Blue Herald
16
Jan
New Orleans Feels Pain of Mental Health Crisis
by QuestionGirl

One thing our new congress isn’t dealing with right away is the damaged Gulf Coast. Shame on them…..

NEW ORLEANS - Sixteen months after Hurricane Katrina tore this city apart, a hidden sort of damage is emerging. Local officials see it in reports of suicides, strokes and stress-related deaths. They see it in the police calls for fights and domestic violence. They see it in the long waiting lists for psychiatric care that they have no way to provide.
These days, life in the Big Easy isn’t easy at all. Everyone from the mayor to the people staffing the public health clinics sees it: New Orleans is facing an unprecedented mental health crisis - and the city has no way to deal with it.

The obvious problems only fuel the more subtle ones. About half of the city’s 450,000 pre-Katrina residents have yet to return, according to the mayor’s office, and entire neighborhoods remain filled with boarded-up homes and businesses. For those who have come back, everything is hard, and the challenges seem endless: lining up contractors, getting basic services restored, even finding neighborhood places to buy groceries, clothes and gasoline.

Now, many fear the situation could worsen. “This couple of months is our most critical time period. … New Year’s, Mardi Gras, Easter, and if people need (mental health) services right now, there really is almost no place to go,” says Kevin Stephens, director of the city Health Department.

“We’ve got families that have been split up for months, families that lost their homes, crammed in small trailers. … People have lost their jobs, their support system,” he adds. “There’s a heaviness. And we’re seeing a much, much higher incidence of mental illness.”

Read more at USA Today


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