Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), Opposite Sector U, D.H.A. Cantt. 54792, Lahore, Pakistan.
Disasters. 2012 Oct;36(4):656-75. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7717.2012.01274.x. Epub 2012 Mar 6.
A massive earthquake off the west coast of Sumatra in Indonesia triggered a tsunami on 26 December 2004. At least five million people around the world were affected, and the total number of deaths exceeded 280,000. In Thailand, the tsunami struck six southern provinces, where the disaster's immediate impact was catastrophic. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Phang Nga Province (2007), this paper provides an overview of the disaster's psychosocial consequences for Thai health service providers, the vast majority of whom were bypassed by regional post-tsunami mental health initiatives. The available tsunami literature only briefly attends to health providers' experience of professional 'burn-out', rather than explores the tsunami's wide spectrum of psychosocial effects. This research aims to remedy such oversights through 'critical medical' and 'interpretive phenomenological' analysis of the diverse and culturally-situated ways in which health providers' experienced the tsunami. The paper concludes by arguing for disaster-related psychosocial interventions to involve health providers explicitly.
2004 年 12 月 26 日,印度尼西亚苏门答腊西海岸发生了一场大规模地震,引发了海啸。全球至少有 500 万人受到影响,死亡总人数超过 28 万。在泰国,海啸袭击了南部的六个省份,当地受灾情况极其严重。本文基于 2007 年在攀牙府进行的民族志实地研究,概述了这场灾难对泰国卫生服务提供者的心理社会后果,而他们中的绝大多数人都被区域海啸后心理健康倡议所忽视。现有的海啸文献仅简要探讨了卫生工作者的职业“倦怠”体验,而没有探讨海啸广泛的心理社会影响。通过对卫生工作者经历海啸的多样化和文化情境的“批判性医学”和“解释现象学”分析,本研究旨在纠正这些不足。本文最后提出,与灾害相关的心理社会干预应明确涉及卫生工作者。