Ali Diab A, Figley Charles R, Tedeschi Richard G, Galarneau David, Amara Shilpa
School of Medicine.
Traumatology Institute.
Psychol Trauma. 2023 Jan;15(1):45-55. doi: 10.1037/tra0001044. Epub 2021 Jun 17.
Countless communities worldwide are exposed directly and subsequently to the effects of massive-scale collective stressors, from natural disasters to human-caused. In contexts of collective adversity, health care providers who are also members of these communities share and interdependently affect the range of responses their patients have. We aim to conceptualize this spectrum, termed shared trauma, shared resilience, and shared growth. In this metasynthesis, we review the literature on these underacknowledged dynamics globally. We include prior conceptualizations of direct and indirect trauma, collective trauma, cultural context, and the COVID-19 pandemic toward clearer conceptualization of shared mental health in global collective stressor contexts. Most trauma and resilience research focuses on prevailing concepts and measures with questionable cross-cultural applicability. These works usually center on acute, highly distressing threats to physical safety at the individual level. The scarce literature on shared trauma describes it as a rare phenomenon, entailing conflicting messages of narrative accounts within contexts of few cultures with medium to high degrees of individualism. There has been little consideration of other non-Western and indigenous communities with more collectivist values and collective trauma histories. There is limited understanding of these concepts as they pertain to the vast majority of cultures. As a result, shared trauma, resilience, and growth have been poorly conceptualized, differentiated, or empirically researched. We propose uniquely inclusive models of shared trauma, resilience, and growth. These models reflect the cumulative effects and interplay of direct to indirect, acute to chronic, individual to collective, and historic to transgenerational factors influenced by cultural context. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
全球无数社区直接或间接受到大规模集体压力源的影响,从自然灾害到人为灾害。在集体逆境的背景下,身为这些社区成员的医疗保健提供者会共同分担并相互影响患者的反应范围。我们旨在对这一范围进行概念化,称之为共享创伤、共享复原力和共享成长。在这项元综合研究中,我们回顾了全球关于这些未得到充分认识的动态的文献。我们纳入了直接和间接创伤、集体创伤、文化背景以及新冠肺炎疫情的先前概念化内容,以便更清晰地界定全球集体压力源背景下的共享心理健康。大多数创伤和复原力研究都聚焦于普遍概念和测量方法,但其跨文化适用性存疑。这些研究通常集中在个体层面上对身体安全的急性、高度痛苦的威胁。关于共享创伤的稀缺文献将其描述为一种罕见现象,在少数具有中度到高度个人主义的文化背景中,叙事描述存在相互矛盾的信息。对于其他具有更多集体主义价值观和集体创伤历史的非西方和本土社区,考虑甚少。对于这些概念与绝大多数文化的关系,人们了解有限。因此,共享创伤、复原力和成长在概念界定、区分或实证研究方面都很薄弱。我们提出了独特的、具有包容性的共享创伤、复原力和成长模型。这些模型反映了受文化背景影响的直接到间接、急性到慢性、个体到集体以及历史到跨代因素的累积效应和相互作用。(PsycInfo数据库记录 (c) 2023美国心理学会,保留所有权利)