After Turkey's earthquake, a grave mental health toll looms
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[February 27, 2023]
By Humeyra Pamuk and Timour Azhari
ISTANBUL/ANTAKYA, Turkey (Reuters) - It has been three weeks since Tugce
Seren Gul's aunt and grandmother were killed in Antakya when a
devastating earthquake struck Turkey's southeast. And yet every night,
she waits until 4.17 am in the morning, the exact time that the disaster
hit, to try to go to sleep.
"I keep thinking another disaster will strike at that time and just wait
for it to pass," said Gul, 28, who managed to run out of her family
house with her mother moments before the walls of her house collapsed
during the tremors.
After reaching the street barefoot, Gul saw the dead bodies of
neighbours killed by falling concrete. She remembers the screams of
people trapped in collapsed buildings.
Gul said the horror had put a heavy toll on the mental health of
survivors who "lost everything" in the city of Antakya, which was
devastated by the quake. She wants to one day seek professional help to
address the trauma, but for now establishing a new life for herself and
her family is the only priority.
The 7.8 earthquake magnitude earthquake, the most deadly in modern
Turkey's history, will have a deep psychological impact, experts and
officials say. More than 44,300 people died in the country and over 1.5
million were left homeless in freezing conditions. Millions have lost
family members, jobs, life savings and their hopes for the future.
CHILDREN AT RISK
Experts fear children will be hardest hit. The United Nations
International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) said many of the more
than 5.4 million children who live across the quake zone were at risk of
developing anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.
"We know how important learning and routine is for children and their
recovery," UNICEF Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia Afshan
Khan said, after a visit to Turkey.
"They need to be able to resume their education, and they urgently need
psychosocial support to help deal with the trauma they have
experienced."
At a large camp for displaced people next to Hatay Stadium on the
outskirts of Antakya, psychosocial support teams have set up small play
areas and pitched tents filled with toys. Children sat on multicolored
chairs in front of a large portable screen that played cartoons. Some
children played hopscotch.
Mehmet Sari, a government psychosocial support worker, said he and
others in his team have picked up signs of trauma in kids. "We see that
some children can't sleep, others can't eat, others have flashbacks and
wet their beds," he told Reuters.
They need long-term support to recover from trauma, he said.
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Volunteers sing with children during an
activity to entertain and support the mental health of children
affected by the deadly earthquake, at a camp for survivors, in
Adiyaman, Turkey, February 18, 2023. REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani/
Turkey's Ministry of Family and
Social Services said it has dispatched more than 3,700 social
workers to support the survivors across the quake zone.
Volunteers with Izmir-based group Sokak Sanatlari
Atolyesi dress in Superman and clown costumes and run activities for
children living in tents at a shelter in Hatay province.
But a large 6.4 magnitude earthquake last Monday shattered efforts
to give the children some feeling of normalcy amid weeks of
terrifying after shocks.
A video provided by Erdal Coban, one of the volunteers and the art
director of the Sokak Atolyesi, shows the children's cheers and
singing turn to screaming.
"Stay calm," one yelled as another held onto a toddler she was
carrying.
"CONSTANT, CHRONIC STRESS"
Turkish people had already been under significant pressure, said
Ayse Bilge Selcuk, a professor and psychologist at Koc University,
due to rising poverty and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Now
the earthquake has taken it to the next level.
"The stress is chronic and constant and it is now beyond a level
that we can cope with," Selcuk said. "For this nation to get back on
its feet, we need to find that strength within us and that starts
with our psychology," she added.
President Tayyip Erdogan has pledged to rebuild homes within a year
but it will still be many months before thousands can leave tents or
shipping containers and daily queues for food and move into
permanent housing, key to gaining the sense of normalcy and safety
they lost.
People look numb, likely a defense mechanism to deal with
insurmountable stress, according to Selcuk. Anxiety, helplessness
and depression are likely to be common and young people could feel a
sense of rage.
Rebuilding efforts should include mental health, Selcuk said, urging
the government to provide funding for trained psychologists to be
sent to the quake zone and stay there. "Sustainability is key. We
shouldn't withdraw our attention three months later," she said.
(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk and Timour Azhari; Additional reporting
by Birsen Altayli in Istanbul; Editing by Alexandra Hudson and Frank
Jack Daniel)
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