Today’s Solutions: May 12, 2025

The pandemic caused a significant rise in anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues. Isolation, combined with health concerns, social justice frustrations, and economic uncertainty took its toll on all of us. With this in mind, researchers from  Johns Hopkins University started offering a free online course in psychological first aid, allowing people to better prepared for their loved ones in their times of need.

The course received a 4.8/5 rating from the 8,000 people who’ve reviewed it and is taught by psychologist George S. Everly, PhD, who teaches students his RAPID model for dealing with emergency mental health situations: Reflective listening, Assessment of needs, Prioritization, Intervention, and Disposition.

Becoming a reflective listener involves repeating back things a person has said to you to assure them they have been heard. The Assessment of Needs portion trains participants on how to rapidly determine the severity of the person’s needs to best connect them with help. This is critical for determining whether someone just needs a shoulder to lean on or more professional help. A significant portion of the course is also dedicated to making a plan for further action to make sure the interaction is followed up with necessary action.

If you join the 200,000 people already enrolled in a psychological first aid training program, the course is broken down into manageable chunks, from 30 minutes to 2 hours.

This specific course is designed with years of crisis and natural disaster experience in mind. It is designed for periods of great uncertainty and is proven to safely transition someone out of crisis temporarily until they can access sustained mental health resources.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Diabetes deaths decline post-pandemic, marking hopeful progress in U.S. healt...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM After a sharp rise during the COVID-19 pandemic, diabetes-related deaths in the United States are beginning to fall ...

Read More

Meet the man who took 200 snake bites so science could strike back

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Tim Friede has been bitten by venomous snakes around 200 times and lives to tell the tale. No, ...

Read More

Grow these plants around your home as natural mosquitos repellents

While there are countless positives that come with the warmer seasons, there’s one huge downside.  Yep, mosquitos! These pesky insects can leave us itching ...

Read More

This crop actually benefits from being shaded by solar panels

Solar panels often take up a lot of real estate that is also optimal for growing crops (flat land with access to lots of ...

Read More

OSZAR »