UC Berkeley-UCSF Joint Medical Program at the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health, 570 University Hall #1190, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Confl Health. 2013 Jul 30;7(1):15. doi: 10.1186/1752-1505-7-15.
In conflict and disaster settings, medical personnel are exposed to psychological stressors that threaten their wellbeing and increase their risk of developing burnout, depression, anxiety, and PTSD. As lay medics frequently function as the primary health providers in these situations, their mental health is crucial to the delivery of services to afflicted populations. This study examines a population of community health workers in Karen State, eastern Myanmar to explore the manifestations of health providers' psychological distress in a low-resource conflict environment.
Mental health screening surveys were administered to 74 medics, incorporating the 12-item general health questionnaire (GHQ-12) and the posttraumatic checklist for civilians (PCL-C). Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 30 medics to investigate local idioms of distress, sources of distress, and the support and management of medics' stressors.
The GHQ-12 mean was 10.7 (SD 5.0, range 0-23) and PCL-C mean was 36.2 (SD 9.7, range 17-69). There was fair internal consistency for the GHQ-12 and PCL-C (Cronbach's alpha coeffecients 0.74 and 0.80, respectively) and significant correlation between the two scales (Pearson's R-correlation 0.47, P<0.001). Qualitative results revealed abundant evidence of stressors, including perceived inadequacy of skills, transportation barriers, lack of medical resources, isolation from family communities, threats of military violence including landmine injury, and early life trauma resulting from conflict and displacement. Medics also discussed mechanisms to manage stressors, including peer support, group-based and individual forms of coping.
The results suggest significant sources and manifestations of mental distress among this under-studied population. The discrepancy between qualitative evidence of abundant stressors and the comparatively low symptom scores may suggest marked mental resilience among subjects. The observed symptom score means in contrast with the qualitative evidence of abundant stressors may suggest the development of marked mental resilience among subjects. Alternatively, the discrepancy may reflect the inadequacy of standard screening tools not validated for this population and potential cultural inappropriateness of established diagnostic frameworks. The importance of peer-group support as a protective factor suggests that interventions might best serve healthworkers in conflict areas by emphasizing community- and team-based strategies.
在冲突和灾难环境中,医务人员面临心理压力源,这些压力源威胁着他们的福祉,并增加了他们 burnout、抑郁、焦虑和 PTSD 的风险。由于非专业医务人员在这些情况下经常充当主要卫生提供者,因此他们的心理健康对于向受灾人群提供服务至关重要。本研究调查了缅甸东部克伦邦的一群社区卫生工作者,以探讨在资源匮乏的冲突环境中卫生提供者心理困扰的表现。
对 74 名医务人员进行了心理健康筛查调查,采用了 12 项一般健康问卷(GHQ-12)和平民创伤后检查表(PCL-C)。对 30 名医务人员进行了半结构化定性访谈,以调查当地的痛苦习语、痛苦来源、医务人员压力源的支持和管理。
GHQ-12 的平均值为 10.7(SD 5.0,范围 0-23),PCL-C 的平均值为 36.2(SD 9.7,范围 17-69)。GHQ-12 和 PCL-C 的内部一致性良好(Cronbach's alpha 系数分别为 0.74 和 0.80),并且两个量表之间存在显著相关性(Pearson's R 相关系数为 0.47,P<0.001)。定性结果显示压力源丰富的证据,包括技能不足、交通障碍、缺乏医疗资源、与家庭社区隔离、军事暴力的威胁,包括地雷伤害,以及因冲突和流离失所而导致的早期生活创伤。医务人员还讨论了管理压力源的机制,包括同伴支持、基于群体和个人的应对方式。
结果表明,在这个研究不足的人群中存在显著的精神困扰来源和表现。定性证据表明压力源丰富,而症状评分相对较低,这可能表明受试者具有明显的心理适应能力。观察到的症状评分均值与定性证据表明压力源丰富的情况形成对比,这可能表明受试者出现了明显的心理适应能力。或者,这种差异可能反映了标准筛查工具不适用于该人群,以及既定诊断框架的潜在文化不适宜性。同伴群体支持作为保护因素的重要性表明,通过强调社区和团队为基础的策略,干预措施可能会最好地为冲突地区的卫生工作者提供服务。