TL;DR. Psychological first aid (PFA) is the immediate, non-clinical support you give someone who’s just been through something psychologically distressing — recognising signs, listening without judgement, and connecting them to professional help. In Australia, the AQF-accredited unit that teaches it is PUARCV001 — Provide psychological first aid. It’s delivered by Registered Training Organisations (RTOs) and leads to a nationally recognised Statement of Attainment. FMS delivers it 100% online in 6–8 hours of self-paced study. RTO 45189.
The short answer
Psychological first aid is the immediate, practical support given to a person in acute psychological distress — in the minutes and hours after a critical incident, a disclosure, or an acute mental health presentation. It’s not therapy. It’s not a diagnosis. It’s the human equivalent of physical first aid: stabilise, support, and hand over to professionals.
Psychological first aid is widely endorsed by the World Health Organization, major humanitarian bodies, and Australian emergency services. In Australia, the AQF-accredited unit of competency that teaches the skills is PUARCV001 — Provide psychological first aid.
What psychological first aid includes
The core skills taught in PUARCV001 track closely with the WHO’s internationally published PFA framework:
- Prepare — understand the situation and your scope
- Look — recognise signs of acute distress, trauma response, and emerging mental ill-health
- Listen — approach calmly, listen without judgement or cross-examination
- Link — practical support, information, and connection to professional help
- Look after yourself — manage your own exposure and cumulative load
What psychological first aid is NOT
- Not therapy — PFA doesn’t diagnose or treat mental ill-health
- Not a debrief — modern evidence cautions against formal psychological debriefing immediately after trauma
- Not a replacement for professional help — PFA connects people to clinical support, it doesn’t substitute for it
- Not mind-reading — PFA doesn’t require you to know what someone is thinking or feeling before you approach them
Psychological first aid vs mental health first aid — are they the same?
In Australian workplaces, the phrases “mental health first aid” and “psychological first aid” are often used interchangeably as buyer language for the same broad capability: being the first person to recognise and support someone in psychological distress.
Where it matters is in accreditation. PUARCV001 (Provide Psychological First Aid) is the AQF-accredited unit of competency delivered by Registered Training Organisations under ASQA. It leads to a nationally recognised Statement of Attainment. Most mental health first aid courses marketed in Australia are non-accredited — they lead to a branded certificate of attendance from the provider, which is not a nationally recognised qualification. Both can be valuable; the accredited pathway is the defensible one for compliance-serious settings (NDIS, aged care, healthcare, education, psychosocial WHS evidence).
Who should do PUARCV001?
- First responders — police, paramedics, firefighters, SES, surf lifesavers
- Community services and NDIS workers
- Healthcare and aged care staff
- HR, P&C, wellbeing leaders
- Teachers and educators
- People leaders with direct reports
- Volunteers and peer-support workers
How do you get the qualification?
- Enrol with an RTO that has PUARCV001 on scope (FMS is RTO 45189).
- Complete the course — online self-paced, typically 6–8 hours.
- Submit assessments online.
- Receive your Statement of Attainment — nationally recognised, AQF-accredited, moves with you between employers.
Will AI replace psychological first aid?
No. AI chatbots, wellbeing apps, and predictive analytics can support mental health at scale — but the human minutes after a trauma, a disclosure, or a crisis cannot be automated, and regulators across healthcare, education, WHS, and emergency services require named humans with documented capability. PFA is one of the clearest examples of AI-proof work. See: AI-proof careers in Australia.
Get accredited in psychological first aid
PUARCV001 — nationally recognised, AQF-accredited, 100% online, RTO 45189. Finish in 6–8 hours.
Frequently asked questions
Is psychological first aid the same as therapy?
No. PFA is immediate, non-clinical support — it’s about stabilising someone in distress and connecting them to professional help. It doesn’t diagnose or treat mental ill-health.
What’s the difference between PUARCV001 and non-accredited mental health first aid?
PUARCV001 is an AQF-accredited unit of competency delivered by Registered Training Organisations under ASQA, leading to a Statement of Attainment. Most mental health first aid courses are branded-accredited but not AQF/ASQA accredited.
How long does PUARCV001 take?
Typically 6–8 hours of self-paced online study with FMS.
Do I need any prerequisites?
No. PUARCV001 has no formal prerequisites. It’s suitable for anyone 18+ whose role involves supporting people in distress.
Explore further
- PFA — main course page
- Accredited vs non-accredited mental health first aid training
- Mental health first aid for the workplace — buying guide
- Psychosocial hazards and PFA at work






















