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Journal Article

Citation

Becker SM. Environ. Health Perspect. 1997; 105(Suppl 6): 1557-1563.

Affiliation

Department of Government and Public Service, School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham 35294-3350, USA. smbecker@sbs.sbs.uab.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9467082

PMCID

PMC1469933

Abstract

There is a substantial body of literature on psychosocial impacts of chemical and nuclear accidents. Less attention, however, has been focused on the program and policy issues that are connected with efforts to provide psychosocial assistance to the victims of such accidents. Because psychosocial assistance efforts are certain to be an essential part of the response to future environmental emergencies, it is vital that relevant program and policy issues by more fully considered. This article discusses the highly complex nature of contamination situations and highlights some of the key policy issues that are associated with the provision of psychosocial services after environmental accidents. One issue concerns the potential for assistance efforts to become objects of conflict. In the context of the intense controversy typically associated with chemical or nuclear accidents, and with debates over the causation of illness usually at the center of environmental accidents, psychosocial assistance services may themselves become contested terrain. Other significant program and policy issues include determining how to interface with citizen self-help and other voluntary groups, addressing the problem of stigma, and deciding how to facilitate stakeholder participation in the shaping of service provision. This article offers a series of policy proposals that may help smooth the way for psychosocial assistance programs in future environmental emergencies.


Language: en

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