leading causes of disability in the world
DESCRIPTION
Leading Causes of Disability in the World. Conflict and Population Displacement. War Has Changed for Civilians. Psychological Trauma. Mental Results of Psychological Trauma. What to Assess? Issues. Advantages of Assessing Mental Illness. Disadvantages of Assessing Mental Illness. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
1
Mental Illness among
Trauma-Affected Populations
Paul Bolton MBBS DTMH MPH MS
Bloomberg School of Public Health
2
Section A
The Nature of Mental Illness
after Trauma
3
Leading Causes of Disabilityin the World
1990 2020
1 Lower resp infections 1 Ischaemic heart disease
2 Diarrhoeal diseases 2 Unipolar major depression
3 Perinatal conditions 3 Road traffic accidents
4 Unipolar major depression 4 Cerebrovascular disease
5 Ischaemic heart disease 5 COPD
6 Cerebrovascular disease 6 Lower resp infections
7 TB 7 TB
8 Measles 8 War injuries
9 Road traffic accidents 9 Diarrhoeal diseases
10 Congenital abnormalities 10 HIV
4
Conflict and PopulationDisplacement
Global mental health issues receiving most
attention are those due to conflict and
population displacement
5
War Has Changed for Civilians
Battle of Gettysburgmdashone civilian casualty
WW Imdash18 casualties civilian
WW IImdash60 casualties civilian
Currentlymdash90 casualties civilian
6
Psychological Trauma
Civilians now commonly experience
psychological trauma
7
Mental Results of PsychologicalTrauma
No effect
Sorrow anger hopeless etc but no
illness
Mental illness
ndash Directly caused by trauma
ndash Increased incidence of other mental
illnesses
8
What to Assess Issues
Importance
ndash Numbers affected
ndash Severity (suffering and dysfunction)
ndash Impact on community
Measurability
Assess problems requiring mental health
expertise
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
2
Section A
The Nature of Mental Illness
after Trauma
3
Leading Causes of Disabilityin the World
1990 2020
1 Lower resp infections 1 Ischaemic heart disease
2 Diarrhoeal diseases 2 Unipolar major depression
3 Perinatal conditions 3 Road traffic accidents
4 Unipolar major depression 4 Cerebrovascular disease
5 Ischaemic heart disease 5 COPD
6 Cerebrovascular disease 6 Lower resp infections
7 TB 7 TB
8 Measles 8 War injuries
9 Road traffic accidents 9 Diarrhoeal diseases
10 Congenital abnormalities 10 HIV
4
Conflict and PopulationDisplacement
Global mental health issues receiving most
attention are those due to conflict and
population displacement
5
War Has Changed for Civilians
Battle of Gettysburgmdashone civilian casualty
WW Imdash18 casualties civilian
WW IImdash60 casualties civilian
Currentlymdash90 casualties civilian
6
Psychological Trauma
Civilians now commonly experience
psychological trauma
7
Mental Results of PsychologicalTrauma
No effect
Sorrow anger hopeless etc but no
illness
Mental illness
ndash Directly caused by trauma
ndash Increased incidence of other mental
illnesses
8
What to Assess Issues
Importance
ndash Numbers affected
ndash Severity (suffering and dysfunction)
ndash Impact on community
Measurability
Assess problems requiring mental health
expertise
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
3
Leading Causes of Disabilityin the World
1990 2020
1 Lower resp infections 1 Ischaemic heart disease
2 Diarrhoeal diseases 2 Unipolar major depression
3 Perinatal conditions 3 Road traffic accidents
4 Unipolar major depression 4 Cerebrovascular disease
5 Ischaemic heart disease 5 COPD
6 Cerebrovascular disease 6 Lower resp infections
7 TB 7 TB
8 Measles 8 War injuries
9 Road traffic accidents 9 Diarrhoeal diseases
10 Congenital abnormalities 10 HIV
4
Conflict and PopulationDisplacement
Global mental health issues receiving most
attention are those due to conflict and
population displacement
5
War Has Changed for Civilians
Battle of Gettysburgmdashone civilian casualty
WW Imdash18 casualties civilian
WW IImdash60 casualties civilian
Currentlymdash90 casualties civilian
6
Psychological Trauma
Civilians now commonly experience
psychological trauma
7
Mental Results of PsychologicalTrauma
No effect
Sorrow anger hopeless etc but no
illness
Mental illness
ndash Directly caused by trauma
ndash Increased incidence of other mental
illnesses
8
What to Assess Issues
Importance
ndash Numbers affected
ndash Severity (suffering and dysfunction)
ndash Impact on community
Measurability
Assess problems requiring mental health
expertise
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
4
Conflict and PopulationDisplacement
Global mental health issues receiving most
attention are those due to conflict and
population displacement
5
War Has Changed for Civilians
Battle of Gettysburgmdashone civilian casualty
WW Imdash18 casualties civilian
WW IImdash60 casualties civilian
Currentlymdash90 casualties civilian
6
Psychological Trauma
Civilians now commonly experience
psychological trauma
7
Mental Results of PsychologicalTrauma
No effect
Sorrow anger hopeless etc but no
illness
Mental illness
ndash Directly caused by trauma
ndash Increased incidence of other mental
illnesses
8
What to Assess Issues
Importance
ndash Numbers affected
ndash Severity (suffering and dysfunction)
ndash Impact on community
Measurability
Assess problems requiring mental health
expertise
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
5
War Has Changed for Civilians
Battle of Gettysburgmdashone civilian casualty
WW Imdash18 casualties civilian
WW IImdash60 casualties civilian
Currentlymdash90 casualties civilian
6
Psychological Trauma
Civilians now commonly experience
psychological trauma
7
Mental Results of PsychologicalTrauma
No effect
Sorrow anger hopeless etc but no
illness
Mental illness
ndash Directly caused by trauma
ndash Increased incidence of other mental
illnesses
8
What to Assess Issues
Importance
ndash Numbers affected
ndash Severity (suffering and dysfunction)
ndash Impact on community
Measurability
