eprintid: 24358 rev_number: 39 userid: 1221 dir: disk0/00/02/43/58 datestamp: 2015-10-21 17:30:00 lastmod: 2018-12-20 00:56:01 status_changed: 2015-10-21 17:30:00 type: thesis metadata_visibility: show contact_email: asgray09@gmail.com item_issues_count: 0 eprint_status: archive creators_name: Gray, Adam title: Promoting disaster mental health preparedness among faith-based organizations in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania ispublished: unpub divisions: sch_gsph_behavioralcommhealthsci full_text_status: public abstract: Psychological resiliency to disasters has been a growing focus of emergency management in recent years. The major psychosocial impacts of disasters include stress-induced psychological disorders, relational problems, increased substance abuse, and the disruption of beneficial social networks. These outcomes negatively impact resilience at individual and community levels. Demands for mental health interventions following disaster can rapidly overwhelm mental health providers’ ability to meet mental health needs. Recent literature has proposed training unlicensed mental health providers to augment the services of licensed mental health providers and chaplains. This paper describes an effort to strengthen disaster mental health response capacity through the integration of faith-based organizations as providers of disaster mental health and Spiritual Care services. This project was sponsored through collaboration between Christian Associates of Southwest Pennsylvania and the Allegheny County Department of Human Services. Outreach was conducted in eight communities in Eastern Allegheny County over a one-year period. Outreach activities involved interviewing faith leaders, presenting to ministerial associations, and organizing informational meetings. The three goals of the community outreach were to educate faith-based organizations about the role of faith-based organizations in disasters, to provide a point of contact for further information, and to encourage participation with the Allegheny County Volunteer Organizations Active in Disaster (VOAD). At the end of the outreach period, fifty-seven organizations were contacted, a total of four congregations expressed an interest in becoming active in disaster response, and four ministerial organizations began discussing their role in disaster preparedness and response. Outreach activities resulted in marginal success in promoting continued participation. Four primary barriers became apparent: frequent leadership turnover, funding limitations, competing time commitments, and volunteer liability concerns. Additionally, a major finding suggests that an active VOAD is a crucial component of sustaining a well-organized reserve of volunteer personnel with a readiness to respond. This community organizing effort holds public health significance by identifying how faith-based organizations may potentially be a community resource to help alleviate the burden of psychiatric stress. date: 2015-04-23 date_type: published publisher: University of Pittsburgh institution: University of Pittsburgh refereed: TRUE etd_access_restriction: immediate etd_patent_pending: FALSE thesis_type: masteressay degree: MPH elements_deleted: 2018-12-19T19:56:01EST citation: Gray, Adam (2015) Promoting disaster mental health preparedness among faith-based organizations in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Master Essay, University of Pittsburgh. document_url: http://d-scholarship-dev.library.pitt.edu/24358/1/Gray_Essay_Final.1.docx document_url: http://d-scholarship-dev.library.pitt.edu/24358/3/licence.txt