Jessica A. Carlile, Kira Mauseth, Noël E. Clark, Jennifer L. Cruz, John W. Thoburn. Local Volunteerism and Resilience Following Large-Scale Disaster: Outcomes for Health Support Team Volunteers in Haiti[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2014, 5(3): 206-213. doi: 10.1007/s13753-014-0028-z
Citation: Jessica A. Carlile, Kira Mauseth, Noël E. Clark, Jennifer L. Cruz, John W. Thoburn. Local Volunteerism and Resilience Following Large-Scale Disaster: Outcomes for Health Support Team Volunteers in Haiti[J]. International Journal of Disaster Risk Science, 2014, 5(3): 206-213. doi: 10.1007/s13753-014-0028-z

Local Volunteerism and Resilience Following Large-Scale Disaster: Outcomes for Health Support Team Volunteers in Haiti

doi: 10.1007/s13753-014-0028-z
  • Available Online: 2021-04-26
  • In-depth interviews with local Haitian volunteers trained in a psychological disaster recovery program called Health Support Team (HST) provide insight into the psychosocial outcomes resulting from their engagement with the program. Qualitative interviews were conducted with four male Haitian participants who had survived the January 2010 Haiti earthquake and had worked as HST volunteers for at least 6 months. Interviews were analyzed using narrative inquiry analysis, which allows individuals to discover and disclose a deeper meaning in their experience and enables the researchers to access more detailed data. Previous research supports the claim that volunteerism provides many important psychological benefits, and the results of the present study suggest that among survivors of large-scale disasters, volunteerism is beneficial as a means of increasing psychological resilience and facilitating personal recovery. Results and themes of our analysis included a reported increase in both hope and purpose for the respondents. Findings suggest that volunteerism on the part of members of the surviving community following large-scale disaster increases resilience among the volunteers and further contributes to their recovery.
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