Disaster Recovery – An Emotional Response
Posted on byThe effects of a disaster are not always physical. Houses and roads can be rebuilt and physical wounds will heal, but the emotional scars from a disaster can often be harder to fix.
In 2008 Cedar Rapids, Iowa experienced extreme flooding that wiped out businesses and homes, disrupting daily life and displacing residents. While other groups work on rebuilding the physical structures damages during the floods, the Upper Midwest Preparedness and Emergency Response Learning Center (UMPERLC) has been developing resources to prepare communities for the emotional and psychological needs following a disaster.
Jennifer Bedet is an Instructional Specialist at the UMPERLC and has been working to develop a scenario –based training to help people learn how to respond to emotional and psychological needs in a crisis situation. Below is an account of her work.
The Healing Process
Although three years has passed, it’s still impossible to drive through Cedar Rapids without seeing reminders of the 2008 floods: abandoned buildings, boarded windows, signs advertising mold remediation contractors. I was on my way to a Psychological First Aid (PFA) training delivered by Johns Hopkins Preparedness and Emergency Response Research Center. The training was held in the basement of an Episcopal Church, where I took my seat at a table. Introductions revealed that most of the other attendees were clergy from around Iowa. The importance of what we were doing that day quickly became clear.
Pastors described their experiences as spiritual and community leaders during the catastrophic 2008 floods. “I feel like we did a great job responding to the immediate, physical needs of the community. We were able to provide shelter, food, and water. We had teams of people ready to help with clean up,” said one pastor. “But I don’t think we did so well on the emotional part of things. I see a lot of people today who still have this sort of dead look in their eyes. There’s a sadness.“ Other attendees’ stories echoed this feeling of being underprepared to handle the psychological impact of the disaster.
At the Upper Midwest Preparedness and Emergency Response Learning Center, we developed a scenario-based training to help clergy and other responders implement the PFA model. Using true-to-life situations, users navigate the process of responding to the psychological needs of flood victims. Beginning with reflective listening practice, learners move through immediate needs assessment and prioritization to intervention and disposition, learning how properly to triage, refer and act as an advocate for the affected person.
The online scenario will be available to the public when UMPERLC launches its new Learning Management System in the summer of 2012: http://go.prepareiowa.com/url/em
The Upper Midwest Preparedness and Emergency Response Learning Center is funded by the CDC and works to strengthen the emergency response capacity of the public health workforce through education and training. Visit our website at http://cph.uiowa.edu/umperlc.
Additional Resources
If you’d like additional information on how to cope with a disaster or traumatic event please visit:
http://emergency.cdc.gov/mentalhealth/ http://www.samhsa.gov/disaster/For tips on emergency preparedness and response please follow us on Twitter @CDCReady or join our LinkedIn group Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response
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