Special report: Strong
Earthquake Jolts SW China
MIANYANG, Sichuan, May 19 (Xinhua) -- China's largest
grief counseling operation for survivors of a natural disaster is in full swing,
a week after an 8.0-magnitude earthquake rocked the southwestern Sichuan
Province.
In a temporary residence for quake victims in Mianyang City, Dr. Wang Ningxia faced 8-year-old Qiao Xi, who was traumatized and unable to speak after her experience in the disaster.
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A psychologist consoles a girl who lost touch with her parents during Monday's earthquake in southwest China's Sichuan Province May 16, 2008. A psychologist consoles a girl who lost touch with her parents during Monday's earthquake in southwest China's Sichuan Province May 16, 2008. A renowned psychologist said Sunday in big disasters like southwest China earthquake, the country shall prepare long-term psychological counseling for victims, which might last for years. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Qiao Xi's mother lost four members of her family
including her son, Qiao Xi's elder brother, in the quake. The formerly talkative
girl hadn't spoken for a week.
"Do you still want to go to school? Would you want to
go back to your school?" the psychologist asked.
The question won the first one-word response.
"Want," whispered the girl, who had been
communicating with the simple body language of nodding for "yes" or shaking her
head for "no."
Wang said that the session had achieved some success.
But not all the cases she was treating in the quake zone progressed.
"I tried in vain to communicate with a mother who
lost her daughter. She could not face the truth. She neither cried nor ate,"
said Wang.
The doctor from the South West University of Science
and Technology led 10 teachers and 34 students to offer counseling in Mianyang
City.
Wang took out a questionnaire she had drafted and
pleaded with Xinhua's reporters to help submit it to authorities, who have the
power to hand out the questionnaire to survivors. "The questionnaire would help
counselors locate victims who urgently need psychological treatment," said Wang.
There are at least 300 professional psychologists
working in the quake zone, according to Xinhua's tally of medical staff sent by
the Ministry of Health and a dozen medical institutes around the country.
A group of psychologists led by Zhang Yuqing,
associate professor from the Psychological Institute of the Chinese Academy of
Sciences, has carried out counseling for 1,000 school children in Beichuan
County, closest to the epicenter of the earthquake.
"We gave the children some knowledge and methods to
ease psychological stress," said Zhang, who also planned to meet injured victims
and orphans.
Wang Ningxia said that most of the psychologists
working in the quake zone volunteered to join the task.
"This was the first time that we faced so many
traumatized people. This is the first attempt at such a massive psychological
operation in China. The work lacks overall coordination," said Wang.
She said that psychological therapy is urgently
needed, since survivors are still gripped with horror and a sense of insecurity
and solitude.
"They re-experience the horror again and again in
everyday nightmares or insomnia. The trauma may persist for two to 10 years,"
she said.
Zhang Kan, director of the Psychological Research
Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that millions of quake
victims, witnesses, rescuers and even reporters could suffer psychological
trauma and need counseling.
"Some people may not handle the emotion and suffer
long-time panic, the feeling of setbacks and emotional dysphoria. Such patients
may turn to liquor, cigarettes and drugs for comfort. Some may contemplate
suicide or other extreme behavior," said Zhang.
Dysphoria is a medical term for a general state of
feeling unwell.
About 10,000 psychological manuals have been sent to
kindergartens and schools in ravaged areas of Sichuan from Tianjin, a northern
port city.
The brochures, compiled by experts and students at
Nankai University, teach people how to comfort themselves and help others to
recover from psychological trauma.
Outside the quake zones, people and organizations
voluntarily mobilized psychological consultation and assistance for the
survivors.
In Liaoning Province, northeast China, a website
started operations on Monday to help young Sichuan migrant students and
employees.
Psychologists will stay online at www.newssc.org and
www.nen.com.cn to answer questions concerning post-quake problems.
"We plan to recruit more professionals and train
volunteers to help the team," said Su Jiasheng, chief of a cyberspace volunteers
association based in Shenyang, the provincial capital.
In Hubei Province, more than 60 psychological
instructors attended a training program at Huazhong Normal University on Monday
afternoon in preparation for helping students whose hometowns are in quake-hit
regions.
Falling into deep grief after losing relatives, many
students confined themselves to their dorms and turned down any kind of help,
said Wang Haiyan, a lecturer in the training course.
The training, based on case studies and experience
from a serious earthquake in Taiwan, is aimed at improving teachers' knowledge
and skill to help get students out of depression and sorrow.
Thousands of volunteers from around the country have
registered through local psychological service stations to help with the rescue.
But there is a serious shortage of professional psychologists, since trauma
counseling is still a developing science, even in China's major cities.