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Journal Article

Citation

Vymetal S, Deistler A, Bering R, Schedlich C, Rooze M, Orengo F, Zurek G, Krtickova M. Prehosp. Disaster Med. 2011; 26(3): 234-236.

Affiliation

Charles University in Prague and Ministry of the Interior, Prague, Czech Republic.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/S1049023X11006303

PMID

22107777

Abstract

After disasters, the individual health and well-being of first responders and affected population are affected for years. Therefore, psychosocial help is needed. Although most victims recover on their own, a minority of survivors, members of rescue teams, or relatives develop long-term, disaster-related psychic disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This subgroup especially should receive timely and appropriate psychosocial help. Many European countries offer post-disaster psychosocial care from a variety of caregivers (i.e., professionals and volunteers, non-governmental organizations, church or commercial organizations). Therefore, European standards for providing post-disaster psychosocial support currently is required. This article describes the project European Guideline for Target Group-Oriented Psychosocial Aftercare-Implementation, supported by the European Commission.


Language: en

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