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New resource addresses storm survivors’ trauma
Posted: Tuesday September 21, 2004 2:23 PM EST
‘Human reconstruction’ as important as rebuilding, health official says
![]() Susan Shaw views her home, which was destroyed by Hurricane Ivan, in Perdido Key, Fla., Monday, Sept. 20, 2004. Residents of Perdido Key were allowed to return to their homes via shuttle for the first time since Hurricane Ivan struck the area. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
LOUISVILLE — In the aftermath of the devastation of Florida by hurricanes during August and September, the National Health Ministries office here has developed a resource to help victims recover spiritually, emotionally and psychologically. The new resource — “Coping with Trauma and Loss” — is posted on the National Health Ministries Web site at http://www.pcusa.org/health/usa. It is also available in print by calling 1-888-728-7228, ext. 5787. Repair of homes and buildings will likely be completed long before the psychological scars of affected people heal, said Pat Gleich, associate for National Health Ministries. “People who experience and survive a disaster suffer both conscious and unconscious losses,” she said. “While the tangible losses — of property, homes, etc., are most visible — there is also a loss of safety and security, community, and status. “In the aftermath of a disaster the primary needs of restoring a safe and secure shelter and basic services for people take precedence,” she added, “but it’s critically important that restoration after a disaster also include time for human reconstruction. The post-crisis situation must include an opportunity for individuals to begin a natural and normal recovery process through mourning and grief and as well as an opportunity for reconnection and reintegration with their various communities.” Congregations are caring communities and provide a safe place for people to be spiritually and emotionally reconstructed and reconnected, Gleich said. “Loss can be an isolating experience,” she said. “The physical separation and isolation of being cut off from people in the community, and, the psychological isolation from community and church, can be manifested in questions of faith, or the role of God in protecting God’s people.“
The new resources are designed to explain many of the psychological issues that surface for individuals during a disaster, provide information to help identify individuals who might need professional help, give coping strategies and suggest ways that congregations can help one another through the aftermath of a disaster.
Source: http://www.pcusa.org/
Reproduced with permission from PC(USA) News.
©2004 Presbyterian Church (USA). All Rights Reserved. |
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