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After Food and Shelter, Help in Coping With Unbearable Loss

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  • After Food and Shelter, Help in Coping With Unbearable Loss

    New York Times
    Jan 4 2005

    After Food and Shelter, Help in Coping With Unbearable Loss

    By BENEDICT CAREY

    Providing psychological services for millions who have lost family
    members, homes and communities in Sri Lanka, Indonesia and other
    countries will become critical in the coming weeks, officials from
    the World Health Organization, Unicef, and other relief agencies say.

    The scope of the emotional fallout will be impossible to predict. The
    first priority, the officials said, is to deliver food, shelter and
    drinking water. But the United Nations has already set up a network
    for counseling in Sri Lanka and, on Friday, sent mental health
    workers to the Maldives.

    Any natural disaster takes a steep emotional toll, the experts said,
    but this one is distinguished by its sheer size and scale. Studies of
    earthquakes, fires, hurricanes and other disasters that have
    devastated communities find that a majority of survivors eventually
    learn to live with awful memories and to work through their grief.
    But a significant number suffer either chronic mental distress or a
    more immediate emotional numbness that can isolate them from others.

    "At this point we have to be very careful not to label as a mental
    health problem this natural psychological response to being displaced
    in a split second, to seeing that everything you had now no longer
    exists," said Dr. Rachel Yehuda, director of the traumatic stress
    program at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and the Bronx Veterans
    Affairs Hospital. Those who are deeply scarred emotionally will need
    long-term care, she said, not a few hours or days of emergency care
    by grief counselors or other mental health workers.

    After suffering a violent injury, or witnessing a catastrophe, some 5
    percent to 10 percent of people suffer from lingering nightmares,
    moodiness, nervous exhaustion and other symptoms of post-traumatic
    stress syndrome, researchers say. These symptoms are considered
    worrisome if they become chronic; they can appear months or even
    years after the crisis.

    Yet the rates of severe traumatic reactions can be much higher among
    people sitting directly in the impact zone of a seemingly apocalyptic
    event. After a 1988 earthquake that leveled the Armenian town of
    Spitak, killing half its schoolchildren, researchers from the
    University of California, Los Angeles, found that more than half the
    town's children suffered from post-traumatic stress and depression.
    The rate was less than half that in Gumri, some 30 miles away, and
    was negligible in Yerevan, the capital, 50 miles away.

    "It's very clear, the more extreme the experience, the higher the
    risk of severe psychological reactions," said Dr. Alan Steinberg, one
    of the study's authors. "Those people who were on the beach in this
    case, or close, are going to be at highest risk" of chronic emotional
    distress.

    Even in areas farther inland, psychiatrists say, the grieving among
    people who have lost homes and family members may be complicated by
    the trauma and violence. When the final memory of a lost loved one is
    violent, or suffused with guilt or helpless rage, experts say, it
    interferes with the natural ability to mourn loss, leaving people
    numb, at risk for serious depression, and cut off from others around
    them.

    "If there's a signature image of this catastrophe, it's the loss of
    children, the parents right there struggling for their own lives but
    unable to protect or save their children," said Dr. Robert Pynoos,
    co-director of the National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, and a
    professor of psychiatry at the University of California's
    Neuropsychiatric Institute in Los Angeles.

    The risk that this prolonged grief can cause depression is greater
    still, experts say, when the death of a loved one is not confirmed,
    or the body is swept into a mass grave without being identified - as
    has occurred in some areas hit by the tsunami.

    In such circumstances, when the normal cultural rituals surrounding
    death are disrupted, wild rumors often circulate, experts say. In
    1985, volcanic ash and rubble killed some 80 percent of the
    inhabitants of the Armero, Colombia, sweeping away the bodies. For
    months afterward, there were stories and "sightings" of some of the
    dead wandering in far-off places. Only after the corpses were found
    two years later and proper ceremonies were conducted, did the
    survivors accept their loss, according to a World Health Organization
    report.

    In 2001, a fire in Lima, Peru, killed some 270 people, charring many
    bodies beyond recognition and depriving families of identifiable
    remains to bury and mourn. In the resulting confusion, rumors
    circulated that relief workers were stealing cadavers for medical
    experimentation, or selling harvested body parts, the W.H.O. report
    said.

    In the weeks and months to come, experts say, relief workers can help
    dispel such rumors, as well as identify survivors who are at risk of
    prolonged depression or traumatic stress. The health organization has
    issued guidelines for relief workers on how to deal with traumatized
    victims, and a group affiliated with the University of Oslo is
    planning a program to provide information on counseling to teachers
    and others in the areas hardest hit by the disaster.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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