AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how family visits to psychiatric inpatients before evacuating due to the FDNPP accident influenced their return to Fukushima.
  • It analyzed data from 44 patients who were evacuated on March 11, 2011, comparing return times between those who had family visits and those who did not.
  • Results indicated that patients who received family visits returned to Fukushima significantly earlier, emphasizing the importance of family support for rehabilitation and reintegration after disasters.

Article Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to elucidate the effects of pre-evacuation family hospital visits on post-evacuation returns to Fukushima Prefecture (hometown) among psychiatric inpatients who mandatorily evacuated to hospitals outside the prefecture because of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP) accident.

Method: Of the inpatients in Fukushima, 44 were admitted to a hospital in the nearby Soso district on March 11, 2011, and were therefore included in the current analysis. We collected information on their discharge after the evacuation and family visits before the evacuation by reviewing the medical records of both the evacuation destination and former hospitals.

Results: The average durations from the accident to post-evacuation return among patients with and those without former family visits were 681.8 days (standard error [SE] = 163.3) and 1,027.8 days (SE = 152.0), respectively. The log-rank test showed a tendency of earlier return to Fukushima among inpatients who had received family visits to the hospital before evacuation ( = .073).

Conclusions: The results highlight the critical need for close collaboration between psychiatric medical practitioners and families, to not only support patients' community reintegration into daily life but also facilitate a timely return to their hometowns following long-distance evacuation caused by an unforeseen large-scale disaster.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00207640241288684DOI Listing

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