Frontiers in Psychiatry (Feb 2022)

Case Series: Managing Severe Mental Illness in Disaster Situation: the Croatian Experience After 2020 Earthquake

  • Sara Medved,
  • Azijada Srkalović Imširagić,
  • Igor Salopek,
  • Dragan Puljić,
  • Hrvoje Handl,
  • Marina Kovač,
  • Alma Mihaljević Peleš,
  • Alma Mihaljević Peleš,
  • Danijela Štimac Grbic,
  • Danijela Štimac Grbic,
  • Luka Romančuk,
  • Roberto MuŽić,
  • Laura Shields Zeeman,
  • Martina Rojnić Kuzman,
  • Martina Rojnić Kuzman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.795661
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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On the 29th of December 2020, amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, Petrinja in the Croatian Sisak-Moslavina County experienced a strong earthquake, resulting in a severe disruption in mental health service delivery. Specialized care community mental health teams were introduced days within the event with the aim to bridge the gap in psychiatric care that was severely disturbed in the region affected by the earthquake. Through a case series of patients with SMI, we describe how care was quickly deployed and delivered after a natural disaster and during a pandemic resulting in their functional recovery. Community mental health teams have the potential to provide feasible, comprehensive, and accessible mental health services, and their continued implementation in the post-disaster period in Croatia could be beneficial for care management of people with severe mental illness.

Keywords