Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Foundations of disaster psychiatry
- Part III Clinical care and interventions
- Part IV Special topics
- 11 Traumatic death in terrorism and disasters
- 12 Weapons of mass destruction and pandemics: global disasters with mass destruction and mass disruption
- 13 Workplace disaster preparedness and response
- 14 Healthcare systems planning
- Part V Public health and disaster psychiatry
- Index
- References
11 - Traumatic death in terrorism and disasters
from Part IV - Special topics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Foundations of disaster psychiatry
- Part III Clinical care and interventions
- Part IV Special topics
- 11 Traumatic death in terrorism and disasters
- 12 Weapons of mass destruction and pandemics: global disasters with mass destruction and mass disruption
- 13 Workplace disaster preparedness and response
- 14 Healthcare systems planning
- Part V Public health and disaster psychiatry
- Index
- References
Summary
Terrorism and disasters are not infrequent occurrences in the present-day world. Common to these events is the likelihood of violent death and the presence of human remains – burned, dismembered, mutilated, or relatively intact. Exposure to mass death as well as individual dead bodies is a disturbing and sometimes frightening event. The handling of the remains of the dead following combat, natural disasters, disasters of human origin, and terrorism, accidents, and other forms of traumatic death is known to cause distress. The nature of the stress of exposure to traumatic death and the dead and its relationship to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other post-traumatic psychiatric illnesses is not well understood (Breslau & Davis, 1987; Lindy et al., 1987; Rundell et al., 1989; Ursano, 1987; Ursano & McCarroll, 1990).
The tasks of body recovery, identification, transport, and burial may require prolonged as well as acute contact with mass death. Recent research has shown that victims, onlookers, and rescue workers are traumatized by the experience or expectation of confronting death in disaster situations (Dyregrov et al., 1996; Jones, 1985; Miles et al., 1984; Schwartz, 1984; Taylor & Frazer, 1982). Exposure to abusive violence (Laufer et al., 1984) and to the grotesque (Green et al., 1989) significantly contributes to the development of psychiatric symptoms in war veterans, particularly intrusive imagery (Clohessy & Ehlers, 1999; Laufer et al., 1985; Lifton, 1973).
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- Textbook of Disaster Psychiatry , pp. 227 - 246Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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