“事实上,心理创伤比身体伤害更难:”对叙利亚冲突中卫生工作者的个人和职业生活受到的健康攻击影响的定性分析。

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Aula Abbara, Diana Rayes, Hannah Tappis, Mohamed Hamze, Reham Wais, Hesham Alahmad, Naser Almhawish, Leonard Rubenstein, Rohini Haar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

引言:武装冲突中对医疗保健的袭击对卫生工作者的个人和职业生活以及他们所服务的社区产生了深远影响。尽管如此,即使在叙利亚等旷日持久的冲突中,卫生工作者也可能选择留下来,尽管卫生设施一再遭到袭击,造成了复杂的创伤。这项研究探讨了这种对医疗保健的攻击对经历过这种攻击的当地卫生专业人员的中期和长期影响,目的是加强围绕这种影响的证据基础,并更好地支持它们。方法:对叙利亚西北部和东北部的卫生工作者进行有针对性的抽样;我们积极寻求采访非医生和女性卫生工作者,因为在类似的研究中,这些群体往往被忽视。深度访谈用阿拉伯语进行,并转录成英语进行框架分析。我们使用先验密码本来探索袭击对卫生工作者的短期和长期影响,并随着分析的进展纳入了紧急主题。结果:共有40名在2013年至2020年间经历过袭击的卫生工作者参加了IDI。13名是女性(32.5%)。包括医生、护士、助产士、药剂师、医疗保健专业学生和技术人员在内的各种卫生干部都有代表。他们主要驻扎在伊德利卜省(39.5%)和阿勒颇省(37.5%)。出现的主题涉及个人和职业影响以及应对机制。关键主题首先包括心理伤害,其次是袭击性质的影响,例如与袭击的“双击”性质有关的预期压力,以及与卫生工作者应对机制有关的机会。结论:叙利亚针对医疗保健的暴力行为对卫生工作者产生了深远而持久的影响,因为医疗保健机构遭到了无情和蓄意的袭击。他们不仅面临着为受冲突影响的人口提供护理的挑战,而且也是社区的一部分。他们在工作中也面临道德困境,导致道德困境和道德伤害。捐助者必须支持为叙利亚和类似情况下的卫生工作者提供心理社会支持的资金;重点必须放在支持和加强现有的针对具体情况的应对策略上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

"Actually, the psychological wounds are more difficult than physical injuries:" a qualitative analysis of the impacts of attacks on health on the personal and professional lives of health workers in the Syrian conflict.

"Actually, the psychological wounds are more difficult than physical injuries:" a qualitative analysis of the impacts of attacks on health on the personal and professional lives of health workers in the Syrian conflict.

Introduction: Attacks on healthcare in armed conflict have far-reaching impacts on the personal and professional lives of health workers, as well as the communities they serve. Despite this, even in protracted conflicts such as in Syria, health workers may choose to stay despite repeated attacks on health facilities, resulting in compounded traumas. This research explores the intermediate and long-term impacts of such attacks on healthcare on the local health professionals who have lived through them with the aim of strengthening the evidence base around such impacts and better supporting them.

Methods: We undertook purposive sampling of health workers in northwest and northeast Syria; we actively sought to interview non-physician and female health workers as these groups are often neglected in similar research. In-depth interviews (IDIs) were conducted in Arabic and transcribed into English for framework analysis. We used an a priori codebook to explore the short- and long-term impacts of attacks on the health workers and incorporated emergent themes as analysis progressed.

Results: A total of 40 health workers who had experienced attacks between 2013 and 2020 participated in IDIs. 13 were female (32.5%). Various health cadres including doctors, nurses, midwives, pharmacists, students in healthcare and technicians were represented. They were mainly based in Idlib (39.5%), and Aleppo (37.5%) governorates. Themes emerged related to personal and professional impacts as well as coping mechanisms. The key themes include firstly the psychological harms, second the impacts of the nature of the attacks e.g. anticipatory stress related to the 'double tap' nature of attacks as well as opportunities related to coping mechanisms among health workers.

Conclusion: Violence against healthcare in Syria has had profound and lasting impacts on the health workforce due to the relentless and intentional targeting of healthcare facilities. They not only face the challenges of providing care for a conflict-affected population but are also part of the community themselves. They also face ethical dilemmas in their work leading to moral distress and moral injury. Donors must support funding for psychosocial support for health workers in Syria and similar contexts; the focus must be on supporting and enhancing existing context-specific coping strategies.

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来源期刊
Conflict and Health
Conflict and Health Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
5.60%
发文量
57
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: Conflict and Health is a highly-accessed, open access journal providing a global platform to disseminate insightful and impactful studies documenting the public health impacts and responses related to armed conflict, humanitarian crises, and forced migration.
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