Disaster relief is Watch A Taste of Experience Onlinemost commonly thought of as providing food, water, and shelter to those affected by calamitous events beyond their control.
But as communities in places like Texas and Puerto Rico are learning, disaster relief that only alleviates physical wants is not enough to put their communities back on their feet.
After first responders have done their jobs to secure personal safety, an emotional recovery has to begin as well.
Organizations like UNICEF are acknowledging that the damage to communities can last long after the repairs to homes are completed.
“When the reality of the disaster sets in, the emotional and psychological responses that are seen community-wide are tremendous and overwhelming,” Center for School Behavioral Health director Janet Pozmantier said. “People simply don’t have the wherewithal to cope effectively.”
That's where organizations like UNICEF are stepping in. Called psychosocial disaster relief, this kind of help comes in the weeks and months after a disaster in order to help people recover emotionally.
If UNICEF can help it, these recovery efforts will be implemented after every storm.
Psychosocial relief in the wake of Hurricanes Maria and Harvey are currently ongoing, and UNICEF knows that the aftermath of Hurricane Florence in the Carolinas will also require this kind of help in the near future.
Other organizations like the Red Cross have also been championing psychological first aid measures for years, and with good reason.
SEE ALSO: Hurricane Maria is the deadliest storm of the 21st centuryResearch suggests that those who have survived catastrophe tend to start showing signs of trauma roughly three months after the event took place. Those signs can look like anything from anxiety and depression to constant irritability and anger or even complete dissociation and inattention in both children and adults.
In order to combat these symptoms, Pozmantier and other staff at the center working under Mental Health America in Greater Houston developed free workshops to teach others how to effectively help people struggling in the aftermath of traumatic disaster-related events.
The workshop focuses on helping educators identify signs and symptoms of trauma in children while also including other useful tools like mindfulness training and how to self-regulate emotions.
After Hurricane Harvey made landfall in Texas, UNICEF reached out to the center and offered to fund a Harvey-specific trauma training workshop, which the center named Are the Kids Alright?
In the months after Harvey made landfall in Texas, Pozmantier would drive through neighborhoods and see the entire contents of homes in a pile on the curb -- family photos and clothing laying on top of piles of water damaged furniture -- all ready to be collected by waste management.
She said it was easy to understand why people would be traumatized.
So when the center developed Are the Kids Alright, aside from training people to deal with trauma in children, they also added some training on how to deal with adults.
“Going through something like this, I realized more than ever that if we can take care of the adults, the kids are going to be okay for the most part too,” Pozmantier said.
Nine months later, when UNICEF approached the center again to help Puerto Rico recover, the message was the same.
The center developed a workshop, completely in Spanish, to help curb the emotional impact Hurricane Maria had on the people of Puerto Rico, focusing again on children -- but also providing help to adults.
First, UNICEF sent hygiene kits, water, and helped with shelter. But what UNICEF USA President Caryl Stern said she’s most proud of is the collaborative work that UNICEF and the Center for School Behavioral Health were able to put into action.
“Now classrooms are catastrophe stations every time it rains in Puerto Rico. The children are worried that their home is destroyed. Or they’re wondering 'Is my mother okay?'” Stern said.
Even seeing adults in distress can trigger the children, Stern said.
Once Stern experienced this, she said she knew that the training workshops would be incredibly important.
In addition to the workshops, UNICEF sent a few hundred college students from State University of New York and City University of New York to pair up with member of various Puerto Rican communities to help rebuild the Boys and Girls Clubs of Puerto Rico.
Through this, people were able to come together and repair their communities themselves -- something that can have a strong positive effect on the psyche.
Stern says everyone who has ever dealt with disaster relief knows that the psychosocial recovery is the most import aspect of relief that is widely ignored by the public.
Pozmantier agreed, adding that if she could, she would mandate that all educators go through training in mental health, trauma, mindfulness, and self-help strategies.
“They are the first line of defense. It’s like any other kind of illness. You wouldn’t wait until you’re on your deathbed to try and strengthen your immune system,” Pozmantier said.
Topics Health Social Good
Modular phones aren't quite dead yet, but the Alcatel A5 doesn't impressAll the best and worst looks on the Oscars 2017 red carpetIndia's prime minister wants everyone to tell their friends about this appTwitter quickly made a glorious meme out of that massive Oscars mess'The Walking Dead' recap: Negan's having some personnel issuesThe best and worst moments of the craziest Oscars everHP embraces 'lapability' with new Pro x2 detachable PCHands on with Sony's Xperia XZ Premium with 4K HDR displayDev Patel brought his mom to the Oscars and the internet can't get over themOscars 2017: Full winners listJimmy Kimmel trolled Matt Damon at the Oscars because what else did you expectHP embraces 'lapability' with new Pro x2 detachable PCYour BFF Emma Stone wore a Planned Parenthood pin to the OscarsThis seal delightedly hugging a toy version of itself is your new wallpaperNASA's TRAPPISTA traditional Japanese painting of Iron Man will look perfect in your grown up apartmentCasey Affleck wins Best Actor after allThe White Helmets aren't happy about their Oscar win for a very important reasonAll the times the Oscars threw shade at Donald TrumpGary from Chicago deserves a lifetime achievement Oscar China forces its Muslim minority to install spyware on their phones Twitter is still full of trolls but says things are getting better New iOS update fixes a very dangerous bug Snapchat no longer knows what the hell it is anymore 'Game of Thrones' showrunners give us the series about slavery no one asked for Doomguy is modeled after a famous 'Doom' developer Lenovo wants to be a serious player in the world of AI 'Words With Friends' might get a TV show. But...why? Amazon Alexa on the HTC U11 sucks and isn't ready for prime time YouTube TV live TV streaming service adds 10 new U.S. markets Samsung will announce Galaxy Note 8 on August 23 It's Shep Smith versus Sean Hannity for the soul of Fox News 'Kingsman: The Golden Circle' footage shown at Comic Harry Potter Starbucks at Comic Con is perfect Jennifer Lawrence barfed at Olivia Wilde's Broadway play Atari's Speakerhat with built Einstein would send Professor Einstein robot into a Black Hole John Boyega hits out at lack of diversity in 'Game of Thrones' Sports fans finally have a streaming TV bundle (but you'd better like soccer) Marvel's 'Inhumans' storm Comic
1.1374s , 10161.4296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch A Taste of Experience Online】,Exquisite Information Network