I had to look it up. One site defined it: "Mental Health First Aid is a groundbreaking public education program that helps the public identify, understand, and respond to signs of mental illnesses and substance use disorders."
What might be more practical would be a course in dealing with the results of a widescale disaster, where
everyone seems to need help. After all, you and the people around you will probably be the first responders, possibly for some time. There is a good chance that no one will be themselves, but it's probably not a good time to end up escalating the problems by telling panicked, distraught people to 'snap out of it'.
We would most likely be dealing with acquaintances, neighbors, family, co-workers and strangers during and immediately after the incident.
An article titled
Prioritizing “Psychological” Consequence...Scale Disasters (8 pages) (mostly from a medical standpoint) indicates they have "categorized ... 5 key antecedents or 'psychological triggers' that have been shown to be associated with emotional, behavioral and cognitive reactions during large-scale emergencies:"
1. Restricted Movement - isolation, shelter-in-place, decontamination, quarantine, increased social distance, and evacuation.
2. Limited Resources - limited resources and supplies can decrease a person’s sense of safety.
3. Trauma Exposure - intense or prolonged direct exposure (actual witnessing or images of people who are injured or ill) can cause psychological consequences.
4. Limited Information - actual or perceived lack of appropriate information about risks, possible consequences, what to do or where to go for help, conflicting information-- all can lead to psychological reactions (fear, anxiety, frustration, hostility).
5. Perceived Personal or Family Risk - fear and concern about safety of self, and the safety and well-being of family and loved ones, but the perception of risk may also cause people to become fearful, anxious, angry, or hostile, particularly if they believe the risk is being imposed intentionally.
Another article:
Acute Psychological Impact of Disaster & Large-Scale Trauma For children:
FEMA: Helping Children Cope with Disaster And when that is all taken care of, then you can find someone who can help YOU.
Sue