Tsunami survivors' mental health in crisis: US psychologist
22/1/2005 21:04
A psychologist at the University of Washington, who just returned from
Indonesia, on Friday warned of mental health crisis among the survivors of Asian
tsunamis. "We are seeing children petrified by seeing water in a tub or
cowering when large airplanes are flying overhead because they sound like
rushing water," Randall Kyes, a research associate professor of psychology, said
in a press release. Kyes said, in the tsunami-hit regions, some children had
begun to stop talking and adults were beginning to experience nightmares and
severe insomnia. "The critical period is now and for the next six months. You
don't meet a single person who didn't lose someone," said Kyes, who spent a week
in Banda Aceh, a city that was the hardest-hit by the disasters. Kyes worked
in Indonesia helping to set up an emergency psychological trauma center and in
recovering bodies of victims. Meanwhile, he conducted workshops and gave
lectures to volunteers on basic education and treatment for psychological
trauma. "When you talk about a disaster of this scale, the extent of
psychological damage is enormous," he said. "Many individuals may never totally
recover and will have concerns and fear that will not be completely resolved.
But if people can get treatment early on, the prognosis for improvement is much
better." The real concern is for children, especially those who lost their
families and have no support to reach out for help. They really suffered twice,
first the loss of parents and siblings and now coping with surviving the
tsunami, the psychologist said.
Xinhua
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