Professorâs Research Endeavors to Provide âHelp to the Helpersâ
The son of a longtime emergency dispatcher, Paul Bourgeois, Ph.D., CRC, NCC, is focusing his own career on fostering the mental health and well-being of dispatchers â critical emergency responders who havenât always received the support and services theyâve needed.
October 4, 2022
By Renee Chmiel, Office of Marketing and Communications
Paul Bourgeois, Ph.D., CRC, NCC, on campus.Paul Bourgeois, Ph.D., CRC, NCC.
Ever since he was a kid growing up in eastern Massachusetts, Paul Bourgeois, Ph.D., CRC, NCC, was inspired by his parents who showed him how helping others in a service profession is both professionally and personally rewarding. They inspired his own passion for helping others, as well as his career as a researcher and educator.
Dr. Bourgeoisâs mother, a nurse at , and his father, an emergency dispatcher who recently retired after nearly a quarter century of service, led by example, he says.
âMy fatherâs personal șÚÁÏÉçs and the stories heâs shared have directly and indirectly impacted both my research and overall path to becoming a counselor educator,â explains Dr. Bourgeois. âDue in part to the many discussions Iâve had with my father, Iâve come to learn that emergency dispatchers are underserved in terms of their mental health needs, with very few researchers examining the factors that may mediate the psychological and emotional demands of their work.â
âIt was very humbling to share my workâ
Coordinator of the Universityâs M.S. in Clinical Mental Health Counseling program and an assistant professor, Dr. Bourgeois has focused on issues related to professional ethical behavior and professional issues in counseling. But, in his research, he found a lack of empirical information about how emergency dispatchers șÚÁÏÉç their work and manage to cope with its psychological challenges.
As part of his research, Dr. Bourgeois aims to understand dispatchersâ șÚÁÏÉçs and learn about the strategies that promote their mental health and well-being. He hopes this will eventually lead to impactful stress reduction and health intervention strategies that will help those who help ensure the health, safety, and well-being of so many.
âThe outcomes of these studies might be used to help guide interventions to increase professional quality of life of emergency dispatchers,â said Dr. Bourgeois, who is conducting research focused on counselors, ethics, and technology. âI hope this will also help develop associated coping strategies used to manage stressful work situations.â
Dr. Bourgeois discussed his work as of the . He discussed how his fatherâs career helped guide his own, and the impact he hopes his research will have.
âIt was very humbling to share my work with such a large audience,â he said. âUltimately, my goal in sharing my work on a platform such as Dispatch in Depth is to help raise awareness related to the mental health needs of emergency dispatchers. This is particularly important for a field that has historically stigmatized mental health issues and concerns.â
Paul Bourgeois, Ph.D., CRC, NCC, speaks as part of a dispatcher stress training.
âExtremely rewarding on both a personal and professional levelâ
Dr. Bourgeois acknowledges that all public safety professionals are under significant stress, due to the nature of their critical and high-stakes work. While this has been a known challenge for some time, he believes more support is needed for dispatchers â unsung heroes in emergency situations who regularly respond to a variety of traumatic events.
âAlthough emergency dispatchers are not typically in visual contact with the emergencies or physically present at the scene of a traumatic event, they are responsible for sending other first responders to dangerous environments,â he said. âThey are also tasked with providing psychological support to civilians on the other end of the call. While police officers, firefighters, and emergency medical personnel are typically recognized for their hard work on-scene, the role of the emergency dispatcher is often overlooked and underappreciated.â
Dr. Bourgeoisâs work is, perhaps, more critical than ever, as the pandemic has had a profound effect on the mental health and well-being of first responders. Dr. Bourgeois believes COVID-related stressors had an especially pronounced effect on them as essential workers, and that these stressors are among the many threats to their mental health.
In addition to his research, Dr. Bourgeois is also training the future helpers of dispatchers. In his work, he has found a meaningful way to give back to others â much as his parents did. He hopes his students will also be able to make an important difference in their careers.
âUltimately, our goal is to prepare counselors to work in an increasingly diverse society within a broad range of practice settings to help individuals, groups, and families overcome emotional and psychological challenges,â he said. âHelping students develop the skills, knowledge, and awareness necessary to engage in this critically important work is extremely rewarding on both a personal and professional level.â