Assess problems requiring mental health
expertise
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
6
Psychological Trauma
Civilians now commonly experience
psychological trauma
7
Mental Results of PsychologicalTrauma
No effect
Sorrow anger hopeless etc but no
illness
Mental illness
ndash Directly caused by trauma
ndash Increased incidence of other mental
illnesses
8
What to Assess Issues
Importance
ndash Numbers affected
ndash Severity (suffering and dysfunction)
ndash Impact on community
Measurability
Assess problems requiring mental health
expertise
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
7
Mental Results of PsychologicalTrauma
No effect
Sorrow anger hopeless etc but no
illness
Mental illness
ndash Directly caused by trauma
ndash Increased incidence of other mental
illnesses
8
What to Assess Issues
Importance
ndash Numbers affected
ndash Severity (suffering and dysfunction)
ndash Impact on community
Measurability
Assess problems requiring mental health
expertise
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
8
What to Assess Issues
Importance
ndash Numbers affected
ndash Severity (suffering and dysfunction)
ndash Impact on community
Measurability
Assess problems requiring mental health
expertise
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
9
Advantages of AssessingMental Illness
Trauma-induced mental disorders are
known to be common among refugees
Cause intense suffering and dysfunction
resulting in effects beyond individual
Have well-defined diagnostic criteria
Lessons learned in one population may be
applicable to others
Require specific mental health interventions
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
10
Disadvantages of AssessingMental Illness
Do these mental illnesses occur across
most cultures
ndash Evidence for some cultures
ndash Others
If so are there differences
May require focus on selected individuals
Lack of evidence for effective interventions
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
11
How Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Severe challenge to a personrsquos world view
Failure to adapt 1048774 mental illness
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
12
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Loss of normal coping mechanisms 1048774 loss
of sense of securitysafety
Unless effective coping mechanismssense
of security is restored the following are
permanently heightened
ndash Vigilance (anxiety disorders)
ndash Despair (mood disorders)
ndash Previous mental illnesses
Continued
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
13
Why Does Trauma CauseMental Illness
Capricious trauma increases likelihood of
mental illness
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
14
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Injurydisabilitydisfigurement
Tortureimprisonmentdeprivation
Witnessing atrocities and destruction
Living in contact with perpetrators
Living in contact with victims
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
15
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Sexual Violence
Common element of ethnic violence
Women and children
Used as a weaponstrategy
ndash Humiliates
ndash Bearing enemy children
ndash Destabilizes families and communities
Continued
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
16
Causes of Psychological Trauma Violence
Domestic violence
Secondary to drug and alcohol abuse
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
17
Causes of Psychological Trauma Losses
Loved ones and friends
Physical capacity
Home and social institutionssupport
Education job career finances
Independence identity
Loss of sense of security
Loss of a future
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
18
Causes of Psychological Trauma Threats
Threaten with violence or loss
Threat can be as damaging as the actuality
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
19
Mental Illnesses Resulting fromWar and Displacement
Anxiety disordersmdashespecially Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Mood disordersmdashespecially depression
Socialization to violence
Exacerbation of pre-existing disorders
ndash Psychoses
ndash Personality disorders
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
20
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder(PTSD)
Result of traumatic event
Disorder of heightened vigilance
Re-experience traumatic event
Increased arousal
Avoidance behavior
Numbing
Function affected
Lasts more than one month
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
21
Depression
Disorder of despair
Mood depressed
Loss of interestpleasure (tired of life)
Change in appetiteweight
Problems sleeping
Psychomotor agitationretardation and
fatigue
Continued
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
22
Depression
Feeling worthless or guilty
Difficulty thinking
Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
Function affected
Not due to bereavement or lasts more than
two months
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
23
Socialization to Violence
Disorder of abnormal coping mechanisms
Especially child soldiers
ndash Amoral behavior
ndash Loss of empathy sympathy
ndash Dehumanized social relationships
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
24
Which Disorder
Nature of trauma
ndash Violence and threats 1048774 PTSD
ndash Losses 1048774 depression
ndash Chronic violence from childhood 1048774
socialization
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
25
Section B
Interventions
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
26
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Reunification and family tracing
Work
Recreation
Buildrebuild infrastructure
Security
Reintegration (soldiers)
Continued
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
27
ldquoNon-PsychologicalrdquoInterventions
Spiritual support of religious leaders elders
Physical health services
