乌克兰平民的心理急救:基于电话的国际志愿者干预的协议和反思。

IF 3.2 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Frontiers in digital health Pub Date : 2025-04-14 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fdgth.2025.1539189
Yanina Shraga, Helen Pushkarskaya, Orly Sarid
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引用次数: 0

摘要

非正式的精神保健团体经常提供电话和文字干预,以支持受自然灾害和人为灾害影响的社区。这些团体在正式法规之外运作,提供灵活和创新的护理;记录他们的实践对于评估服务质量至关重要。本文提出了一个国际,非正式的心理急救(PFA)电话为基础的倡议协议和一个反思的帐户从志愿治疗师。该倡议旨在通过危机干预和复原力建设,支持受俄乌战争影响的乌克兰平民。在PFA原则、理论急救模型和循证实践的指导下,电话干预的重点是减少痛苦、提供道德支持和恢复功能。一名会说俄语的治疗师帮助了34名乌克兰平民,主要是治疗急性压力、焦虑和恐慌发作。本研究采用自我民族志方法,结合治疗师的回顾反思、文化背景和专业学习来检验危机情境下PFA的实施。接受以电话为基础的PFA的人报告说,他们的痛苦减少了,应对策略也增强了,这表明了有效性。该倡议的三年延续说明了它的可持续性。治疗师的反思强调了专业准备、共同的语言和文化背景以及提供有效支持的目的感的重要性。尽管缺乏标准化措施以及潜在的自我选择和志愿者偏见等局限性,但本研究证明了通过非正式国际团体向平民提供远程心理急救的可行性。批判性地评估这些非正式组织所采用的做法对于了解其有效性、改进未来的实施以及共同创造危机干预和支持服务的最佳做法至关重要,这些危机干预和支持服务采用“无地址关怀”模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Psychological first aid for Ukrainian civilians: protocol and reflections on a volunteer international phone-based intervention.

Informal mental healthcare groups often provide telephonic and text-based interventions to support communities affected by natural and man-made disasters. Operating outside formal regulations, these groups offer flexible and innovative care; documenting their practices is crucial for evaluating service quality. This paper presents a protocol of an international, informal Psychological First Aid (PFA) telephone-based initiative and a reflective account from a volunteering therapist. The initiative aimed to support Ukrainian civilians affected by the Russian-Ukrainian war through crisis intervention and resilience-building. Guided by PFA principles, theoretical first aid models, and evidence-based practices, the telephone interventions focused on reducing distress, providing moral support, and restoring functioning. A Russian-speaking therapist assisted 34 Ukrainian civilians, primarily addressing acute stress, anxiety, and panic attacks. Using an autoethnographic approach, this study integrates the therapist's retrospective reflections, cultural context, and professional learning to examine PFA implementation in a crisis setting. Individuals who received telephone-based PFA reported decreased distress and enhanced coping strategies, suggesting effectiveness. The initiative's three-year continuation illustrates its sustainability. The therapist's reflections highlight the importance of professional preparation, shared linguistic and cultural backgrounds, and a sense of purpose in delivering effective support. While limitations include the absence of standardized measures and potential self-selection and volunteer biases, this study demonstrates the feasibility of providing remote psychological first aid to civilians through informal international groups. Critically evaluating practices adopted by these informal organizations is essential for understanding their effectiveness, improving future implementation, and co-creating best practices for crisis intervention and support services that embrace "Care Without Address" models.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
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审稿时长
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