New York Turns to Oklahoma for Guidance
Two Terrorist Acts: The Past Is Prologue
by John
V. O'Neill, MSW, News Staff
November
2001

Illustration:
John Michael Yanson
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Many weren't functioning very well before the bombing.
One of the first acts of NASW's New York City Chapter after the Sept. 11 terrorist
attack was to contact the Oklahoma Chapter to gain insight
into problems the city might expect in its social services
delivery systems, how to best use chapter resources to help,
what New Yorkers might expect in the way of emotional and
mental health problems in the short term and long term, and
how best to prepare practitioners for the challenges they
would face.
Six and one-half years earlier, Oklahoma City's peace was
shattered by a terrorist's bomb that ripped apart the Alfred
P. Murrah Federal Building, killing 168 people and injuring
490.
The scale of the losses and trauma in New York City is so
much larger than anything else in the nation's recent history
that it is bound to be different from other traumatic events.
"Here in Oklahoma City, we are just a pinhead compared
to what happened in New York City," said Sue Settles,
executive director of the Oklahoma Chapter. Nonetheless, New
Yorkers felt there were lessons to be learned from the experiences
in Oklahoma.
"What you have to realize is that 100 percent of the
people weren't functioning that great to begin with,"
said Settles in an interview. Those with severe reactions
"didn't fall into clear categories," she said. "People
who had post-traumatic stress syndrome from the Vietnam War
relived their experiences, and many went into a day treatment
center."
It was especially hard for people with mental problems resulting
from the bombing to reach out, said Settles. The mental health
centers were taking care of people who already had a diagnosis,
so it was hard for them to take more people. That problem
was partially solved with a grant from the Federal Emergency
Management Agency earmarked for "new people" affected
by the bombing.
Licensed social workers are trained to deal with individuals
and their families, and many hadn't considered trauma part
of their practice, said Settles. When 80 of the approximately
350 social workers in private practice in Oklahoma City asked
to volunteer, the chapter set up skill-building workshops
on trauma.
For about two months, the chapter personnel and volunteers
in Oklahoma City were involved almost exclusively in crisis-oriented
responses and helping match volunteers with areas of need.
Thereafter, they began to focus on long-term issues. "The
effects on people and their needs don't go away just because
the cameras turn to something else," said Settles.
NASW, with other organizations like mental health centers,
schools, nonprofit agencies and faith-based agencies, set
up a long-term recovery planning group that met for years
on a regular basis to discuss how resources could best be
used to ease the disaster's effects. For instance, most of
those killed at the Murrah building were federal employees
with life insurance, health insurance and retirement plans.
But there were families whose sole provider was killed or
injured in the bombing, and more resources were directed to
the most needy.
It will be up to the chapters in New York and the other disaster
sites to decide what their priorities are, said Settles. "It's
not just the one-on-one counseling that's important. There
are roles for all kinds of social work skills. Communities
need to be rebuilt, groups need to be convened and meet objectives,
administrative skills are vital, programs and work plans need
to be put together, research needs to be done."
People's need for mental health services was intermittent,
said Settles. "Many were in such shock and denial at
the beginning that they wouldn't admit they needed help, but
problems came up later." For instance, one crane operator
had problems on the first anniversary as replays were shown
on television, and he brought in his whole crew for counseling
offered by the Fire Fighters Association, she said.
Getting back to something approaching normal has taken us
"a long, long time," said Settles. "We are
still not over it."
There were some benefits to the chapter and social work from
participation. The Salvation Army, the city, the state legislature
and NASW's national office honored them.
"I was told by the Salvation Army that social workers
make great volunteers," said Settles. "They will
be the ones who will be around long after the other volunteers
have left town."
Since the bombing, NASW entered into an agreement with the
American Red Cross that established ground rules for close
cooperation between the two organizations in the delivery
of mental health services to people affected by disasters
and provided a focus for NASW chapters' relationships with
the organization. The agreement, said Settles, "needs
to be executed in every state. Chapters can get incorporated
in state disaster plans as providers of service."
