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Journal Article

Citation

Rao K. Int. Rev. Psychiatry 2006; 18(6): 547-552.

Affiliation

Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS), Bangalore, India.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/09540260601037961

PMID

17162695

Abstract

Different phases of intervention after any disaster bring with them specific issues that policy-makers as well as healthcare deliverers must take into account. There are some specific issues related to aid with dignity and dead-body identification that need to be taken into account. The human and material resources are important in planning and delivering mental healthcare. In India, with each successive disaster, the immediate response in the rescue and relief phase has improved and the administration is able to mobilize a large amount of resources from different sectors quickly, efficiently and in a co-ordinated manner in the immediate and short-term periods after a disaster. That psychological first aid will reduce psychiatric morbidity is now generally accepted as a key principle in interventions immediately after a disaster. In the recent events, large numbers of community-level volunteers have received short-term training and been able to provide effective psychosocial care and support. The paper presents the author's observations and provides an overview of some of the lessons learnt in mental health and psychosocial support care across the several natural and human-made disasters that have taken place in India. While significant progress has been made with respect to the rescue and relief response, there is still a lot to be achieved in the rehabilitation and rebuilding phases that follow a disaster. Disaster prevention and mitigation need global vision combined with local action. Building capacity through careful planning and training potential workers is an important step. The stakeholders must take into account local cultural and social needs.


Language: en

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