Persistent traumatic stress exposure : rethinking PTSD for frontline workers
Cogan, Nicola (2026) Persistent traumatic stress exposure : rethinking PTSD for frontline workers. Healthcare, 14 (2). 255. ISSN 2227-9032 (https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14020255)
Preview |
Text.
Filename: Cogan-Healthcare-2026-Persistant-traumatic-stress-exposure.pdf
Final Published Version License:
Download (193kB)| Preview |
Abstract
Frontline workers across health, emergency, and social care sectors are repeatedly exposed to distressing events and chronic stressors as part of their occupational roles. Unlike single-event trauma, these cumulative exposures accrue over time, generating persistent psychological and physiological strain. Traditional diagnostic frameworks, particularly post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), were not designed to capture the layered and ongoing nature of this occupational trauma. This commentary introduces the concept of Persistent Traumatic Stress Exposure (PTSE), a framework that reframes trauma among frontline workers as an exposure arising from organisational and systemic conditions rather than solely an individual disorder. It aims to reorient understanding, responsibility, and intervention from a purely clinical lens toward systems, cultures, and organisational duties of care. PTSE is presented as an integrative paradigm informed by contemporary theory and evidence on trauma, moral injury, organisational stress, and trauma-informed systems. The framework synthesises findings from health, emergency, and social care settings, illustrating how repeated exposure, ethical conflict, and institutional pressures contribute to cumulative psychological harm. PTSE highlights that psychological injury may build across shifts, careers, and lifetimes, requiring preventive, real-time, and sustained responses. The framework emphasises that effective support is dependent on both organisational readiness, the structural conditions that enable trauma-informed work, and organisational preparedness, the practical capability to enact safe, predictable, and stigma-free responses to trauma exposure. PTSE challenges prevailing stigma by framing trauma as a predictable occupational hazard rather than a personal weakness. It aligns with modern occupational health perspectives by advocating for systems that strengthen psychological safety, leadership capability and access to support. By adopting PTSE, organisations can shift from reactive treatment models toward proactive cultural and structural protection, honouring the lived realities of frontline workers and promoting long-term wellbeing and resilience.
ORCID iDs
Cogan, Nicola
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0861-5133;
-
-
Item type: Article ID code: 95316 Dates: DateEvent20 January 2026Published16 January 2026AcceptedSubjects: Social Sciences > Commerce > Business > Industrial psychology Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Psychological Sciences and Health > Psychology Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 16 Jan 2026 11:50 Last modified: 10 Feb 2026 08:10 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/95316
Tools
Tools






