Major Incidents, Pandemics and Mental Health (eBook, ePUB)
The Psychosocial Aspects of Health Emergencies, Incidents, Disasters and Disease Outbreaks
Redaktion: Williams, Richard; Drury, John; Healing, Tim; Porter, Keith; Kemp, Verity
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Major Incidents, Pandemics and Mental Health (eBook, ePUB)
The Psychosocial Aspects of Health Emergencies, Incidents, Disasters and Disease Outbreaks
Redaktion: Williams, Richard; Drury, John; Healing, Tim; Porter, Keith; Kemp, Verity
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009022156
- Artikelnr.: 70909292
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Section 1. The Nature and Impacts of 21st Century Healthcare Emergencies:
1. Emergencies, incidents, disasters, disease outbreaks and mental health:
the scope of this book Professor Richard Williams; 2. How the world views
trauma and trauma care Professor Julian Redhead; 3. How the world views the
mental health implications of traumatic events, major incidents and serious
contagious diseases Professor John Lord Alderdice; 4. Two personal
perspectives on trauma and recovery Toni Wallace and Tom Renninson; 5. How
emergencies, incidents, disasters and disease outbreaks affect people and
healthcare practitioners Dr John Stancombe, Dr Suzy Stokes, Dr Andy Wood
and Professor Richard Williams; 6. The impact of emergencies, terrorism and
disease on children and their families Professor Prathiba Chitsabesan, Dr
Brian Jacobs and Dr Raphael Kelvin; 7. The impacts of urbanising the
world's population on emergencies, incidents, disasters and disease
outbreaks Dr Tim Healing; 8. Myths about disasters Professor David E.
Alexander; 9. Primary and secondary stressors: the ways in which traumatic
events are stressful Professor Richard Williams, Dr Evangelos Ntontis,
Professor John Drury, Dr Khalifah Alfadhli and Professor Richard Amlôt; 10.
The differing challenges posed by big bang, rising tide and longer-term
incidents affecting local and dispersed populations Professor Chris Brewin,
Dr Kate Allsopp, Dr Talya Greene and Professor Richard Williams; 11. Mental
health impacts of multiple disaster exposures Professor Claire Leppold and
Dr Lennart Reifels; 12. The common ground in the mental health impacts of
emergencies, incidents, disasters, disease outbreaks and conflict and a
framework for responding to people's needs Professor Richard Williams, Dr
John Stancombe and Professor James Ryan; Section 2. Clinical Aspects of
Traumatic Injuries, Epidemics and Pandemics: 13. Advances in pre-hospital
care Professor Sir Keith Porter and Mr Emir Battaloglu; 14. The changing
face of clinical medicine in major trauma: lessons from civilian practice
and military deployments Miss J. J. Lee and Professor Sir Keith Porter; 15.
The changing face of traumatic injury: increasing experiences of
penetrating gun and knife injuries and their treatment Mr Tom Konig; 16.
Lessons from history and the epidemiology of severe epidemics and
pandemics: plague, cholera, influenza, viral haemorrhagic fevers, and
coronaviruses Dr Tim Healing; 17. The health aspects of epidemics and
pandemics Group Captain Andy Green and Dr Sharon Irvine; 18. Challenges in
managing epidemics and pandemics illustrated by Ebola and covid-19: a case
study perspective Dr Claire Bayntun; Section 3. The Role of the Public in
Emergencies: Survivors, Bystanders and 'Volunteers': 19. The role of the
public understanding of group processes in emergencies, incidents,
disasters and disease outbreaks Professor John Drury; 20. Social identity
and traumatic stress in the context of an earthquake and a pandemic:
understanding the roles of shared and isolating social experiences
Professor Orla Muldoon; 21. Mobilisation and deterioration of social
support following disasters resulting from natural and human-induced
hazards Professor Krzysztof Kaniasty and Beata Urbäska; 22. Collective
responses to terrorist attacks Dr Chris Cocking and Dr Anne Templeton; 23.
