5 results on '"Stepan Vymetal"'
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2. Central System of Psychosocial Support to the Czech Victims Affected by the Tsunami in Southeast Asia
- Author
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Stepan, Vymetal
- Subjects
Travel ,Social Support ,Disaster Planning ,Emergency Nursing ,Relief Work ,Disasters ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Crisis Intervention ,Government Agencies ,Tsunamis ,Indonesia ,Rescue Work ,Emergency Medicine ,Humans ,Psychology ,Asia, Southeastern ,Czech Republic - Abstract
The Tsunami disaster affected several countries in Southeast Asia in December 2004 and killed or affected many tourists, most of them from Europe. Eight Czech citizens died, and about 500 Czechs were seriously mentally traumatized. The psychosocial needs of tourists included: (1) protection; (2) treatment; (3) safety; (4) relief; (5) psychological first aid; (6) connecting with family members; (7) transportation home; (8) information about possible mental reactions to trauma; (9) information about the normality of their reaction; (10) procedural and environmental orientation; (11) reinforcement of personal competencies; and (12) psycho-trauma therapy.The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic was in charge of general emergency management. General coordination of psychosocial support was coordinated under the Ministry of Interior of the Czech Republic, which is connected to the Central Crisis Staff of the Czech Government. The major cooperative partners were: the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Defence, the Ministry of Health, Czech Airlines, psychosocial intervention teams of the Czech Republic, and the Czech Association of Clinical Psychologists.The main goals of relief workers were: (1) to bring back home the maximum number of Czech citizens; (2) to provide relevant information to the maximum number of affected Czech citizens; (3) to provide relevant information to rescue workers and professionals; and (4) to prepare working psychosocial support regional network.Major activities of the Ministry of Interior (psychology section) included: (1) establishing a psychological helpline; (2) running a team of psychological assistance (assistance in the Czech airports, psychological monitoring of tourists, crisis intervention, psychological first aid, assistance in the collection of DNA material from relatives); (3) drafting and distributing specific information materials (brochures, leaflets, address lists, printed and electronic instructions); (4) communicating via the media and advertising; and (5) providing analysis and research studies.Central coordination of psychosocial support has been found as successful in the first phase after the disaster. The plans must be built for preferable cooperation in the psychosocial field in the Czech Republic. Better collaborates with journalists must exist in order to reduce secondary psycho-trauma.There is a need for intensive international cooperation in the psychosocial field and to build the network at the global level.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. European Commission Project: European Guideline for Target Group-Oriented Psychosocial Aftercare—Implementation
- Author
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Stepan Vymetal, Albert Deistler, Gisela Zurek, Francisco Orengo, Claudia Schedlich, Robert Bering, Michaela Krtickova, and Magda Rooze
- Subjects
Population ,Poison control ,Guidelines as Topic ,Emergency Nursing ,Suicide prevention ,Disaster Medicine ,Occupational safety and health ,Disasters ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Nursing ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Medicine ,European Union ,Survivors ,education ,Stress Disorders, Traumatic, Acute ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Emergency Responders ,Social Support ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Guideline ,humanities ,Early Diagnosis ,Emergency Medicine ,business ,Psychosocial ,Disaster medicine - Abstract
After disasters, the individual health and well-being of first responders and affected population are affected for years. Therefore, psychosocial help is needed. Although most victims recover on their own, a minority of survivors, members of rescue teams, or relatives develop long-term, disaster-related psychic disorders, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This subgroup especially should receive timely and appropriate psychosocial help. Many European countries offer post-disaster psychosocial care from a variety of caregivers (i.e., professionals and volunteers, non-governmental organizations, church or commercial organizations). Therefore, European standards for providing post-disaster psychosocial support currently is required. This article describes the project European Guideline for Target Group-Oriented Psychosocial Aftercare—Implementation, supported by the European Commission.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. (A54) EU Project: European Guideline for Target Group Oriented Psychosocial Aftercare-Implementation
- Author
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G. Zurek, A. Diestler, F. Orengo, Stepan Vymetal, Magda Rooze, Robert Bering, and Claudia Schedlich
- Subjects
