Evaluation of Mental Health Emergency Preparedness Among Health Professionals

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Issue Date
2008-08-01Author
Ablah, Elizabeth
Hawley, Suzanne
Konda, Kurt M.
Wolfe, Deborah
Cook, David J.
Publisher
Association of Schools of Allied Health Professions
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Published Version
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/asahp/jah/2008/00000037/00000003/art00005?token=004a172125c74e6437a63736a6f3547464c367034442e493e6f644a467b4d616d3f4e4b34cMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The purpose of this study was to identify if health professionals report an increase in mental health preparedness abilities with having only two mental health components as part of a 2-day preparedness training conference. At each of three conferences, identical pretraining and posttraining surveys were administered to conference participants. A 3-month follow-up survey was administered to respondents who volunteered to complete them. At pretraining, respondents (n = 603) reported generally greater mental health preparedness abilities than non–mental health preparedness abilities. This trend continued at posttraining (n = 490) and at 3 months posttraining (n = 195). Participants reported significantly increased mental health preparedness abilities at immediate posttraining and at 3 months posttraining from pretraining. This current study suggests that even when mental health items are included as a secondary component of disaster preparedness training, significant and meaningful growth in participants' confidence in their abilities can occur.
Description
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://www.ingentaconnect.com
ISSN
0090-7421Collections
Citation
Ablah, Elizabeth et al. (2008). "Evaluation of Mental Health Emergency Preparedness Among Health Professionals." Journal of Allied Health, 37(3):144-149.
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