Mental Trauma in Injured War Refugees

Author(s):  
Uri Yatzkar ◽  
Lidia Isakson ◽  
Faras Issa
Keyword(s):  
2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. G. Tsikunov ◽  
A. G. Pshenichnaya ◽  
A. G. Kusov ◽  
N. N. Klyueva

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.V. Beznin ◽  
A.G. Pschenichnaya ◽  
A.G. Kusov ◽  
S.G. Tsikunov

Coronaviruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 01 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaurav Dhiman

: In this letter, the psychological impact of COVID-19 on cancer infected patients is discussed. Cancer is a serious health-related problem in the human body nowadays. The 2019 pandemic of coronavirus disease has developed into an unheard-of pandemic. Given the havoc wreaked by this pathogen worldwide, many countries have implemented a severe, legally enforced method of social distancing, in the form of a lockdown. Unless adequate preventive measures are taken, the cost of the pandemic and subsequent lockdown can prove to be irreparable. The obvious consequences of this lockout, such as the escalating levels of unemployment, imminent economic crisis, and extreme food scarcity faced by the sudden unemployed migrant labour population, have been widely reported. Cancer patients are a highly vulnerable group even during non-pandemic periods, often presenting late in the course of their illness, without the services required to avail recommended care. The incidence of psychological complications and emotional distress is considerably higher than in the general population, and the trauma of both the pandemic and subsequent lockdown contributes significantly to their mental trauma. This analysis is geared at solving the challenges faced by cancer patients in the face of this pandemic and subsequent lockdown, with a look at potential solutions that can be enforced.


Author(s):  
Ю.А. Бондарчук ◽  
О.В. Алексеева ◽  
И.И. Шахматов ◽  
Ю.Б. Лебедева ◽  
Е.Ю. Медведева

Введение. Психоэмоциональный стресс, связанный с риском для жизни и здоровья (витальный стресс), вызывает комплексную ответную реакцию всего организма. Система гемостаза, обеспечивающая жидкостные характеристики циркулирующей крови, играет существенную роль в формировании процессов адаптации или дезадаптации. Нарушения равновесия в процессах свертывания и противосвертывания вместе с изменениями микроциркуляции являются основой патогенеза острых и хронических заболеваний с развитием тромботических либо геморрагических осложнений. Цель исследования: оценить состояние системы гемостаза у крыс с разным уровнем двигательной активности после острой психогенной травмы в виде витального стресса. Материалы и методы. Исследования выполнены на 44 лабораторных половозрелых крысахсамцах линии Wistar, которые составили 2 экспериментальные группы с низкой (n 15) и высокой (n 15) двигательной активностью и контрольную группу интактных животных (n 14). Спонтанную двигательную активность оценивали с помощью теста открытое поле . В качестве острого психотравмирующего воздействия использовали модель психической травмы у крыс в виде витального стресса, вызванного переживанием гибели партнера от действий хищника. Результаты. Острое психотравмирующее воздействие у животных с низкой двигательной активностью вызывало угнетение агрегации тромбоцитов. В группе животных с высокой двигательной активностью была выявлена гиперкоагуляция по внешнему пути активации плазменного гемостаза, а также на конечных этапах коагуляции. В обеих экспериментальных группах наблюдали укорочение времени полимеризации фибринмономера, снижение уровня фибриногена, а также активности антитромбина III на фоне активации фибринолиза. Заключение. Изменения состояния системы гемостаза у крыс с разным уровнем двигательной активности после острого психоэмоционального стресса имели одинаковую направленность, но различную степень выраженности ответной реакции. Полученные результаты позволяют охарактеризовать однократное психоэмоциональное воздействие как не выходящее за рамки эустресса (по данным коагулограммы). Introduction. Psychoemotional stress associated with the risk to life and health (vital stress) causes a complex total body response. Hemostasis supports fluid characteristics of circulating blood and plays a significant role in the formation of adaptation or disadaptation processes. Imbalance in the processes of coagulation and anticoagulation with microcirculation changes are the basis of pathogenesis of acute and chronic diseases with the development of thrombotic or hemorrhagic complications. Aim: to assess hemostasis state in rats with different levels of motor activity after acute psychogenic trauma (vital stress). Materials and methods. The studies were performed on 44 laboratory matured Wistar male rats that were divided into 2 experimental groups with low (n 15) and high (n 15) motor activity and a control group of intact animals (n 14). Spontaneous motor activity was assessed using the open field test. A model of mental trauma was used for the formation of acute psychotraumatic effect in rats in the form of vital stress caused by the experience of partner death from a predator. Results. Acute psychotraumatic effect in animals with low motor activity caused inhibition of platelet aggregation. In animals with high motor activity, hypercoagulation was revealed in the external pathway of plasma hemostasis activation, as well as at the final stages of coagulation. Shortening of fibrin monomer polymerization time, decreasing of fibrinogen level and antithrombin III activity with fibrinolysis activation were observed in both experimental groups. Conclusion. After acute psychoemotional stress hemostasis changes in rats with different levels of motor activity had the same direction, but different intensity of response. The obtained results allow to characterize a single psychoemotional effect as not exceeding the limits of eustress (according to the coagulogram data).


