Keough Mary Ellen, Samuels Margaret F
Kosovo Family Support Project, Physicians for Human Rights.
Soc Work. 2004 Oct;49(4):587-94. doi: 10.1093/sw/49.4.587.
This article presents a case that illustrates the vital role that social workers and other mental health and public health workers provided to support families following the 1999 conflict between Serb forces and Kosovar Albanians in Kosovo. A public health and social work team from Boston-based Physicians for Human Rights responded to an emergency postconflict situation by planning and implementing a community-based intervention that mobilized local mental health providers and established collaboration among national and international agencies, including the International War Crimes Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, to provide a support network for families with missing family members. The intervention included assessment of local resources, training, fieldwork, professional development of local staff, and the establishment of long-term local responsibility and autonomy.
本文介绍了一个案例,该案例说明了1999年塞尔维亚部队与科索沃阿族人在科索沃发生冲突后,社会工作者以及其他心理健康和公共卫生工作者在为家庭提供支持方面所发挥的重要作用。来自波士顿的人权医生组织的一个公共卫生和社会工作团队应对冲突后的紧急情况,通过规划和实施一项基于社区的干预措施,动员当地心理健康服务提供者,并在包括前南斯拉夫问题国际刑事法庭在内的国家和国际机构之间建立合作,为有家庭成员失踪的家庭提供支持网络。该干预措施包括评估当地资源、培训、实地工作、当地工作人员的专业发展,以及确立长期的当地责任和自主权。