First-responders and front-line healthcare professionals are vulnerable to PTSD
Rogers Connect Care is available to treat traumas caused by COVID-19 pandemic
(May 4, 2020, Oconomowoc, WI) – The recent suicide of Lorna Breen, a New York City emergency room doctor who had suffered from COVID-19 and had been traumatized by treating other patients who had contracted the virus, needs to serve as a wakeup call for all first-responders and front-line healthcare professionals.
“These heroes are saving lives, but that can come with a cost to their own well-being,” said Chad Wetterneck, PhD, a licensed clinical psychologist and clinical director of trauma recovery services at Rogers Behavioral Health. “This pandemic is unprecedented in our lifetime, and the entire medical community needs to be cognizant of the symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).”
Wetterneck said the symptoms of trauma or posttraumatic stress disorder are different for each individual based on the specific experience, but can include:
- Scanning for danger in safe situations
- Experiencing irritability, anger or aggression
- Withdrawn behavior
- Recurrent nightmares or flashbacks of the event, feeling as though the life-threatening situation is present again
- Typically avoiding places, people, activities or objects that are reminders of the event
- Difficulty sleeping
- Tending not to go out in public
- Feeling depressed and alone
- Engaging in risky behaviors such as substance use, gambling, driving fast, etc.
“The change in mood and thoughts can look a little different for each person. For many, people report feeling more anger, shame and a lot of fear. Others find themselves emotionally ‘numbed,’” Dr. Wetterneck said. “Imagine 90 percent of the workforce is told to stay at home, but you are asked to be there and work harder, and you yourself may be at risk.”
In the COVID-19 pandemic, front-line healthcare professionals are the last people to comfort their dying patients, adding to the traumas those workers are experiencing, Dr. Wetterneck said.
As emergency rooms and other health care organizations become increasingly overwhelmed, Rogers is supporting communities by providing highly specialized, evidence-based mental health and addiction treatment that is critically needed at this time.
Rogers Connect Care, a new telehealth mental treatment option for patients, provides a secure virtual environment that ensures privacy while allowing patients to continue therapeutic group-based and individual treatment. Learn more at rogersbh.org/connectcare.
“It’s long been said that necessity is the mother of invention. Rogers already had made in-roads in implementing the electronic delivery of mental health care. But the necessity of responding to the COVID-19 pandemic provided us a catalyst to expedite and greatly expand our telehealth services,” says President and Chief Executive Officer Pat Hammer.
“With Rogers Connect Care, we are building on the experience our psychiatrists already had using telemedicine and leveraging Rogers’ longstanding expertise in providing highly effective treatment. Our emerging telehealth capabilities have created a new way of delivering patient-centered psychiatric care,” says Dr. Jerry Halverson, chief medical officer. “The heightened demand for mental health and addiction treatment in this pandemic makes it imperative that we utilize new technologies and methods to provide the best possible care that is also safe for both patients and employees during COVID-19.”
Meanwhile, Rogers continues to accept patients for inpatient and residential care when appropriate and has immediate availability in several programs.
In addition to its headquarters in Oconomowoc, WI, Rogers provides mental health care services at facilities in Appleton, Brown Deer, Kenosha, Madison, and West Allis, WI, as well as San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego, CA; Tampa and Miami, FL; Atlanta, GA; Skokie and Hinsdale, IL; Minneapolis and St. Paul, MN; Philadelphia, PA; and Nashville, TN.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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First-responders and front-line healthcare professionals are vulnerable to PTSD
May 4th, 2020 by Rogers Behavioral HealthRogers Connect Care is available to treat traumas caused by COVID-19 pandemic