Project Helping Hands Provides Mental Health Resouces for Gustav Victims
September 10, 2008 by Alicia Sparks, Mental Health Notes
Filed under Diseases & Conditions

Who doesn’t love it when our society pulls together to help victims?
Yesterday I received this press release from the National Council, the same bunch of forward thinkers who created an office on an island in Second Life called Nonprofit Commons in order to virtually offer mental health and addictions awareness and support.
Emergency Assistance Available for Gustav Victims
Experts Available to Discuss Mental Health and Addictions Issues in the Wake of Disaster
Contact: Meena Dayak, MeenaD@thenationalcouncil.org; 301.602.8474
Washington, DC — As the Gulf Coast braces for another potentially devastating hurricane, help is available to meet emergency mental health and addictions needs in the immediate aftermath of the storm.
Established by National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare, Project Helping Hands will help behavioral healthcare organizations respond to emergency needs in any community affected by the storm.
It is estimated that up to 25 to 30 percent of people in the most vulnerable communities experience new mental health and addictions problems in the wake of disasters.
“The stress and emotional impact of yet another major disaster can cause severe worry and anxiety,” said Linda Rosenberg, president and CEO of the National Council. “Project Helping Hands can be an immediate resource for residents who may be psychiatrically vulnerable and
traumatized by the storm.”Rosenberg said that people who have to leave their homes—seen as places of safety and comfort—can make the mental health challenges even more pronounced.
“The fear of losing your home, personal possessions, and even loved ones helps to compound the anxiety that people feel,” said Rosenberg.
Begun in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Project Helping Hands provided modest grants to treatment organizations in several Gulf Coast states. The grants were used to help with emergency needs like hiring treatment staff, setting up emergency outreach offices, and
purchasing medications and emergency equipment.“In the wake of disaster, community behavioral health providers must address the critical needs of two groups — those who experience the onset of trauma and mental disorders as a result of the disaster and those with pre-existing serious mental illnesses and addictions who need continued care and treatment,” said Rosenberg. “Our pockets are not deep
but we are standing by to help in any way we can.”More information about Project Helping Hands may be found at www.TheNationalCouncil.org/HelpingHands.
Feel free to forward this information to any Gustav victims you know!

Image: SXC















i would like to know about the helping hands i have a child that is mr and i need some extra help with things