Justice and accountability
Self-determination
Decent environment
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
28
Psychological Interventions
Psycho-education and psychotherapy
ldquoWork throughrdquo experiences
Assist local people to conduct their own
healing processes
Drugs
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
29
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Not much used (yet)
Need to adapt to local understanding of
illness
Discussion of triggering events (debriefing)
Normalization of illness
Reinterpretation of events
Continued
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
30
Psycho-Education andPsychotherapy
Individual or groupfamily therapy or activities
ndash Cognitive behavioral therapy
ndash Interpersonal psychotherapy
ndash Eye movement desensitization and
reprocessing
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
31
Working through Experiences
Talking therapies
ndash Story telling
Creative therapies
ndash Drawing collage
Play therapies
ndash Drama dance play
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
32
Facilitate Local Approaches
Healing treatments
Healing ceremonies
Acceptance procedures
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
33
Drugs
Not currently used
Currently no long term role
Short term anxiolyticssedatives may be
beneficial
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
34
Section C
Issues
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
35
Issues
Psychosocial vs psychiatric
Wellbeing model vs disease model
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
36
Evidence for Mental Illness
Most is based on Western instruments
Are Western concepts of illness applicable
across cultures
How to assess function
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
37
Guhahamuka
Failure to sleep dagger Mixed feelings and
thoughts in your head at
the same time daggerDespair hopelessness dagger
Anger
Failure to eat dagger Feeling extremely weak dagger
Failure to talk Absentmindedness
Loss of intelligence Too many thoughts dagger
Attempting suicide dagger Feeling worthless dagger
Confusion
Acting crazy
Feeling you would be better dead dagger
Easily startled Lack of concentration daggerContinued
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
38
GuhahamukaFeel you have a ldquocloudrdquo
within
Talking to anybody who
comes by about your pain
Chaos in the mind
(flashback)Feeling disconnected
Often falling sick
Keep dreaming of bad
experiences
Instability of the mind
Feeling like you are having
an epileptic episode
(collapse)Fleeing from people and
hiding
Lack of trust Acting without thinking
Feeling like fighting Having nightmares about fighting
Deep sadness that can lead to death dagger
Being quarrelsome
Excessive crying dagger
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
- Slide 9
- Slide 10
- Slide 11
- Slide 12
- Slide 13
- Slide 14
- Slide 15
- Slide 16
- Slide 17
- Slide 18
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- Slide 22
- Slide 23
- Slide 24
- Slide 25
- Slide 26
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- Slide 30
- Slide 31
- Slide 32
- Slide 33
- Slide 34
- Slide 35
- Slide 36
- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
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- Slide 45
-
39
Agahinda
Isolation Sadness dagger
Being displeased with your
living conditions situationLack of self care dagger
Loss of mind
Being very talkative Not pleased by anything dagger
Not caring to work dagger Inability to withstand
whatever happens to youDrunkenness
Feeling life is meaningless dagger
Committing suicide
Burying onersquos cheek in
hisher palm (hopeless) dagger
Donrsquot feel like talking Difficulty interacting with
others (poor relationships)Excessive alcohol drinking
causing crazy behavior
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
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-
40
Important Tasks in RuralRwanda
Men WomenWash Wash
Dress Dress
Advise the family Cook
Attend meetings Wash clothes
Socialize Clean house
Manual labor Care for children
Earn money Attend meetings
Socialize
Transmit culture
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
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- Slide 45
-
41
How to Distinguish Mental
Illness from a
Poor Environment
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
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- Slide 45
-
42
Little Evidence for Effectiveness
Impact of all post-disaster interventions
unproven
Impact of most disease-specific
interventions unknown in most developing
countries
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
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- Slide 37
- Slide 38
- Slide 39
- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
43
Recommendations
1 First focus on ldquonon-psychologicalrdquo
interventions while studying the
community (ethnographics)
2 Delay psych interventions until non-psych
interventions have been implemented
ndash Adapt psych instruments and
interventions to local situation
3 Assess for common major illness
Continued
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
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- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
44
Recommendations
4 Specific treatment with adapted psych
interventions
5 Assess impact of psych interventions
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
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- Slide 38
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- Slide 40
- Slide 41
- Slide 42
- Slide 43
- Slide 44
- Slide 45
-
45
Non-Mental Health Workers
What can a non-mental health person do
about trauma if they are working in an area
where this is happening
- Slide 1
- Slide 2
- Slide 3
- Slide 4
- Slide 5
- Slide 6
- Slide 7
- Slide 8
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-