Objectives: To assess public attitudes towards data sharing to facilitate a mental health screening programme for people caught up in a mass casualty incident. Design: Two, identical, cross-sectional, online surveys, using quotas to ensure demographic representativeness of people aged 18–65 years in England. Participants were randomly allocated to consider a scenario in which they witness a terrorism-related radiation incident or mass shooting, after which a police officer records their contact details. Setting: Participants were drawn from an online panel maintained by a market research company. Surveys were conducted before and immediately after a series of terrorist attacks and a large tower block fire occurred in England. ...
Aims- Recently the NHS has expanded the provision of liaison mental health services (LMHS) to ens...
Purpose: This research was conducted to explore the psychological processes involved in spontaneous ...
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic increased the availability and use of population and individual h...
There remains concern that survey research after a disaster can precipitate or exacerbate distress a...
OBJECTIVES: To explore whether the Screen and Treat Programme to support United Kingdom citizens pot...
Terrorist attacks in January 2015 in Paris on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, and related inci...
Background A 2017 terrorist attack in Manchester, UK, affected large numbers of adults and young peo...
Background: Reports published directly after terrorist mass casualty incidents frequently fail to ca...
Mental health responses for people caught up in terror attacks are often inadequate. Internationally...
Background Distress after major incidents is widespread among survivors. The great majority do not ...
BACKGROUND: Routinely-collected mental health data could deliver novel insights for mental health re...
Objectives Malicious incidents involving chemical agents sometimes trigger high public concern. We a...
International audienceBackground: The use of mental health supports by populations exposed to terror...
Background: Responding to a mass casualty event can cause significant distress, even for highly trai...
International audienceBackground: The Nice terror attack of July 14, 2016 resulted in 84 deaths and ...
Aims- Recently the NHS has expanded the provision of liaison mental health services (LMHS) to ens...
Purpose: This research was conducted to explore the psychological processes involved in spontaneous ...
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic increased the availability and use of population and individual h...
There remains concern that survey research after a disaster can precipitate or exacerbate distress a...
OBJECTIVES: To explore whether the Screen and Treat Programme to support United Kingdom citizens pot...
Terrorist attacks in January 2015 in Paris on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, and related inci...
Background A 2017 terrorist attack in Manchester, UK, affected large numbers of adults and young peo...
Background: Reports published directly after terrorist mass casualty incidents frequently fail to ca...
Mental health responses for people caught up in terror attacks are often inadequate. Internationally...
Background Distress after major incidents is widespread among survivors. The great majority do not ...
BACKGROUND: Routinely-collected mental health data could deliver novel insights for mental health re...
Objectives Malicious incidents involving chemical agents sometimes trigger high public concern. We a...
International audienceBackground: The use of mental health supports by populations exposed to terror...
Background: Responding to a mass casualty event can cause significant distress, even for highly trai...
International audienceBackground: The Nice terror attack of July 14, 2016 resulted in 84 deaths and ...
Aims- Recently the NHS has expanded the provision of liaison mental health services (LMHS) to ens...
Purpose: This research was conducted to explore the psychological processes involved in spontaneous ...
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic increased the availability and use of population and individual h...