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Tech professor, veteran firefighter leads first responder mental health research and advocacy
Derrick Edwards, assistant professor of counseling and psychology at Tennessee Tech,
has spent two decades in the fire service and now supports the mental health needs
of his fellow first responders through Tech's Responder Health Lab. Photo courtesy
of the Putnam County Fire Department.
Across the country, more than one million career and volunteer firefighters offer
themselves in service to their communities.
Now, one of their own is using his faculty role at Tennessee Tech University to rally
support for first responders’ mental health needs and raise awareness of the true
extent of their sacrifices in the line of duty.
Derrick Edwards, Ph.D., is assistant professor of counseling and psychology at Tech,
where he also leads the university’s Responder Health Lab, an on-campus center he
launched to support emergency workers through impactful research and hands-on departmental
assistance.
For Edwards, a licensed professional counselor and advanced emergency medical technician
(AEMT) who first joined the fire service in 2004, the lab offers a way to bring awareness
to the unseen emotional wounds of firefighters’ daily work.
“We’re here to serve a population that is often overlooked in the world of research,”
explained Edwards. “Historically, emergency responders have been lumped into military
research, especially when it comes to the psychological impacts of their jobs. And
of course, there are similarities, but there are also some important differences.”
Edwards notes that firefighters typically live in the communities they serve, meaning
that, unlike most military servicemembers, the traumatic situations they may encounter
are close to home, in the very places they pass by each day.
He has personally known first responders who have been called to the scene of fatal
accidents involving their loved ones. Their emotional scars spurred a deeper passion
and urgency in Edwards’ research.
A two-time Tech graduate, Edwards’ master’s thesis examined the physiological response
to stress among first responders. Today, the Responder Health Lab addresses everything
from cancer rates to cardiac health and suicide prevention. Edwards notes that roughly
half of all first responders will contemplate taking their own life, something he
calls “a startling find.”
“I leverage my cultural awareness as a firefighter EMT having spent 20 years in the
fire service,” Edwards explained. “I speak the language, I know the people and they’re
more willing to talk to me about these things.”
Edwards’ support for his fellow firefighters is not just through research. Outside
of his work at Tech, he continues to serve as a part-time firefighter AEMT for the
Wilson County Emergency Management Agency and volunteer firefighter and chaplain for
the Putnam County Fire Department – a rigorous schedule, but one he is resistant to
change.
Edwards leads a seminar on mental health for first responders at the Wilson County
Emergency Management Agency, where he is also a part-time firefighter AEMT. Photo
courtesy of the Wilson County Firefighters Association.
“In a classroom, when you find those students who have a passion, you can tell that
they are absolutely going to change the lives of so many people,” he continued. “There’s
nothing like that except when you respond to someone on the worst day of their life
because they've called 911 and you're the one who can at least be there with them
as they go through it. It’s such a similar feeling that I can’t even describe it.”
Edwards says that, as a student, and now as a faculty member, he has felt supported
by the Tech community.
“Tech is the type of university where, if I really needed to call President Oldham,
I could. I have my dean’s cell phone number. My department chair tells me jokes. That’s
the kind of place this is. To feel supported in this way – it’s a no-brainer,” said
Edwards.
“I tell families, 'I know I’m biased, but I don’t think there’s a better choice than
Tech,'” he added. “We’re a big enough university that you’re going to get an education
that is unmatched across the state, but your professors are also going to know your
name.”
On Edwards’ watch, the Responder Health Lab is moving forward with ambitious grant
proposals and research projects. One proposal would aim to rewrite the way volunteer
firefighters are recruited for research studies, using a more economical model that
draws participants from state academies instead of the current, more laborious method
of going through individual local departments. Another ongoing study is researching
instances of infertility, ovarian cancer and bladder cancer among female firefighters.
Each project the lab takes on is a nod to Edwards’ deeply felt calling to support
his brothers and sisters in fire service.
“What I would want people to know about first responders is, it’s not what you see
on television,” he said. “It takes a lot, and these are people who, with very few
exceptions, are poorly paid, highly educated and highly specialized. So, we appreciate
when people say ‘Hey, we see you’ because this is a hard job.”
Learn more about Tech’s Responder Health Lab at https://www.tntech.edu/education/cp/responder-health-lab.php.