Nursing ,Group (periodic table) ,Emergency Medicine ,Systems engineering ,Guideline ,Emergency Nursing ,Psychology ,Psychosocial - Abstract
Although most victims of disasters recover on their own, a minority of survivors, uniformed services, and relatives develop long-term disaster related psychic disorders such as Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Especially this subgroup should receive timely and appropriate psychosocial help. In many EU countries is offered post-disaster psychosocial care by a variety of caregivers (i.e. professionals and volunteers, NGOs, church or commercial organizations). Therefore, European standardization of providing post-disaster psychosocial support is currently required. The presentation describes the project supported by the European Commission and named European Guideline for Target Group Oriented Psychosocial Aftercare – Implementation (EUTOPA-IP), supported by the European Commission. EUTOPA-IP has integrated two materials: German “Target Group Intervention Programme” and Dutch “Multidisciplinary guideline”, also with the experiences of experts in the area of psychosocial support from the EU countries. Main target is to develop a guideline for the uniformed services on the basis of the Multidisciplinary guideline for early psychosocial interventions, the adaptation of the Target group Oriented Intervention Program (TGIP) to the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and preparation and implementation of training program for various professional groups. The project aims at standardization of psychosocial aftercare in case of disasters as well as at the development of European network based on current findings in psychotraumatology. Early screening, supportive context, early preventive and curative psychosocial interventions, management of interventions, implications for the clinical field and future research are topics discussed in the project. Project consortium: – City of Cologne (Germany)– Centre of Psychotraumatology (Germany)– Impact (The Netherlands)– Spanish Society for Psychotraumatology and Traumatic Stress (Spain)– Charles University in Prague (Czech Republic)– Capital City of Dusseldorf, Department of Public Health (Germany).
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Central System for Psychosocial Support of Czech Victims Affected by the Tsunami in Southeast Asia
- Author
-
Stepan Vymetal
- Subjects
Czech ,Government ,Emergency management ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Emergency Nursing ,Public relations ,language.human_language ,Social support ,Intervention (law) ,Emergency Medicine ,language ,medicine ,business ,Psychosocial ,Crisis intervention ,Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Abstract
The tsunami disaster affected several countries in Southeast Asia in December 2004 and killed or affected many tourists, most of them from Europe. Eight Czech citizens died, and about 500 Czechs were seriously mentally traumatized. The psychosocial needs of tourists included: (1) protection; (2) treatment; (3) safety; (4) relief; (5) psychological first aid; (6) connecting with family members; (7) transportation home; (8) information about possible mental reactions to trauma; (9) information about the normality of their reaction; (10) procedural and environmental orientation; (11) reinforcement of personal competencies; and (12) psycho-trauma therapy. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic was in charge of general emergency management. General coordination of psychosocial support was coordinated under the Ministry of Interior of the Czech Republic, which is connected to the Central Crisis Staff of the Czech Government. The major cooperative partners were: the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Defence, the Ministry of Health, Czech Airlines, psychosocial intervention teams of the Czech Republic, and the Czech Association of Clinical Psychologists. The main goals of relief workers were: (1) to bring back home the maximum number of Czech citizens; (2) to provide relevant information to the maximum number of affected Czech citizens; (3) to provide relevant information to rescue workers and professionals; and (4) to prepare working psychosocial support regional network. Major activities of the Ministry of Interior (psychology section) included: (1) establishing a psychological helpline; (2) running a team of psychological assistance (assistance in the Czech airports, psychological monitoring of tourists, crisis intervention, psychological first aid, assistance in the collection of DNA material from relatives); (3) drafting and distributing specific information materials (brochures, leaflets, address lists, printed and electronic instructions); (4) communicating via the media and advertising, and (5) providing analysis and research studies. Central coordination of psychosocial support has been found as successful in the first phase after the disaster. The plans must be built for preferable cooperation in the psychosocial field in the Czech Republic. Better collaborates with journalists must exist in order to reduce secondary psycho-trauma. There is a need for intensive international cooperation in the psychosocial field and to build the network at the global level.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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