| Literature DB >> 32267343 |
Felipe Ornell1,2,3, Jaqueline B Schuch1,2, Anne O Sordi1, Felix Henrique Paim Kessler1,2.
Abstract
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32267343 PMCID: PMC7236170 DOI: 10.1590/1516-4446-2020-0008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Braz J Psychiatry ISSN: 1516-4446 Impact factor: 2.697
Box 1 Mental health recommendations during pandemics and large-scale disasters
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| - Encourage the participation of multidisciplinary mental health teams at national, state and municipal levels | - Provide official channels for updated information to the public |
| - Training in stress management, trauma, depression and risk behavior protocols | - Provide alternative service channels (apps, websites, telephone); |
| - Standardize psychotropic medications and make them available | - Monitor and rebut fake news |
| - Ensure adequate resources and infrastructure for mental health services | - Continuously encourage scientific research |
| - Ensure that clinical and mental health care are accessible to the population | - Consider and respect cultural factors in the implementation of public policies |
| - Develop psychoeducational materials that are easily accessible to the population | - Collect epidemiological data that can support future prevention and mental health care policies |
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| - Take care of yourself and others, keeping in touch with friends and family and finding time for leisure activities | - Limit exposure to pandemic-related news, since too much information can trigger anxiety disorders |
| - Follow WHO and government health agency recommendations | - Tell someone when you experience symptoms of sadness or anxiety |
| - Pay attention to your own needs, feelings and thoughts | - Assist, as much as possible, people in risk groups |
| - Limit physical contact with other people while avoiding emotional distance | - Share contamination prevention information and instructions |
| - Monitor dysphoric mental states such as irritability and aggression | - Understand that stress and fear are normal in unknown situations |
| - Develop a feeling of belonging to the collective care process | - Avoid confusing the solitude of preventive confinement with abandonment, rejection or helplessness |
| - Consider the collective impact of your actions | - Establish a support network (even if it is a virtual one) |
| - Consider the impact of social actions on stopping or decelerating the disease | - Do not discriminate or blame groups or individuals for the contamination process |
| - Do not disseminate information from unofficial sources | - Maintain adequate sleep, nutrition and exercise patterns |
| - Practice meditation (mindfulness) | |
| - Maintain normal use of prescription medications | - Use positive psychiatry/psychology techniques |
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| - Establish a contingency plan and strategies for dealing with more serious psychiatric symptoms | |
| - Establish a relationship of transparency and trust with employees that prioritizes equity and well-being | |
| - Ensure adequate training for teams and provide support or supervision, which can be done in group settings | |
| - Provide quality clinical and psychological assistance for teams exposed to risk situations | |
| - Maintain an empathetic and flexible posture when facing the fears, stress and changes in routine common to such situations | |
| - Ensure mental health care for the family members of people who may be affected by the pathogen | |
| - Inform everyone that feelings such as fear, anxiety and sadness are normal at times like this and guide those who are seeking help whenever necessary | |
| - Ensure a healthy climate of communication and collaboration between professionals and teams, in addition to providing expert intervention in interpersonal problems that may arise | |
| - Constantly value the work of those who are exposing themselves to risk for the social good | |