Special
report: Strong
Earthquake Jolts SW China
 |
|
Psychological counselors are still
unable to tell 12-year-old Liu Xiaohua (R) that she's an orphan on
May 16, 2008. (File Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
MIANYANG, Sichuan Province, May 18 (Xinhua) -- Five
days after the devastating southwest China earthquake, psychological counselors
are still unable to tell 12-year-old Liu Xiaohua that she's an orphan.
Playing in the welfare center in
Mianyang, Sichuan Province, the girl has been waiting for her parents to collect
her and take her home.
 |
|
Premier Wen condoles Liu Xiaohua (2nd
L) during his stay in quake-hit Mianyang, Sichuan Province on May
13, 2008. (File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
But Zhao Guoqiu, a Health
Ministry psychological intervention expert, says her mental state is still too
fragile for her to receive the news that her parents died in the quake.
Liu, of the Qiang ethnic minority, has been
"resistant" to discussing her horrific experiences immediately after the
disaster, says Zhao.
The sixth grader was in class at the Qushan Primary
School, in Beichuan county, one of the worst-hit areas, when the quake struck.
The building collapsed, but a teacher helped her
escape from the debris and she returned home to find her grandmother and her
younger brother dead.
Her parents had died rushing to her school.
"This is the most difficult case I have dealt with in
30 years. To see the death of her relatives is extremely cruel for someone so
young," says Zhao.
Counselors are still trying to win her trust in order
to help her express the grief of that day, but she curls up weeping and refuses
to discuss those events whenever the subject is raised.
"Her therapy has progressed very slowly as she has
avoided facing reality," says Zhao.
"The disaster has cast a huge shadow in her mind and
she can't expel the shadow, it could develop into a serious psychological
problem, which could ruin her future or even drive her to suicide."
The eight children in the welfare center are among
tens of thousands of people thought to be seriously traumatized by the disaster.
The quake, which was felt in
many parts of the country, has caused 28,881 deaths nationwide. In Sichuan
alone, the death toll exceeded 28,300, while more than 10,000 are still buried.
In Mianyang's Jiuzhou Stadium, where Premier Wen
Jiabao met LiuXiaohua during a visit on Tuesday, Lu Jianguo, a psychologist from
the Chengdu Medical College has found many severely traumatized people.
"Almost everybody is suffering depression, anxiety,
guilt, self-doubt or anger, and suffer insomnia or nightmare," says
HuangGuoping, director with the Psychological Intervention Center of the
Mianyang No. 3 hospital.
About 60 percent of the people would probably recover
within a year, but the rest could suffer trauma symptom for life, says Huang.
The work of a psychological consultant, according to
Wu Huiqiong, research fellow with the psychological research center of the
Guangzhou-based Sun-Yet Sen University, was to "encourage the patients open
their hearts, cry, and let out their grief".
"We first accompany them to gain trust, let them tell
their stories, and help them restore their normal psychological status," she
says.
Zhao Guoqiu says the best time for psychological
intervention is 24 to 72 hours after the disaster. "The later, the harder," he
says.
After the earthquake, the Health Ministry dispatched
a team of more than 20 experts to help with psychological intervention.
But Zhao believes their capabilities are limited.
"Not just children need psychological treatment, adults need it as well."
Some other experts suggested that rescuers may need
such treatment too.
Post-disaster psychological intervention in China is
a recent phenomenon. After the devastating typhoon Saomai that killed at least
460 in 2006, a team of 32 doctors and volunteers was sent to the worst hit area
in Zhejiang.
But a lack of specialists has hindered the
development of psychological intervention, as China, with a population of 1.3
billion, has fewer than 15,000 psychological doctors.