Experiences of disaster mental health providers in Oklahoma
and at many other sites show strong reasons why social workers
need training before doing this sort of work. Lesson number
one in any training is that disaster work is very different
from psychotherapy.
Fortunately, there is a fair amount of literature on disaster
mental health to give clues as to the effects on those who
survived the disasters, on their families, on the nearby population
and on rescue workers.
Several readily available models for crisis intervention
are available for study, and the American Red Cross, among
others, offers training. One helpful book from the Center
for Mental Health Services (CMHS) is Disaster Response
and Recovery: A Handbook for Mental Health Professionals.
From it, providers learn that most of the problems and symptomatology
are normal reactions of normal people to abnormal events.
Few require traditional psychotherapy unless they persist.
Few disaster survivors seek out mental health assistance,
so providers who simply wait in clinics will have little to
do.
For these reasons, outreach to the community is essential.
Outreach means mingling with survivors, rescue workers and
others in shelters, at meal sites and in devastated neighborhoods.
Interventions must be appropriate to the phase of the disaster.
For instance, it may be counterproductive to probe for feelings
while shock and denial are shielding individuals from intense
emotions. During later phases of their adjustment, people
may be feeling frustration and anger and could resent being
asked if they can find something "good" coming out
of the disaster.
There are two types of disaster trauma, both of which could
greatly benefit from social work expertise. These are individual
trauma and collective trauma, according to CMHS. Individual
trauma is the stress and grief people feel with such force
they can't function effectively. Collective trauma can sever
ties of survivors with each other and the locale.
"People will find it difficult, if not impossible, to
heal from the effects of individual trauma while the community
around them remains in shreds and a supportive community setting
does not exist," said CMHS. "Thus, mental health
interventions such as outreach, supportive groups and community
organization, which seek to reestablish linkages between individuals
and groups, are essential."
Many social workers have become experts in disaster mental
health. Among them are John Weaver of Pennsylvania and Robert
Chazin and Sheila Berger of Fordham University's social work
school.
Weaver's book Disasters: Mental Health Interventions
and Web site received much attention after the terrorist attacks.
The question, "How do you feel?" or similarly intrusive
questions are perceived to be the stereotypic pyschobabble
that television and movies use as shorthand for all mental
health counseling or what media representatives use to get
sound bites from traumatized people, wrote Weaver. "Once
you begin opening up a dialogue about the facts, the feelings
will follow, without having to ask for them."
He suggests several questions to open a conversation with
those who have lost loved ones. Among them: When did you and
your family get the news? What have you learned about the
circumstances of the death? What do you have to do next? What
happened during your last contact with the lost loved one?
Fordham's Chazin and Berger have developed a four-part guide
for crisis counseling that they used in debriefings around
the New York City after the Sept. 11 attack. It is called
SANE, and the four parts are story, assessment, new interventions
and evaluation.
In their model, first the counselor elicits the person's
"story" what he or she experienced then and
are experiencing now and accepts the pain without trying
to fix it.
Next there is an assessment of the person's difficulty and
trauma reaction. Is it a normal grief reaction or one that
is more serious, with ongoing counseling or other interventions
needed? What coping mechanisms are being used, and what would
be helpful now?
With "new interventions," the person's reactions
are interpreted as being normal, to be expected after loss
and trauma, and there is a review of the stages of grief:
shock, denial, anger, guilt, fear, depression, acceptance
and reintegration. Also, there is an education component,
which includes:
- Explaining grief as an ongoing process that can emerge
and subside more than once.
- Pointing out that use of substances may numb out bad realities,
but it delays or stops healing.
- Encouraging self-care and nurturing.
- Encouraging mutual aid with family, co-workers, neighbors,
children, the community, rescuers and aid organizations.
- Instilling hope and trust that the pain will subside with
time.
- Teaching relaxation techniques, such as breathing exercises.
When finished, an evaluation is done of what was helpful
and might continue to help, and individual plans for continued
healing are made.
For a copy of Disaster Response and Recovery: A
Handbook for Mental Health Professionals: (800) 789-2647,
document number (SMA) 94-3010; John Weaver's Web site: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/johndweaver/;
for the SANE model: chazin@fordham.edu. |