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Psychosocial effects of the 2001 UK foot and mouth disease epidemic in a rural population: Qualitative diary based study

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Psychosocial effects of the 2001 UK foot and mouth disease epidemic in a rural population: Qualitative diary based study. / Mort, Margaret; Convery, Ian; Baxter, Josephine et al.
In: BMJ, Vol. 331, No. 7527, 26.11.2005, p. 1234-1237.

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Mort M, Convery I, Baxter J, Bailey C. Psychosocial effects of the 2001 UK foot and mouth disease epidemic in a rural population: Qualitative diary based study. BMJ. 2005 Nov 26;331(7527):1234-1237. doi: 10.1136/bmj.38603.375856.68

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@article{a296028cef9447e297af502acc622ad6,
title = "Psychosocial effects of the 2001 UK foot and mouth disease epidemic in a rural population: Qualitative diary based study",
abstract = "Objectives To understand the health and social consequences of the 2001 foot and mouth disease epidemic for a rural population. Design Longitudinal qualitative analysis. Setting North Cumbria, the worst affected area in Britain. Sample Purposive sample of 54 respondents divided in six demographically balanced rural occupational and population groups. Main outcome measures 3071 weekly diaries contributed over 18 months; 72 semistructured interviews (with the 54 diarists and 18 others); 12 group discussions with diarists Results The disease epidemic was a human tragedy, not just an animal one. Respondents' reports showed that life after the foot and mouth disease epidemic was accompanied by distress, feelings of bereavement, fear of a new disaster, loss of trust in authority and systems of control, and the undermining of the value of local knowledge. Distress was experienced across diverse groups well beyond the farming community. Many of these effects continued to feature in the diaries throughout the 18 month period. Conclusions The use of a rural citizens' panel allowed data capture from a wide spectrum of the rural population and showed that a greater number of workers and residents had traumatic experiences than has previously been reported. Recommendations for future disaster management include joint service reviews of what counts as a disaster, regular NHS and voluntary sector sharing of intelligence, debriefing and peer support for front line workers, increased community involvement in disposal site or disaster management, and wider, more flexible access to regeneration funding and rural health outreach work.",
author = "Margaret Mort and Ian Convery and Josephine Baxter and Catherine Bailey",
note = "This article was the subject of a press release by the British Medical Journal editor and resulted in more than 100 media reports.",
year = "2005",
month = nov,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1136/bmj.38603.375856.68",
language = "English",
volume = "331",
pages = "1234--1237",
journal = "BMJ",
publisher = "British Medical Association",
number = "7527",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Psychosocial effects of the 2001 UK foot and mouth disease epidemic in a rural population

T2 - Qualitative diary based study

AU - Mort, Margaret

AU - Convery, Ian

AU - Baxter, Josephine

AU - Bailey, Catherine

N1 - This article was the subject of a press release by the British Medical Journal editor and resulted in more than 100 media reports.

PY - 2005/11/26

Y1 - 2005/11/26

N2 - Objectives To understand the health and social consequences of the 2001 foot and mouth disease epidemic for a rural population. Design Longitudinal qualitative analysis. Setting North Cumbria, the worst affected area in Britain. Sample Purposive sample of 54 respondents divided in six demographically balanced rural occupational and population groups. Main outcome measures 3071 weekly diaries contributed over 18 months; 72 semistructured interviews (with the 54 diarists and 18 others); 12 group discussions with diarists Results The disease epidemic was a human tragedy, not just an animal one. Respondents' reports showed that life after the foot and mouth disease epidemic was accompanied by distress, feelings of bereavement, fear of a new disaster, loss of trust in authority and systems of control, and the undermining of the value of local knowledge. Distress was experienced across diverse groups well beyond the farming community. Many of these effects continued to feature in the diaries throughout the 18 month period. Conclusions The use of a rural citizens' panel allowed data capture from a wide spectrum of the rural population and showed that a greater number of workers and residents had traumatic experiences than has previously been reported. Recommendations for future disaster management include joint service reviews of what counts as a disaster, regular NHS and voluntary sector sharing of intelligence, debriefing and peer support for front line workers, increased community involvement in disposal site or disaster management, and wider, more flexible access to regeneration funding and rural health outreach work.

AB - Objectives To understand the health and social consequences of the 2001 foot and mouth disease epidemic for a rural population. Design Longitudinal qualitative analysis. Setting North Cumbria, the worst affected area in Britain. Sample Purposive sample of 54 respondents divided in six demographically balanced rural occupational and population groups. Main outcome measures 3071 weekly diaries contributed over 18 months; 72 semistructured interviews (with the 54 diarists and 18 others); 12 group discussions with diarists Results The disease epidemic was a human tragedy, not just an animal one. Respondents' reports showed that life after the foot and mouth disease epidemic was accompanied by distress, feelings of bereavement, fear of a new disaster, loss of trust in authority and systems of control, and the undermining of the value of local knowledge. Distress was experienced across diverse groups well beyond the farming community. Many of these effects continued to feature in the diaries throughout the 18 month period. Conclusions The use of a rural citizens' panel allowed data capture from a wide spectrum of the rural population and showed that a greater number of workers and residents had traumatic experiences than has previously been reported. Recommendations for future disaster management include joint service reviews of what counts as a disaster, regular NHS and voluntary sector sharing of intelligence, debriefing and peer support for front line workers, increased community involvement in disposal site or disaster management, and wider, more flexible access to regeneration funding and rural health outreach work.

U2 - 10.1136/bmj.38603.375856.68

DO - 10.1136/bmj.38603.375856.68

M3 - Journal article

VL - 331

SP - 1234

EP - 1237

JO - BMJ

JF - BMJ

IS - 7527

ER -