Prince-Embury S, Rooney J F
Jersey Shore Medical Center, Neptune 07711.
J Trauma Stress. 1995 Jan;8(1):47-59. doi: 10.1007/BF02105406.
Psychological adaptation is examined in a sample of residents who remained in the vicinity of Three Mile Island following the restart of the nuclear generating facility which had been shut down since the 1979 accident. Findings indicate a lowering of psychological symptoms between 1985 and 1989 in spite of increased lack of control, less faith in experts and increased fear of developing cancer. The suggestion is made that reduced stress might have been related to a process of adaptation whereby a cognition of emergency preparedness was integrated by some of these residents as a modulating cognitive element. Findings also indicate that "loss of faith in experts" is a persistently salient cognition consistent with the "shattered assumptions" theory of victimization.
对自1979年事故后一直关闭的核发电设施重新启动后仍留在三里岛附近的居民样本进行了心理适应研究。研究结果表明,尽管缺乏控制感增加、对专家的信任减少以及患癌症的恐惧增加,但在1985年至1989年期间心理症状有所减轻。有人提出,压力减轻可能与一种适应过程有关,即这些居民中的一些人将应急准备的认知整合为一种调节性认知因素。研究结果还表明,“对专家失去信心”是一种持续突出的认知,与受害的“假设破灭”理论一致。