LCH-After the Call
iOS Universel / Forme et santé
After the Call is a mental health and recovery support app created specifically for first responders who face trauma, loss, and high-stress incidents in the line of duty.
EMS professionals, firefighters, law enforcement officers, dispatchers, and emergency personnel often carry the emotional weight of what they experience long after the scene has cleared. The difficult calls, the ones that stay with you, can affect sleep, relationships, focus, and long-term well-being.
After the Call was built to provide practical, confidential tools that help responders process these experiences in a healthy way.
Developed as part of the Love Compassion Hope mental wellness system, the app provides immediate support tools, guided decompression exercises, trauma-informed resources, and structured reflection tools that help responders release stress instead of carrying it indefinitely.
The app recognizes a reality many first responders face:
You are trained to handle the call, but not always what comes after it.
After the Call helps bridge that gap.
Quoi de neuf dans la dernière version ?
NEW IN AFTER THE CALL
The latest update to After the Call introduces profession-specific support tools designed specifically for first responders. Users can now choose their profession, including law enforcement, EMS, firefighters, dispatchers, corrections, and more, to access tailored mental health resources, trauma education, grounding tools, peer-support guidance, and family support information relevant to their unique experiences.
This update also adds dedicated support sections for suicide-related calls and line-of-duty loss, recognizing the lasting emotional impact these incidents can have on responders. The app now includes practical post-call grounding exercises, tactical breathing tools, warning sign education, peer culture support, and guidance for spouses and families navigating secondary trauma and hypervigilance.
Built with real-world responder experiences in mind, these additions focus on operational stress, cumulative trauma exposure, PTSD awareness, emotional recovery, and suicide prevention within first responder communities.