Collective psychosocial resilience as a group process following flooding:
how it arises and how groups can sustain it Dr Evangelos Ntontis and Dr
Meng Zhang; 24. Facilitating the public response to covid-19: mutual aid
and group processes Professor John Drury, Dr Evangelos Ntontis, Dr Maria
Fernandes-Jesus and Guanlan Mao; 25. The social psychology of mass casualty
decontamination in CBRN incidents Dr Holly Carter, Dr Charles Symons, Dr
Dale Weston and Professor Richard Amlôt; 26. Factors that determine wider
solidarity responses after a major incide
1. Emergencies, incidents, disasters, disease outbreaks and mental health:
the scope of this book Professor Richard Williams; 2. How the world views
trauma and trauma care Professor Julian Redhead; 3. How the world views the
mental health implications of traumatic events, major incidents and serious
contagious diseases Professor John Lord Alderdice; 4. Two personal
perspectives on trauma and recovery Toni Wallace and Tom Renninson; 5. How
emergencies, incidents, disasters and disease outbreaks affect people and
healthcare practitioners Dr John Stancombe, Dr Suzy Stokes, Dr Andy Wood
and Professor Richard Williams; 6. The impact of emergencies, terrorism and
disease on children and their families Professor Prathiba Chitsabesan, Dr
Brian Jacobs and Dr Raphael Kelvin; 7. The impacts of urbanising the
world's population on emergencies, incidents, disasters and disease
outbreaks Dr Tim Healing; 8. Myths about disasters Professor David E.
Alexander; 9. Primary and secondary stressors: the ways in which traumatic
events are stressful Professor Richard Williams, Dr Evangelos Ntontis,
Professor John Drury, Dr Khalifah Alfadhli and Professor Richard Amlôt; 10.
The differing challenges posed by big bang, rising tide and longer-term
incidents affecting local and dispersed populations Professor Chris Brewin,
Dr Kate Allsopp, Dr Talya Greene and Professor Richard Williams; 11. Mental
health impacts of multiple disaster exposures Professor Claire Leppold and
Dr Lennart Reifels; 12. The common ground in the mental health impacts of
emergencies, incidents, disasters, disease outbreaks and conflict and a
framework for responding to people's needs Professor Richard Williams, Dr
John Stancombe and Professor James Ryan; Section 2. Clinical Aspects of
Traumatic Injuries, Epidemics and Pandemics: 13. Advances in pre-hospital
care Professor Sir Keith Porter and Mr Emir Battaloglu; 14. The changing
face of clinical medicine in major trauma: lessons from civilian practice
and military deployments Miss J. J. Lee and Professor Sir Keith Porter; 15.
The changing face of traumatic injury: increasing experiences of
penetrating gun and knife injuries and their treatment Mr Tom Konig; 16.
Lessons from history and the epidemiology of severe epidemics and
pandemics: plague, cholera, influenza, viral haemorrhagic fevers, and
coronaviruses Dr Tim Healing; 17. The health aspects of epidemics and
pandemics Group Captain Andy Green and Dr Sharon Irvine; 18. Challenges in
managing epidemics and pandemics illustrated by Ebola and covid-19: a case
study perspective Dr Claire Bayntun; Section 3. The Role of the Public in
Emergencies: Survivors, Bystanders and 'Volunteers': 19. The role of the
public understanding of group processes in emergencies, incidents,
disasters and disease outbreaks Professor John Drury; 20. Social identity
and traumatic stress in the context of an earthquake and a pandemic:
understanding the roles of shared and isolating social experiences
Professor Orla Muldoon; 21. Mobilisation and deterioration of social
support following disasters resulting from natural and human-induced
hazards Professor Krzysztof Kaniasty and Beata Urbäska; 22. Collective
responses to terrorist attacks Dr Chris Cocking and Dr Anne Templeton; 23.
