黑料不打烊 Note: Several weeks ago, we published results of a new CDC study that found that one in four young adults between the ages of 18 and 24 say they’ve considered suicide in the past month because of the pandemic, with more than 40 percent of those surveyed saying they experienced a mental or behavioral health condition connected to the Covid-19 emergency.
Accordingly, the Democrat鈥檚 HEROES COVID relief bill included a measure by longtime mental health champion Rep. Paul Tonko that would require the National Institute of Mental Health to fund research on how COVID-19 has affected essential employees鈥 mental well-being in order to 鈥渉elp us better understand these mental and behavioral health challenges and equip us with knowledge and tools to help [frontline workers] manage their health and build resiliency.鈥
Advocates behavioral health services in 黑料不打烊 have pointed on an almost daily basis to the unmet mental health and addiction related needs of essential workers both currently and in anticipation of a possible recurrence of the spread of the virus in our efforts to urge Congress, Governor Cuomo and the NYS legislature to increase rather than cut vital BH services at a time when they are most needed.
On Front Lines Of COVID Battle, Mental Anguish
By Megan Sauer Albany Times Union August 27, 2020
ALBANY 鈥 Marissa Robbins, a surgical physician鈥檚 assistant at Rochester General Hospital, has always invested in her mental health 鈥 she sees a therapist, exercises and spends time with her family every Sunday to cope with the everyday stress of her job.
That all changed in early March when Robbins, 27, was reassigned to work in the hospital鈥檚 Intensive Care Unit and at a COVID testing site, which she estimates tested 800 people a day in its first two weeks. And while being present for the initial wave of testing felt like a call to action, Robbins and other hospital employees working on the forefront have suffered emotional consequences.
鈥淸The pandemic] greatly affected [my mental health] because I was constantly in a state of fear as we didn’t know what was going to happen,鈥 Robbins said. 鈥淲e didn’t know if we were going to get the amount of people like 黑料不打烊 City did.鈥
Hospitals throughout 黑料不打烊 state are aware of the stress their employees are under and provide healthcare workers with a variety of options to support their mental health.
While Robbins had similar support in Rochester, she said she couldn鈥檛 attend wellness lectures or use the other mental health resources provided by the hospital because she had to be 鈥渓aser-focused鈥 on her job.
鈥淲hen people are ventilated in the ICU, we sometimes will turn them face down,鈥 Robbins said, describing one of the tactics used to expand patients鈥 lungs. 鈥淲hen that happens, they get pressure ulcers. People will have necrotic tissue all over their face, all over their body. It鈥檚 hard to see because as you鈥檙e trying to save these people, there are other consequences.鈥
Rep. Paul Tonko, D-Amsterdam, introduced a mental health research bill in April, which aimed to help health care workers process daily mental trauma.
The legislation, included in the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions Act, would require the National Institute of Mental Health to fund research on how COVID-19 has affected essential employees鈥 mental well-being. The Democratic-controlled House passed the HEROS Act on a party-line vote, but the Republican-controlled Senate has yet to consider the measure.
In a recent statement, Tonko noted that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in June revealed more than 40% of adults in the U.S. reported struggling with their mental health. The numbers show a 鈥渨idespread, quiet suffering鈥 within American households that will have lasting consequences, he said.
鈥淢y COVID-19 Mental Health Research Act would help us better understand these mental and behavioral health challenges and equip us with knowledge and tools to help [frontline workers] manage their health and build resiliency,鈥 Tonko said.
Representatives at the Albany Medical Center 鈥渁pplauds Rep. Tonko鈥檚 efforts鈥 because they are 鈥渃ommitted to providing an environment that promotes the health and well-being of its workforce.鈥
鈥淲e offer a robust Employee Assistance Program through Capital EAP with free counseling and a host of other services for employees and their family members,鈥 Albany Med spokeswoman Sue Ford said in an email. 鈥淚n addition, Albany Med has a wide range of wellness offerings, and a multi-disciplinary committee 鈥 called Support Our Staff 鈥 on call to assist Albany Med staff who are experiencing any form of crisis.鈥
Albany psychologist Tania Khan said experiences like Robbins鈥 are why research during the pandemic should be considered essential because mental professionals are also trying to figure out the best way to treat their patients.
鈥淚t’s really dangerous to make sweeping generalizations or assumptions about people just based on their personal experience.鈥 Khan said. “It’s not my job to give advice based on my life experiences. It is based on treatments that we know are effective for broader groups, not just a certain type of individual. Without that research we can’t make the conclusion about what would work.鈥
Khan also said workers鈥 mental health should be prioritized not only for their sake, but for society鈥檚 well-being.
鈥淲e all live in a system and those of us who are not health care workers rely on hospitals to take care of us,鈥 Khan said. 鈥淸Essential] employees are working around the clock, and if they don鈥檛 have the physical time to [take care of themselves], they鈥檙e not getting the care they need to deliver the services we need.鈥
While 黑料不打烊 state appears to have temporarily controlled the spread of the virus, Robbins and Rochester General Hospital are anticipating a new wave of infections in the fall. The facility has prepared more beds and negative pressure rooms, and Robbins鈥 is preparing to care for her mental health by resuming therapy through Telehealth.
鈥淚 wish I could have gone to 黑料不打烊 City and done more because I feel like I didn’t even do enough, which is something I鈥檝e talked about with my therapist,鈥 Robbins said.
On their website, the CDC lists signs of stress, coping and resilience techniques and provides resources on where essential workers can get mental health support. The specific page for emergency responders, a job that rarely allots time for preparation, cautions the side effects of burnout and secondary traumatic stress. A third page also provides an instructional video and curriculum titled, 鈥淐aring for Yourself While Caring for Others,鈥 which informs healthcare employees how to manage the risks of their job while caring for their personal safety.
Megan Sauer is a reporter for the Medill News Service and journalism master’s degree student at Northwestern University.