PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Adler, Amy B AU - Gutierrez, I A AU - McCuaig Edge, H AU - Nordstrand, A E AU - Simms, A AU - Willmund, G D TI - Peer-based intervention for acute stress reaction: adaptations by five militaries AID - 10.1136/military-2022-002344 DP - 2024 Oct 01 TA - BMJ Military Health PG - 425--429 VI - 170 IP - 5 4099 - http://militaryhealth.bmj.com/content/170/5/425.short 4100 - http://militaryhealth.bmj.com/content/170/5/425.full SO - BMJ Mil Health2024 Oct 01; 170 AB - Military service members need to be able to operate under conditions of extreme stress to ensure the success of their team’s mission; however, an acute stress reaction (ASR) can compromise team safety and effectiveness by rendering an individual unable to function. Building on an intervention originally developed by the Israel Defense Forces, several countries have developed, tested, and disseminated a peer-based intervention to help service members manage acute stress in others. This paper reviews how five countries (Canada, Germany, Norway, the UK and the USA) adjusted the protocol to fit their organisational culture while retaining essential elements of the original procedure, suggesting there can be interoperability and mutual intelligibility in the management of ASR by military allies. Future research should examine the parameters of effectiveness for this intervention, the impact of intervention on long-term trajectories, and individual differences in managing ASR.