Collective psychosocial resilience as a group process following flooding:
how it arises and how groups can sustain it Dr Evangelos Ntontis and Dr
Meng Zhang; 24. Facilitating the public response to covid-19: mutual aid
and group processes Professor John Drury, Dr Evangelos Ntontis, Dr Maria
Fernandes-Jesus and Guanlan Mao; 25. The social psychology of mass casualty
decontamination in CBRN incidents Dr Holly Carter, Dr Charles Symons, Dr
Dale Weston and Professor Richard Amlôt; 26. Factors that determine wider
solidarity responses after a major incide
Section 1. The Nature and Impacts of 21st Century Healthcare Emergencies:
1. Emergencies, incidents, disasters, disease outbreaks and mental health:
the scope of this book Professor Richard Williams; 2. How the world views
trauma and trauma care Professor Julian Redhead; 3. How the world views the
mental health implications of traumatic events, major incidents and serious
contagious diseases Professor John Lord Alderdice; 4. Two personal
perspectives on trauma and recovery Toni Wallace and Tom Renninson; 5. How
emergencies, incidents, disasters and disease outbreaks affect people and
healthcare practitioners Dr John Stancombe, Dr Suzy Stokes, Dr Andy Wood
and Professor Richard Williams; 6. The impact of emergencies, terrorism and
disease on children and their families Professor Prathiba Chitsabesan, Dr
Brian Jacobs and Dr Raphael Kelvin; 7. The impacts of urbanising the
world's population on emergencies, incidents, disasters and disease
outbreaks Dr Tim Healing; 8. Myths about disasters Professor David E.
Alexander; 9. Primary and secondary stressors: the ways in which traumatic
events are stressful Professor Richard Williams, Dr Evangelos Ntontis,
Professor John Drury, Dr Khalifah Alfadhli and Professor Richard Amlôt; 10.
The differing challenges posed by big bang, rising tide and longer-term
incidents affecting local and dispersed populations Professor Chris Brewin,
Dr Kate Allsopp, Dr Talya Greene and Professor Richard Williams; 11. Mental
health impacts of multiple disaster exposures Professor Claire Leppold and
Dr Lennart Reifels; 12. The common ground in the mental health impacts of
emergencies, incidents, disasters, disease outbreaks and conflict and a
framework for responding to people's needs Professor Richard Williams, Dr
John Stancombe and Professor James Ryan; Section 2. Clinical Aspects of
Traumatic Injuries, Epidemics and Pandemics: 13. Advances in pre-hospital
care Professor Sir Keith Porter and Mr Emir Battaloglu; 14. The changing
face of clinical medicine in major trauma: lessons from civilian practice
and military deployments Miss J. J. Lee and Professor Sir Keith Porter; 15.
The changing face of traumatic injury: increasing experiences of
penetrating gun and knife injuries and their treatment Mr Tom Konig; 16.
Lessons from history and the epidemiology of severe epidemics and
pandemics: plague, cholera, influenza, viral haemorrhagic fevers, and
coronaviruses Dr Tim Healing; 17. The health aspects of epidemics and
pandemics Group Captain Andy Green and Dr Sharon Irvine; 18. Challenges in
managing epidemics and pandemics illustrated by Ebola and covid-19: a case
study perspective Dr Claire Bayntun; Section 3. The Role of the Public in
Emergencies: Survivors, Bystanders and 'Volunteers': 19. The role of the
public understanding of group processes in emergencies, incidents,
disasters and disease outbreaks Professor John Drury; 20. Social identity
and traumatic stress in the context of an earthquake and a pandemic:
understanding the roles of shared and isolating social experiences
Professor Orla Muldoon; 21. Mobilisation and deterioration of social
support following disasters resulting from natural and human-induced
hazards Professor Krzysztof Kaniasty and Beata Urbäska; 22. Collective
responses to terrorist attacks Dr Chris Cocking and Dr Anne Templeton; 23.
