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Meeting the Needs of Post-Tsunami Women Survivors in Rural Aceh

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Ha-Redeye, Omar (University of Western Ontario)
CONFERENCE TITLE:
  8th Annual International Women's and Children's Health Symposium (IWCH)
CONF. LOCATION: None
YEAR: 2006
PUB TYPE: Conference Paper
SUBJECT(S): cultural sensitivity, aceh, tsunami, disaster, Sphere minimum standards, Vienna Conference on Human Rights
DISCIPLINE: Public Health
HTTP: http://nursinglibrary.org/Portal/main.aspx?pageid=4024&pid=8423
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-445-062 (Last edited on 2008/09/01 03:03:07 GMT-6)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
Purpose: To devise a better means of providing aid to post-tsunami women survivors in rural Aceh. Background: The approach taken by various governments and agencies in response to the Dec. 26, 2004 tsunami varied greatly in Aceh. Most did not employ principles of placing the needs of female survivors as a central focus. Banda Aceh was the primary destination for aid, and the rural areas and women inhabitants of these areas were largely ignored. Design and Data Analysis: By matching the culture and religion of the population, communication and performance was enhanced. Traditional routes of patriarchal authority were engaged and challenged to meet the needs of women under their care. Interventions that considered the preferences and outlooks of the local population were better received better by both recipients and stakeholders. Medical teams were integrated into the IDP camp and were considered as part of the community. Rural women survivors were themselves able to identify their needs and allow outsiders to assist them in achieving these goals. The needs of the female population were at times specific and distinct from the general survivor population. Concrete strategies were implemented and specific programs were presented to meet these needs. Minimal control was administered in these programs to allow a self-directed application. Significance: The appropriateness of western-style interventions should also be questioned. Some approaches were inappropriate, while others were even considered offensive. Interventions unsuitable to the area met considerable resistance and even had potential for volatile adverse reactions from the community. Implementations of faith-based psychosocial programs traditionally used in the Acehnese culture were preferred by clients due to familiarity and a higher level of confidence in outcomes. Rights of women in the post-recovery period were often neglected by central governmental policies by citing political sensitivities. These violations are a concern for the entire international community under the Vienna Conference on Human Rights. Implementation of the Sphere minimum standards in the future will prevent such violations from occurring.
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