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (02) ◽  
pp. 133-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajesh Yadav ◽  
Dundaiah Somashekar ◽  
Samir V. Sodha ◽  
Kayla F. Laserson ◽  
Srinivasa Venkatesh ◽  
...  

AbstractObjectivesTorrential rainfall and flooding from September 2-6, 2014 submerged >350 villages in Jammu and Kashmir state. We conducted rapid needs assessment in capital Srinagar from 27 September to 1 October to assess population health and safety needs.MethodsBased on Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER) methodology, we selected 7 households each from 30 census blocks using 2-stage cluster sampling. We collected information on demographics, needs, and illnesses using structured questionnaire.ResultsOf the 210 households surveyed, an estimated 57% (CI: 41%-73%) reported significant damage, 50% (CI: 36%-63%) were evacuated, and 16% (CI: 10%-22%) reported injuries. Households lacked electricity (22%; CI: 8.8%-36%), tap water (13%; CI: 5%-21%), working toilets (11%; CI: 4%-19%), and adequate food supply (14%; CI: 8%-20%). Moreover, 55% (CI: 45%-64%) of households reported cough, cold, fever, rashes, or diarrhea; 68% (CI: 59%-77%) experienced agitation, anxiety, depression, or nightmares since the flooding. Of the households with a member on medicines for non-communicable diseases, 40% did not have a week’s supply. Restoring basic essentials (30%; CI: 22%-37%) and repairing houses (30%; CI: 19%-40%) were the most urgent needs expressed.ConclusionsFloods damaged >1/2 of households in Srinagar, disrupting basic essentials, and causing mental trauma. These findings helped authorities prioritize assistance with psychological symptoms and availability of prescription medicines. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2019;13:133–137)


Author(s):  
Maria Cecília de Souza Minayo ◽  
Saul Franco

Violence is a problem that accompanies the trajectory of humanity, but it presents itself in different ways in each society and throughout its historical development. Despite having different meanings according to the field of knowledge from which it is addressed and the institutions that tackle it, there are some common elements in the definition of this phenomenon. It is acknowledged as the intentional use of force and power by individuals, groups, classes, or countries to impose themselves on others, causing harm and limiting or denying rights. Its most frequent and visible forms include homicides, suicides, war, and terrorism, but violence is also articulated and manifested in less visible forms, such as gender violence, domestic violence, and enforced disappearances. Although attention to the consequences of different forms of violence has always been part of health services, its formal and global inclusion in health sector policies and guidelines is very recent. It was only in 1996 that the World Health Organization acknowledged it as a priority in the health programs of all countries. Violence affects individual and collective health; causes deaths, injuries, and physical and mental trauma; decreases the quality of life; and impairs the well-being of people, communities, and nations. At the same time, violence poses problems for health researchers trying to understand the complexity of its causes, its dynamics, and the different ways of dealing with it. It also poses serious challenges to health systems and services for the care of victims and perpetrators and the formulation of interdisciplinary, multi-professional, inter-sectoral, and socially articulated confrontation and prevention policies and programs.


2009 ◽  
Vol 24 (S1) ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
C. Bastos ◽  
C.L. Maia Coelho

Two fundamental aspects of cultural intuitive conceptions of time's passage - cyclic and continuous temporality - are here related to clinical psychopathology of post-traumatic stress in Brazil. People with predominantly cyclical cultural perceptions of time tend to see life and death as part of an eternal movement. Severity and persistence of mental trauma are not directly related to the magnitude of the catastrophe or even of the traumatic experience, but rather to the way they pervade the mind and to the roles they represent on it. Modern culture tends to produce individuals prepared to a highly complex world, running in a frantic rhythm and under constant pressure. Nearly all events must be anticipated, planned or controlled, and obsessive traits tend to be facilitated. However, in catastrophic, unpredictable events, when nothing can be done, these full-schedule people may show frailty and despair.Traditional communities seem capable to bear extremely high levels of aggression or suffering - in traumatic and catastrophic situations - without showing proportional signs of mental stress. While in the high social layers of modern communities an act of violence as an assault or rape may have serious and long lasting consequences, in everyday public hospital practice we come across victims of potentially traumatic events without any of the expected devastating effects on their mental life. Periodic dissociative rituals may have a role in their resilience.


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