LEADER 00000cam 2200000 a 4500 001 ocn613425283 003 OCoLC 005 20120801112129.0 008 120425t20122012flu b 001 0 eng 010 2012008932 016 7 015762600|2Uk 016 7 101586680|2DNLM 020 9781439821237|qhardback 020 1439821232|qhardback 035 (OCoLC)613425283 035 (OCoLC)613425283 035 (OCoLC)613425283 040 DLC|beng|cDLC|dYDX|dBTCTA|dYDXCP|dUKMGB|dCDX|dOCLCO|dNLM |dSTJ 042 pcc 049 STJJ 050 00 RA645.5|b.B44 2012 060 00 2012 E-833 060 10 WA 295 082 00 363.34|223 084 MED105000|aPOL017000|aPOL028000|2bisacsh 092 363.34|bB419B 245 00 Behavioral health response to disasters /|cedited by Julie Framingham, Martell L. Teasley. 264 1 Boca Raton, FL :|bCRC Press,|c[2012] 264 4 |c©2012 300 xxxi, 409 pages ;|c26 cm 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent 337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia 338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier 504 Includes bibliographical references and index. 505 0 Past disaster experiences and behavioral health outcomes / Richard Salkowe -- Disaster behavioral health outreach : a nontraditional approach to assisting survivors / Julie L. Framingham -- Governmental roles and responsibilities in disaster behavioral health response and recovery / Richard Salkowe and Julie L. Framingham -- Nongovernmental organizations responding to disasters in the United States / Angela. M. Eikenberry and Tracy Cooper -- Disaster mental health : a public health paradigm / Anthony T. Ng and Jeannie Straussman -- Coping with loss and overcoming trauma / Michael J. Zakour -- Mental health outcomes of disasters and terrorism / Patricia Santucci -- Disaster behavioral health for children and adolescents : best practices for preparedness, response, and recovery : Melissa J. Brymer, Gilbert Reyes, and Alan M. Steinberg -- Disaster behavioral health and older adults : American and Canadian readiness and response / Lisa M. Brown, Maggie Gibson, and Diane L. Elmore -- Cultural competence in behavioral health disaster response : the challenge, the opportunity / Kermit A. Crawford, Mari C. Bennasar, and Lauren M. B. Mizock -- Helping the helpers : ameliorating secondary traumatic stress in disaster workers / April Naturale and Mary L. Pulido -- Understanding climatic, geographic, and topographic considerations for assessing disaster vulnerability / John C. Pine -- 505 0 Disaster vulnerability and the school setting : understanding environmental risk and implications for behavioral health response -- Martell L. Teasley -- Issues in providing mental and medical health care in long-term care settings during disasters / David Dosa, Kathryn Hyer, and Lisa M. Brown -- Delivery of behavioral health services in general population shelters / Brenda D. Phillips [et al.] -- Initial behavioral health response : the conundrums of a state crisis counseling program / Julie L. Framingham -- Long-term mental health treatment for adult disaster survivors / Jessica L. Hamblen, Erin Barnett, and Fran H. Norris -- Disaster and substance abuse services / Dee S. Owens, Brian McKernan, and Julie L. Framingham -- Understanding disaster recovery case management and behavioral health : a review of research / Martell L. Teasley -- Disaster behavioral health services : implementation, training, and sustainability / Bruce H. Young and Josef I. Ruzek -- The role of social marketing in developing disaster behavioral health programs / Lisa M. Brown, Christine Haley, and Carol Bryant -- Planning for disaster : a behavioral health perspective / Raymond Runo and Julie L. Framingham 520 "Foreword Behavioral Health Response to Disasters Disaster behavioral health has come a long way in a short amount of time. The book you hold in your hands (or perhaps view on your Kindle e-reader) encompasses an array of topics almost unimaginable even 25 years ago. It covers the roles and responsibilities of government and nongovernmental organizations and the integration of behavioral health into public health preparedness and response. There are separate chapters on children, adolescents, older adults, and racially and ethnically diverse populations. Other chapters address secondary trauma in disaster workers and assessing local disaster vulnerability. The list goes on, including dealing with school systems, long-term care, behavioral health in shelters, treatment for disaster survivors, disaster substance abuse services, culturally competent case management, response team training, and building community resilience. A simple perusal of the table of contents serves as an illustration of the way that attention to disaster behavioral health has grown exponentially in research, policy, and practice communities. It was not always so. When I began graduate training in the mid 1980s, to my knowledge disaster mental health was not part of any graduate school curriculum. A small subset of clinical psychologists and other mental health professionals had some training in crisis mental health, but it was optional, and it carried a different and much more specifi c meaning. Crisis mental health in those days typically meant: (1) working with people who were in acute crisis, (2) working with victims of extreme circumstances using models derived from the military and trauma research, and/or (3) community crisis intervention" --Provided by publisher. 650 0 Disaster medicine. 650 0 Emergency management|xPsychological aspects. 650 0 Disasters|xPsychological aspects. 650 0 Medical policy. 650 12 Disaster Medicine|xmethods. 650 22 Disaster Planning|xmethods. 650 22 Mental Health Services|xorganization & administration. 650 22 Stress, Psychological|xprevention & control. 700 1 Framingham, Julie. 700 1 Teasley, Martell L. 938 Coutts Information Services|bCOUT|n17085569 994 01|bSTJ
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