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Journal Article

Citation

Maheshwari N, Yadav R, Singh NP. J. Pharm. Bioallied. Sci. 2010; 2(3): 267-274.

Affiliation

Strategic Behaviour Division, Defence Institute of Psychological Research, Drdo, Lucknow Road, Timarpur, Delhi - 110 054, India.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Medknow Publications)

DOI

10.4103/0975-7406.68509

PMID

21829322

PMCID

PMC3148631

Abstract

Management of disaster effects, physical or psychological, has been the subject of considerable research. Though physical rehabilitation of the victims of any disaster, whether natural or man-made, receives immediate attention, the management of psychological trauma often remains a challenge for the disaster management machinery, in general, and mental health professionals, in particular. The magnitude of population affected, on the one hand, and lack of sufficient mental health professionals, on the other hand, often hinders the psychological rehabilitation of a cross section of the affected population. We attempt to present an overview of the literature to bring home the understanding of correlates of psychological effects in the mass disaster affected population in this article. It dwells on the efficacy of group counseling as the most appropriate paradigm of primary prevention to check the onset of severe psychological disorders. The article also presents an overview of two case studies: tsunami disaster (Nagapatanam, Tamil Nadu, India) and victims of bomb blast (Dhimajee, Assam, India) to highlight the silver lining in the psychological management of disaster traumas. It is proposed that group counseling can prove to be a most important mental rehabilitation program to further strengthen the efficacy of individual therapeutic interventions.


Language: en

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