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2001 Table of Contents | Public Employee Press Archives | Home
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![]() At a counseling session on Oct. 16, Robert Terruso, director of the DC 37 Personal Services Unit, meets with workers at McKinley Park Library. Brooklyn Public Library Local 1482 requested the session to help members cope with the Sept. 11 attack. |
More than a month later,
many DC 37 members affected by the Sept. 11 attack are trying to move
from shock to recovery. Mental health counselors, including the staff
of the unions Personal Service Unit, are helping them with the
coping process. Others have received aid and advice from school nurses
in Local 436, Social Workers in Local 768 and volunteer members of
Social Service Employees Local 371.
Many workers may remain scarred for life, said PSU Director
Robert Terruso. But most will pull through. They should be able
to develop their own coping skills to move on with life by talking
out their trauma with friends, families and therapists.
Since Sept. 11, PSU counselors have met with
hundreds of members who work at EMS, the Brooklyn Public Library,
the Housing Authority, Harlem and Bellevue hospitals, the Dept. of
Design and Construction, the Dept. of Youth and Community Services,
the Comptrollers Office, the Police Dept. and the Commission
on Human Rights. PSU has also provided members with telephone counseling
and referrals to mental health therapists.
PSU social workers say members are reporting such problems as difficulty
sleeping, anxiety, nightmares, headaches, eating binges and a lack
of appetite, disturbing memories, alcohol and substance issues, memory
lapses, jumpiness, feelings of isolation and anger, and a fear of
returning to work sites near ground zero.
Board of Education Employees Local 372 Executive Vice President Santos
Crespo mirrored the progress of the recovery effort as he moved from
doing the psychologically stressful rescue work himself to helping
survivors cope with their mental trauma.
Only hours after the towers collapsed, Santos and Grievance Rep Vito
Valenti volunteered at ground zero. A school drug abuse specialist
with training in crisis counseling, Mr. Crespo was then deployed to
Pier 27, where he worked with the families of the missing. Later,
he reported to the local school district and counseled teachers and
students who had seen the disaster.
Many students were traumatized and feared it could happen again,
said Mr. Crespo. His own feelings shut down for a while,
but he remains shaken by his experience.
Virtually all of the 1,500 members of EMTs and Paramedics Local 2507
have received help, including one-on-one counseling, group sessions
and informal talks with counselors. Luckily, the local had already
created its Peer Support Team for crisis situations and a program
administered by Human Service Centers, the largest behavioral health
organization in the state. The local established the program a few
years ago with City Council funding after several members committed
suicide.
Counselors are alarmed that many workers are showing signs of depression
and relapses earlier than expected after a major traumatic incident,
said Barbra Ann Perina, a clinical supervisor with Human Services
Centers.
We have a real mental health mess on our hands, Ms. Perina
said. How are we going to deal with this down the road?
Easing the Pain
![]() At Metropolitan Hospital, Sr. Psychologist Ife Ayodele, a member of Local 1189, set up weekly counseling sessions for people who were affected by the World Trade Center disaster. |
Senior Psychologist Ife Ayodele, a Local 1189 member
who set up a weekly counseling session at Metropolitan Hospital for
people affected by the Sept. 11 tragedy, said post-traumatic stress
disorder generally sets in about eight weeks after a traumatic event.
Ms. Ayodele advises her patients to take steps to help ease the pain,
such as practicing yoga, playing sports, and establishing regular,
pleasurable activities with loved ones.
Meanwhile, state and local health officials are gearing up for an
unprecedented increase in mental-health treatment in New York City.
All told, as many as 2.3 million people may require treatment, according
to the Coalition of Voluntary Mental Health Agencies.
Ilene Margolin, vice president for corporate affairs at GHI, the health-insurance
carrier chosen by many DC 37 members, said they have already offered
special services to help people cope with acute stress and anticipate
a significant increase in the use of mental health services in coming
the next months.
Its an open question how much a massive intervention by the
mental health community will help alleviate the psychological pain
unleashed by the World Trade Center assault.
To say that people wont be impacted by this is a lie,
said Local 2507 President Patrick J. Bahnken. The effects of
this incident are going to be far reaching and long term.
The experience of Oklahoma City suggests that the prognosis for survivors
of the World Trade Center disaster could be difficult.
Since the 1995 bombing of the Federal Building there snuffed out 168
lives, one-third of the survivors have suffered from post-traumatic
stress disorder. Half of the survivors directly exposed to the bombing
experienced anxiety, depression and drinking problems. The World Trade
Center incident has caused some of those survivors to relive their
trauma, said health-care sources.
Joseph Hunt, a social worker with DC 37s PSU, warned that people
who get no treatment or believe one debriefing session is adequate
are putting themselves at risk. But he expressed hope for the affected
people who seek therapeutic help.
We are human beings and we are survivors, said Mr. Hunt,
who has counseled members. The human spirit will persevere.
Human beings are resilient. We are not going to roll over and give
up.