‘Profound personal and professional impacts’: A qualitative study of clinician experiences of a mental health disaster response to Australia's black summer bushfires

Author:

Thomas Margaret1ORCID,Martin Elizabeth2,Isobel Sophie3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sydney Local Health District Mental Health Service Concord Centre for Mental Health Concord New South Wales Australia

2. Murrumbidgee Local Health District Mental Health, Drug and Alcohol Wagga Wagga New South Wales Australia

3. Faculty of Medicine and Health University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo explore the experiences of clinician and management stakeholders involved in a rural/metropolitan collaborative mental health disaster response to the 2019–2020 Black Summer bushfires in the Snowy Valleys region of southern New South Wales (NSW), Australia.SettingA mental health and drug health service in the Snowy Valleys region of rural NSW in collaboration with a mental health service from metropolitan Sydney, NSW.ParticipantsMental health clinicians and managers from a rural health district (n = 6) and a metropolitan health district (n = 8) involved in a collaborative disaster response to the 2019–2020 Black Summer bushfire disaster in the Snowy Valleys region of southern NSW, Australia.DesignAn interpretive qualitative study design using semi‐structured individual interviews, with transcripts analysed using Reflexive Thematic Analysis.ResultsThematic findings on participant experiences are presented under three organising constructs of before (stepping up and jumping right in), during (finding a rhythm of working together), and after (profound personal and professional impacts) the mental health disaster response.ConclusionParticipant experiences had shared and distinct components before, during and after the mental health disaster response, culminating in profound personal and professional impacts. Findings highlight positive aspects and challenges for clinicians participating in a rural/metropolitan collaborative mental health disaster response. The findings of this study contribute new knowledge about experiences of mental health clinicians participating in a disaster response after bushfires, from dual perspectives of members of a bushfire‐affected community and those responding from outside a bushfire‐affected community, which may inform ongoing planning of responses to disaster in Australia.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference39 articles.

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2. BishopJ BellT ChuanH WardM.Fire on the farm: assessing the impacts of the 2019–2020 bushfires on food and agriculture in Australia. 27 p. Available from:https://assets.wwf.org.au/image/upload/v1/website‐media/resources/WWF_Report‐Fire_on_the_Farm_converted

3. Editorial: the 2019/20 Black Summer bushfires

4. Van EedenLM NimmoD MahonyM HermanK EhmkeG DriessenJ et al.Impacts of the unprecedented 2019–2020 bushfires on Australian animals. Report prepared for WWF‐Australia Ultimo NSW.2020. 29 p. Available from:https://www.wwf.nl/globalassets/pdf/wwf‐impacts‐of‐the‐unprecedented‐2019‐2020‐bushfires‐on‐australian‐animals.pdf

5. After the Megafires: What Next for Australian Wildlife?

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