Collective psychosocial resilience as a group process following flooding:
how it arises and how groups can sustain it Dr Evangelos Ntontis and Dr
Meng Zhang; 24. Facilitating the public response to covid-19: mutual aid
and group processes Professor John Drury, Dr Evangelos Ntontis, Dr Maria
Fernandes-Jesus and Guanlan Mao; 25. The social psychology of mass casualty
decontamination in CBRN incidents Dr Holly Carter, Dr Charles Symons, Dr
Dale Weston and Professor Richard Amlôt; 26. Factors that determine wider
solidarity responses after a major incide
1. Emergencies, incidents, disasters, disease outbreaks and mental health:
the scope of this book Professor Richard Williams; 2. How the world views
trauma and trauma care Professor Julian Redhead; 3. How the world views the
mental health implications of traumatic events, major incidents and serious
contagious diseases Professor John Lord Alderdice; 4. Two personal
perspectives on trauma and recovery Toni Wallace and Tom Renninson; 5. How
emergencies, incidents, disasters and disease outbreaks affect people and
healthcare practitioners Dr John Stancombe, Dr Suzy Stokes, Dr Andy Wood
and Professor Richard Williams; 6. The impact of emergencies, terrorism and
disease on children and their families Professor Prathiba Chitsabesan, Dr
Brian Jacobs and Dr Raphael Kelvin; 7. The impacts of urbanising the
world's population on emergencies, incidents, disasters and disease
outbreaks Dr Tim Healing; 8. Myths about disasters Professor David E.
Alexander; 9. Primary and secondary stressors: the ways in which traumatic
events are stressful Professor Richard Williams, Dr Evangelos Ntontis,
Professor John Drury, Dr Khalifah Alfadhli and Professor Richard Amlôt; 10.
The differing challenges posed by big bang, rising tide and longer-term
incidents affecting local and dispersed populations Professor Chris Brewin,
Dr Kate Allsopp, Dr Talya Greene and Professor Richard Williams; 11. Mental
health impacts of multiple disaster exposures Professor Claire Leppold and
Dr Lennart Reifels; 12. The common ground in the mental health impacts of
emergencies, incidents, disasters, disease outbreaks and conflict and a
framework for responding to people's needs Professor Richard Williams, Dr
John Stancombe and Professor James Ryan; Section 2. Clinical Aspects of
Traumatic Injuries, Epidemics and Pandemics: 13. Advances in pre-hospital
care Professor Sir Keith Porter and Mr Emir Battaloglu; 14. The changing
face of clinical medicine in major trauma: lessons from civilian practice
and military deployments Miss J. J. Lee and Professor Sir Keith Porter; 15.
The changing face of traumatic injury: increasing experiences of
penetrating gun and knife injuries and their treatment Mr Tom Konig; 16.
Lessons from history and the epidemiology of severe epidemics and
pandemics: plague, cholera, influenza, viral haemorrhagic fevers, and
coronaviruses Dr Tim Healing; 17. The health aspects of epidemics and
pandemics Group Captain Andy Green and Dr Sharon Irvine; 18. Challenges in
managing epidemics and pandemics illustrated by Ebola and covid-19: a case
study perspective Dr Claire Bayntun; Section 3. The Role of the Public in
Emergencies: Survivors, Bystanders and 'Volunteers': 19. The role of the
public understanding of group processes in emergencies, incidents,
disasters and disease outbreaks Professor John Drury; 20. Social identity
and traumatic stress in the context of an earthquake and a pandemic:
understanding the roles of shared and isolating social experiences
Professor Orla Muldoon; 21. Mobilisation and deterioration of social
support following disasters resulting from natural and human-induced
hazards Professor Krzysztof Kaniasty and Beata Urbäska; 22. Collective
responses to terrorist attacks Dr Chris Cocking and Dr Anne Templeton; 23.
Collective psychosocial resilience as a group process following flooding:
how it arises and how groups can sustain it Dr Evangelos Ntontis and Dr
Meng Zhang; 24. Facilitating the public response to covid-19: mutual aid
and group processes Professor John Drury, Dr Evangelos Ntontis, Dr Maria
Fernandes-Jesus and Guanlan Mao; 25. The social psychology of mass casualty
decontamination in CBRN incidents Dr Holly Carter, Dr Charles Symons, Dr
Dale Weston and Professor Richard Amlôt; 26. Factors that determine wider
solidarity responses after a major incide