지진의 심리적 영향: 대처 전략
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Earthquakes cause lasting psychological trauma including PTSD and anxiety. Learn coping strategies and when to seek professional help.
The Invisible Injuries of Earthquakes
When we think about earthquake casualties, we typically think of physical injuries: crush injuries, fractures, lacerations, and deaths from building collapse. But earthquakes also produce a large population of psychological casualties — people suffering from trauma-related mental health conditions that, while invisible on X-rays, impair functioning and quality of life profoundly. Research on major earthquakes consistently finds that the number of people experiencing significant psychological distress after a major earthquake substantially exceeds the number with severe physical injuries.
Understanding the psychological dimensions of earthquake disaster matters for several reasons. It shapes how communities should plan their response and recovery efforts. It helps individuals recognize what they and their neighbors may experience and how to respond helpfully. And it challenges the sometimes implicit view that emotional responses to catastrophic events are somehow signs of weakness rather than normal human reactions to abnormal circumstances.
Immediate Psychological Responses to Earthquakes
During and immediately after an earthquake, most people experience acute fear responses — racing heart, muscle tension, heightened alertness, and the urge to flee. These are adaptive biological responses to genuine danger, not signs of mental illness. After the shaking stops, a period of psychological shock typically follows. People may appear dazed, may have difficulty processing information, may engage in purposeless behavior, or may be emotionally flat in what observers sometimes misread as abnormal calm.
In the hours following an earthquake, survivors commonly experience intrusive thoughts about the event, heightened startle responses to aftershocks and other stimuli, difficulty concentrating, and sleep disturbance. These are normal acute stress responses and in most people they diminish over the following days and weeks without formal intervention. Research shows that the majority of earthquake survivors with acute stress responses do not develop long-term mental health conditions.
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder After Earthquakes
For a substantial minority of survivors, psychological distress does not resolve naturally within weeks. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is characterized by persistent intrusive memories of the trauma (including nightmares and flashbacks), avoidance of trauma-related stimuli, negative changes in mood and thinking, and hyperarousal. After major earthquakes, PTSD rates in directly affected populations typically range from 10 to 30 percent, with higher rates in populations with greater trauma exposure — those who were trapped, injured, bereaved, or who witnessed deaths.
[[Aftershock]] sequences have a particularly important relationship with PTSD development. Each significant aftershock re-activates the fear response and potentially re-traumatizes survivors. In regions with prolonged aftershock sequences — which can last months or years following very large earthquakes — sustained elevated aftershock activity creates ongoing stress that prevents the normal psychological processing that leads to recovery. Research following the Canterbury earthquake sequence in New Zealand (beginning with the 2010 Darfield earthquake and continuing through the devastating 2011 Christchurch earthquake) found that PTSD and anxiety disorder rates remained elevated for years, linked to the extraordinarily prolonged aftershock sequence.
Depression and Grief After Earthquakes
Depression is as prevalent as PTSD in earthquake-affected populations. The losses associated with major earthquakes — of homes, possessions, community spaces, livelihood, and loved ones — constitute profound grief triggers. The cumulative weight of multiple simultaneous losses is particularly difficult. A person who lost their home, their business, and a family member in a single earthquake faces grief on a scale that exceeds what the normal grief process was designed to handle in a compressed timeframe.
Complicated grief — grief that becomes prolonged and impairing — is more common when deaths were sudden and unexpected, when the body of a loved one could not be recovered, or when survivors experience guilt about having survived when others did not. The mass casualty nature of earthquakes means that bereaved survivors often cannot rely on the normal social support mechanisms of grief (funerals, community gathering, mutual support from friends) because everyone around them is simultaneously grieving.
Special Populations at Higher Psychological Risk
Children are particularly vulnerable to earthquake psychological impacts. Their understanding of death, their limited coping resources, and their dependence on adults who are themselves traumatized all contribute to elevated risk. Children's trauma responses often manifest differently than adults': regression to younger behaviors, separation anxiety, sleep disturbances, school refusal, and play that re-enacts the disaster. Effective response includes ensuring children have accurate age-appropriate information, maintaining routines as much as possible, and providing trained support through schools and community programs.
[[Disaster-preparedness]] education for children, when well-designed, can reduce psychological impact by giving children a sense of agency and reducing the experience of helplessness. Children who know what to do during an earthquake and why, and who have practiced responses, typically show lower acute distress than children for whom the event was entirely unexpected and incomprehensible.
Rescue workers, first responders, and Search and Rescue (SAR)Organized efforts to locate and extract survivors trapped in collapsed structures after an earthquake. The first 72 hours are the critical window for finding survivors alive. teams are also at elevated psychological risk. Prolonged exposure to scenes of destruction and death, the stress of dangerous working conditions, secondary traumatization from contact with bereaved survivors, and the moral injury of working in situations where impossible choices must be made all contribute to elevated rates of PTSD, depression, and burnout among disaster responders.
Psychological First Aid
Psychological First Aid (PFA) is the evidence-informed approach to supporting people in acute psychological distress after disasters. Unlike formal psychological therapy, PFA can be provided by trained non-clinicians — volunteer responders, community health workers, and peers. PFA focuses on safety, calmness, self-efficacy, connectedness, and hope. Its core activities include making contact and engaging with distressed people in a calm, non-intrusive way; helping with practical needs; listening and providing information; connecting people with social supports; and identifying those who need referral to professional mental health care.
PFA deliberately avoids some approaches that are intuitively appealing but not evidence-supported. Psychological debriefing — structured group discussions of traumatic events conducted shortly after the event — was widely used for years but has not been found to prevent PTSD and may in some circumstances be harmful by requiring premature processing of trauma memories. The shift from mandatory debriefing toward optional PFA represents an evidence-based evolution in disaster mental health practice.
Community and Meaning-Making
At the community level, psychological recovery from earthquakes is supported by practices that restore meaning, community cohesion, and a sense of forward movement. Public rituals of commemoration — memorials, anniversaries, community gatherings — allow collective processing of shared trauma. Community-led reconstruction, in which survivors have genuine agency over how their neighborhood and homes are rebuilt, supports psychological recovery by restoring a sense of control and future orientation.
Research on community resilience consistently finds that strong social networks before a disaster are among the most protective factors against prolonged psychological impact. Communities where people know and trust each other, where social institutions are robust, and where there is a shared sense of collective identity recover more rapidly — both economically and psychologically — than socially fragmented communities experiencing comparable physical destruction.