Psychological Support for Families

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Psychological Support for Families - Grief's Ground Zero

  • Immediate psychological first aid (PFA) is paramount for families facing loss in DVI.
  • Core Needs: Accurate information, empathy, practical assistance, sense of safety.

    ⭐ Common immediate reactions include shock, denial, and acute distress; these are normal responses to an abnormal event.

  • Understanding Grief:
    • While Kübler-Ross's model (📌 DABDA: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance) is a well-known framework, grief is highly individualized and non-linear. Modern understanding acknowledges wider emotional responses, and individuals may not experience all stages or in any particular order.
    • Anticipatory grief is common during prolonged identification processes.
  • Support Strategies:
    • Clear, honest, regular communication from authorities.
    • Respect for cultural, religious, and individual grieving processes.
    • Facilitate connection with mental health professionals (psychologists, counselors).
    • Provide a private, supportive environment for expressing emotions.

    💡 Psychological First Aid (PFA) is evidence-based immediate support - not therapy, but humane, supportive response providing practical assistance.

  • Consider long-term needs and ensure avenues for follow-up support.

Psychological Support for Families - Healing Hands

  • Mitigates long-term psychological distress, aids coping post-disaster. Key for DVI.
  • Core Principles: Empathy, respect, cultural sensitivity, confidentiality, clear communication.
  • Psychological First Aid (PFA): Evidence-informed, modular approach for helping disaster survivors. Involves eight core actions: Contact and Engagement, Safety and Comfort, Stabilization, Information Gathering (Current Needs and Concerns), Practical Assistance, Connection with Social Supports, Information on Coping, and Linkage with Collaborative Services.

    ⭐ Psychological First Aid (PFA) encompasses comprehensive eight core actions, with 'Look, Listen, Link' as foundational concepts.

    • 📌 Look: Assess safety, urgent basic needs, signs of serious distress.
    • 📌 Listen: Approach respectfully, hear concerns, help them feel calm. Non-intrusive.
    • 📌 Link: Connect with information, practical support, loved ones, and other services.
  • Effective Communication:
    • Deliver information clearly, honestly, compassionately. Use simple language; avoid jargon.
    • Provide regular updates; be available for questions.
    • Breaking bad news: Requires privacy, adequate time, emotional support (e.g., AM/PM notification teams).
  • Grief & Bereavement Care:
    • Acknowledge grief as a normal process; explain common reactions.
    • Identify individuals needing specialized mental health services (e.g., complicated grief, PTSD).
  • Practical & Social Support:
    • Assist with viewing arrangements, documentation, logistical needs.
    • Facilitate connection with community resources and support networks.

Psychological Support for Families - Navigating the Maze

  • Goal: Mitigate distress, support family coping mechanisms post-disaster, ensure dignity.
  • Principles:
    • Empathy, dignity, respect for families and deceased.
    • Clear, timely, honest, and culturally sensitive communication.
  • Interventions:
    • Information: Regular updates, DVI procedure explanation, managing expectations.
    • Emotional Support: Psychological First Aid (PFA), grief counseling, crisis intervention.
    • Practical Aid: Logistical, administrative, legal guidance; resource connection.
    • Facilitate viewing/identification respectfully and with preparation.
  • Challenges & Needs:
    • Vulnerable groups (children, elderly, prior trauma).
    • Cultural/religious rites and needs.
    • Managing media intrusion effectively.

⭐ Ambiguous loss (loss without closure, e.g., missing persons) is a significant complicating factor in DVI, prolonging grief and complicating bereavement.

  • Aim: Foster resilience, prevent complicated grief/PTSD, support long-term adjustment.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Provide clear, honest, and timely information to families.
  • Empathy, respect, and cultural sensitivity are crucial in all communications.
  • Anticipate varied grief reactions: shock, anger, guilt, prolonged sadness.
  • Avoid technical jargon, speculation, and false reassurance.
  • Sensitive facilitation of ante-mortem data collection and viewing processes.
  • Refer to specialized mental health services for ongoing support.
  • Ensure psychological debriefing for DVI personnel to prevent burnout_._

Practice Questions: Psychological Support for Families

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All are provisions of WHO mental health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP), except:

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Flashcards: Psychological Support for Families

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Victims of accident and suicide who are found dead at the scene and resuscitation is deemed pointless are classified under Category _____ of Modified Maastricht classification

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Victims of accident and suicide who are found dead at the scene and resuscitation is deemed pointless are classified under Category _____ of Modified Maastricht classification

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