MANILA, Philippines鈥擶anted: Psychiatrists who specialize in psychosocial care.
Despite the Philippines being a 鈥渄isaster-prone country,鈥 devastated by typhoons and earthquakes almost every year, there is a serious lack of psychiatrists to help victims cope with post-calamity stress, said Dr. Lourdes Ignacio, author of many books on coping with tragedy.
鈥淭here is a need for more psychiatrists that can provide psychosocial care to respond (to these disasters),鈥 Ignacio told a forum in San Juan.
According to Ignacio, there are 鈥渙nly 450鈥 psychiatrists in the Philippines, 80 percent of whom are based in Metro Manila.
鈥淭he interesting thing is that not all of them are trained to conduct this kind of work, psychosocial therapy,鈥 explained Ignacio, who is with the World Association for Psychosocial Rehabilitation and is the coauthor of 鈥淕inhawa: Well-being in the Aftermath of Disasters.鈥
She could not give an estimate of how many of these Filipino psychiatrists are trained to conduct psychosocial therapy as she said she still has to 鈥渕ake an inventory.鈥
Ignacio stressed the need for the conduct of 鈥渕ultiple-session鈥 debriefings in 鈥減rivate鈥 places and not 鈥渟ingle-session鈥 ones in public areas, as sometimes resorted to by government.
At the Villamor Air Base in Pasay City where the victims of Supertyphoon 鈥淵olanda鈥 were flown in from eastern Visayas, stress debriefings were being conducted in tents.
But stress management is 鈥渘ot a one-shot deal,鈥 said Ignacio.