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While Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) disaster response prioritizes physical containment, a parallel and overlooked crisis targets the mental health professionals deployed to aid victims: the vicarious internalization of catastrophic trauma. This conceptual analysis contends that reactive psychological debriefing is fundamentally insufficient for this unique context and introduces the pioneering paradigm of Psychosocial Immunity. This framework proposes a proactive, multi-phase defense system engineered to shield mental health professionals from the debilitating psychological toxicity of CBRN environments. We delineate the distinct pathogenic pressures on these professionals, including the cognitive burden of imperceptible threats, the validation of ungrievable losses, and sustained exposure to collective moral injury. We argue that operationalizing this immunity through a structured, three-phase model—pre-deployment cognitive vaccination, in-field sanctuary pods for psychological decontamination, and mandatory long-term surveillance—is a strategic imperative. Neglecting this architectural support for psychological first responders risks a secondary wave of casualties among the support corps, ultimately compromising the foundation of community recovery. Sustaining a population's capacity to heal is predicated on proactively fortifying the psychological well-being of its healers.
Seyedin et al. (Mon,) studied this question.