Sammanfattning
BACKGROUND Following the terror attack on Utøya on 22 July 2011, the Norwegian Directorate of Health recommended a proactive model of follow-up in the municipalities.
According to this model, crisis teams were to rapidly contact the survivors, and all survivors were to be assigned a fixed contact person in the municipality. The aim was to
ensure early assistance and continuity of follow-up. In this study we investigate whether there were geographical differences in the assistance measures provided.
MATERIAL AND METHOD The study includes 321 of 495 survivors of the Utøya attack. The participants were interviewed 4-5 months after the terror attack. We studied
whether there were differences in the proportion of survivors who received proactive follow-up and other health services based on health region or centrality of the
municipality of residence.
RESULTS The study showed that there were geographical differences in the health assistance provided, whereby a lower proportion of survivors received proactive
follow-up in Oslo compared to the country as a whole. In Oslo, 66 % of the survivors reported that they had been contacted by a crisis team and 61 % that they had been
assigned a contact person. In smaller central municipalities, 88-98 % reported contact with a crisis team and 85-91 % reported that they had been assigned a contact
person.
INTERPRETATION The findings must be seen in the context of the particularly severe effect on Oslo of the terror attacks on 22 July 2011. Organisational factors in the
municipality may also have had an impact on the outcome.