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  1. Article ; Online: Responding to the Psychological Needs of Health Workers During Pandemic: Ten Lessons From Humanitarian Work.

    Cherepanov, Elena

    Disaster medicine and public health preparedness

    2020  Volume 16, Issue 2, Page(s) 734–740

    Abstract: ... psychological needs of health-care responders. ... care providers to work efficiently under duress saves lives. The author uses her experience of providing mental health ... health. In CEs, the sheer volume of work and the emotional over-engagement tend to produce toxic ...

    Abstract When a complex emergency (CE) overwhelms infrastructure, the ability of health-care providers to work efficiently under duress saves lives. The author uses her experience of providing mental health supports to humanitarian aid workers and the pieces of training conducted for internal medicine practitioners to offer guidance on how to manage severe job-related stresses during the response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This work reminds responders about their professional mission and purpose, but its extreme physical and mental demands can take a toll on their well-being and health. In CEs, the sheer volume of work and the emotional over-engagement tend to produce toxic fantasies (eg, rescuer or helper fantasies), acting upon which threatens integrity of care and increases risks for both patients and providers. Accumulated fatigue and exposure to mass suffering and mortality can change the perceived value of life and increase reckless, risk-taking, and suicidal behaviors. Introducing a self-awareness framework prioritizes the awareness of the available choices and making situation-appropriate and informed decisions about balancing one's own and others' needs. The COVID-19 response has demonstrated that fostering peer supports, changing organizational culture, addressing self-awareness within a training and supervisory context, and strengthening supports for managers are important parts of disaster preparedness. It also revealed that more research is needed to better understand and meet the special psychological needs of health-care responders.
    MeSH term(s) COVID-19/epidemiology ; Female ; Health Personnel/psychology ; Health Workforce ; Humans ; Mental Health ; Pandemics
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-09-10
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2375268-3
    ISSN 1938-744X ; 1935-7893
    ISSN (online) 1938-744X
    ISSN 1935-7893
    DOI 10.1017/dmp.2020.356
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article: Responding to the Psychological Needs of Health Workers During Pandemic: Ten Lessons from Humanitarian Work

    Cherepanov, Elena

    Disaster Med Public Health Prep

    Abstract: ... of providing mental health supports to humanitarian aid workers and the pieces of training conducted ... needed to better understand and meet the special psychological needs of healthcare responders. ... to COVID-19 pandemic. This work reminds responders about their professional mission and purpose ...

    Abstract When a complex emergency (CE) overwhelms infrastructure, the ability of healthcare providers to work efficiently under duress saves lives. Objectives and method: The author uses her experience of providing mental health supports to humanitarian aid workers and the pieces of training conducted for internal medicine practitioners to offer guidance on how to manage severe job-related stresses during the response to COVID-19 pandemic. This work reminds responders about their professional mission and purpose, but its extreme physical and mental demands can take a toll on their well-being and health. In CEs, the sheer volume of work and the emotional over-engagement tend to produce toxic fantasies (e.g., rescuer or helper fantasies), acting upon which threatens integrity of care and increases risks for both patients and providers. Accumulated fatigue and exposure to mass suffering and mortality can change the perceived value of life and increase reckless, risk-taking, and suicidal behaviors. Introducing a self-awareness framework prioritizes the awareness of the available choices and making situation-appropriate and informed decisions about balancing one's own and others' needs. The COVID-19 response has demonstrated that fostering peer supports, changing organizational culture, addressing self-awareness within a training and supervisory context, and strengthening supports for managers are important parts of disaster preparedness. It also revealed that more research is needed to better understand and meet the special psychological needs of healthcare responders.
    Keywords covid19
    Publisher WHO
    Document type Article
    Note WHO #Covidence: #752611
    Database COVID19

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  3. Article ; Online: Responding to the Psychological Needs of Health Workers During Pandemic

    Cherepanov, Elena

    Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness

    Ten Lessons from Humanitarian Work

    2020  , Page(s) 1–19

    Abstract: ... her experience of providing mental health supports to humanitarian aid workers and the pieces of training ... psychological needs of healthcare responders. ... during the response to COVID-19 pandemic. This work reminds responders about their professional mission ...

    Abstract Abstract When a complex emergency (CE) overwhelms infrastructure, the ability of healthcare providers to work efficiently under duress saves lives. Objectives and method: The author uses her experience of providing mental health supports to humanitarian aid workers and the pieces of training conducted for internal medicine practitioners to offer guidance on how to manage severe job-related stresses during the response to COVID-19 pandemic. This work reminds responders about their professional mission and purpose, but its extreme physical and mental demands can take a toll on their well-being and health. In CEs, the sheer volume of work and the emotional over-engagement tend to produce toxic fantasies (e.g., rescuer or helper fantasies), acting upon which threatens integrity of care and increases risks for both patients and providers. Accumulated fatigue and exposure to mass suffering and mortality can change the perceived value of life and increase reckless, risk-taking, and suicidal behaviors. Introducing a self-awareness framework prioritizes the awareness of the available choices and making situation-appropriate and informed decisions about balancing one’s own and others’ needs. The COVID-19 response has demonstrated that fostering peer supports, changing organizational culture, addressing self-awareness within a training and supervisory context, and strengthening supports for managers are important parts of disaster preparedness. It also revealed that more research is needed to better understand and meet the special psychological needs of healthcare responders.
    Keywords Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ; covid19
    Language English
    Publisher Cambridge University Press (CUP)
    Publishing country uk
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 2375268-3
    ISSN 1938-744X ; 1935-7893
    ISSN (online) 1938-744X
    ISSN 1935-7893
    DOI 10.1017/dmp.2020.356
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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