| Literature DB >> 36035619 |
Min Hyung Lee1, Josh Raitt1,2, Barry A Hong3, Alexandra Diduck4, Anna Marie Thi Thanh Nguyen5, Ariel Villareal4, Michaela Moden6, Brittany Turner1, Carol S North1,2, David E Pollio7.
Abstract
Survivors of disasters can be expected to form meaningful perspectives on their experiences that shape their trajectories of recovery; thus, these perspectives are important to study. If humans are naturally compelled to create meaning from traumatic experiences, the creation of meaning should be evident in survivors' discussion of the effects of the disaster in their lives. Therefore, the purpose of this study of highly trauma-exposed disaster survivors was to identify meaningful aspects or outcomes of their disaster experiences in their perspectives. This study examined a random sample (N=182) of survivors of the Oklahoma City bombing six months after the disaster using open-ended questions. Text responses (N=650) were compiled, themes identified by multiple coders, responses coded into the themes, interrater reliability established, and the themes were then interpreted. Six themes were identified and grouped into three general categories: personal aspirations (reprioritizing life and altruism and self-improvement), connection with others (a freestanding category/theme), and making meaning (appreciation for life, religion and spirituality, and contemplating life, death, and humanity), which contained the majority of the responses. The findings from this study affirm the human need to make meaning from the experience of a traumatic disaster and suggest the potential relevance to survivors' recovery of therapies based on the creation of meaning and the promotion of positive growth.Entities:
Keywords: disaster; meaning making; perspectives; qualitative methods; terrorism
Year: 2021 PMID: 36035619 PMCID: PMC9400919 DOI: 10.1037/trm0000326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Traumatology (Tallahass Fla) ISSN: 1085-9373