Login / Signup

Evaluation of the Situations of Coping With Mental Trauma and Trauma in Emergency Service Personnel Who Medically Intervened to Earthquake Affected People in the 2020 Izmir Earthquake.

Gülseren KeskinEsra Yurt
Published in: Disaster medicine and public health preparedness (2024)
In our study, mental trauma and post-traumatic coping levels of health-care workers who were exposed to earthquakes differed according to age, gender, and educational status. We found that post-earthquake trauma levels were directly related to state and trait anxiety levels and religious coping levels. We found that, after the earthquake, social support seeking behavior, state and trait anxiety levels increased; negative cognitions about self, negative cognitions about the world, and self-blame increased.Practice implications: This study draws attention to the evaluation of emergency health workers who work at the forefront of disasters in terms of subsyndromal post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). It is recommended to make plans for psychologically protective and preventive interventions for health-care workers especially after disasters.
Keyphrases
  • social support
  • depressive symptoms
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • emergency department
  • trauma patients
  • primary care
  • genome wide
  • physical activity
  • sleep quality
  • climate change
  • working memory
  • dna methylation