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Storm leaves trauma trail

A couple surveys the remains of her parents' home that burned down during Superstorm Sandy in New York in October 2012. Officials estimate about 700,000 New Yorkers are still experiencing mental health issues from the storm.
Many wary after Sandy

LONG BEACH, N.Y. — Kathy and Mark Michaels huddled in the attic of their Long Beach home as Superstorm Sandy turned streets into canals, ripped apart the boardwalk and snapped electrical lines.

“I was very worried the whole roof was going to come down on us,” Kathy Michaels said. “We were holding hands. We thought it would maybe be our last night on Earth.”

Michaels has tried antidepressants, psychotherapy and weekly support group meetings to cope with her trauma. She’s back in her home now, but says she is forever changed.

“You don’t like things like this to define your life but I don’t think I’ll ever be the same,” said Michaels, 60. “I’ll never be psychologically the same.”

New York health officials estimate about 700,000 residents are still experiencing mental health problems from the storm, which hit on Oct 29, 2012. New Jersey officials did not have a similar estimate but in the 15 months after Sandy, the state supported a disaster mental health program that served 500,000 people.

“There’s just this sort of cumulative stress that has taken a toll on people,” said Renee Burawski, director of Office for Sandy Recovery in the New Jersey Division of Mental Health and Addiction Services.

It manifests in different ways, such as children avoiding showers because they remind them of rain or an inability to track bills or paperwork. And sometimes it’s a forecast of bad weather.

“It’s left me in a very panic-stricken state of mind,” said Connie Livolsi of Long Beach.

The sooner people get help, the easier the recovery. The Mental Health Association of New York City launched a program last week called iHelp: Sandy Stress Relief. It offers access to counselors and resources to help with anxiety, substance abuse and other issues.

The goal is to give people coping skills so they can be more resilient in future traumas, said association executive vice president Kathryn Salisbury.

Shelter, safety and basic needs are the ones that get dealt with before you begin to seek help for emotional issues,” Salisbury said.

Dr. Kerry Symon, director of the disaster distress response program for The Visiting Nurse System of New York, said her agency is working with 450 clients in the region through 10-week programs that teach behavior modification and relaxation techniques.

“It really is about what else in their lives can help them,” Symon said.

Breezy Point resident Marty Ingram said exercise, eating right and doing something constructive has helped. The former chief of the Point Breeze Fire Department was leading one of three volunteer fire departments when Sandy pushed ashore. A fire fed by gusting winds burned 130 homes.

Now Ingram is working with a partner in Canada to build fire vehicles that can operate in floodwaters. “That’s helped me,” Ingram said. “Sometimes I get upset that we lost so many homes on my watch.”

The Mental Health Association in New Jersey had about 250 counselors going door-to-door in the 10 most affected counties after Sandy. About 25 are still making visits. Vice president and chief operating officer Robert Kley said there has not been a large demand for mental health services recently. Kley said large outreach efforts initially may have helped but people may also still be focused on getting home.

“The recovery process is taking a longer period of time,” Kley said. “We’re kind of feeling we’re going to see some of the longer-term impacts coming out a bit more.”

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