Commentary

Puerto Rico after Maria: Trauma team returns


 

Regressive behaviors cited

Laura Deliz, PsyD, director of the Autism Center at Ponce Health Sciences University, also attended the training. She reported that some of the autistic children under her care are manifesting regressive behaviors and are losing learned skills. They are more insecure, cling to transitional objects, and complain of pains, sleep problems, and show signs of having eating disorders. “Little things bother them more,” Dr. Deliz said. They cry more frequently, display more problems with concentration and attention, and are having more tantrums.

Comorbid with PTSD, symptoms of depression, anxiety disorders, conduct disorders, attention deficit disorders, and substance use disorders also are being encountered. Substance abuse more often is a comorbid condition in adolescents, but clinicians also are seeing this in children. Impulsive behaviors, self-destructive behaviors, and feelings of guilt also are being observed.

Compassion fatigue

Many trainees also are reporting symptoms of secondary traumatization and compassion fatigue. One trainee who lives in a mountain area had no electricity until 3 weeks before the training. Access to clean water has been sporadic, because power is required to pump the water.

Efforts to obtain gasoline has entailed waiting in line for 5 hours, sometimes only to have the supply run out upon reaching the pump. Puerto Rico continues to experience rolling blackouts. The island’s power company has lacked the proper materials to fix the problems. The elderly seem to be the main victims of this failing. Many of the elderly in the mountain areas, for example, still have no clean drinking water or electricity. Many of them live alone, and the churches are trying to help them.

Another trainee from the north coast, where the primary source of work is the dairy industry, reported that, when the power went off, the electric fences failed – and the cows wandered. Many became ill and died. An entire herd perished when an electric wire fell into nearby water.

Meanwhile, another trainee reported seeing a lot of anxiety and fear in the faces of the people waiting in long lines in the supermarkets trying to buy water, food that did not require refrigeration or cooking, and among people waiting in long lines at gas stations. Some people were sociable and supportive to one another; others were encouraging and telling stories. But there also were reports of fights breaking out. People were feeling frustrated because they could not get their basic needs met.

Among the adults, according to one observer, a sense of hopelessness and sadness prevailed. In the first weeks after the hurricane, just trying to communicate with other family members was a struggle because of the absence of cell phone service. In some ways, the children seemed more resilient, because they still managed to find ways to engage in play.

Compassion fatigue also is being experienced by many of the teachers on the island, our team learned. Many of them do not know whether they will have jobs at the beginning of the new school year. The public education system, already hit hard by a decade-long recession that preceded Maria, remains challenged. Of the 1,113 public schools, only 828 will remain operational, according to the Orlando Sentinel. Meanwhile, the psychosocial environment in many of the schools is not healthy, “not when you have students who are hungry and emotionally hurting,” according to one of our students.

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