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Communicating with Children in Crises. Dr. Lynne Jones International Medical Corps Developmental psychiatry section Cambridge University. INTRODUCTION. Family approaches in Kosovo Sexual abuse in Sierra Leone Grief and loss in Aceh Conclusions. Kosovo Spring 1999.
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Communicating with Children in Crises Dr. Lynne Jones International Medical Corps Developmental psychiatry section Cambridge University
INTRODUCTION • Family approaches in Kosovo • Sexual abuse in Sierra Leone • Grief and loss in Aceh • Conclusions
Kosovo Spring 1999 • Longstanding conflict over Albanian desire for independence • NATO airstrikes • At least ¾ of population of 2 million Albanians flee province at gun point • Remainder trapped in province • Serb forces and para-militaries in control
Drawing family trees • Collective act- engages extended family • Interesting and engaging for children • Allows for a collective naming of the dead • Allows for story telling under child’s control • Children included in collective narrative
Different children, different responses • Arlinda 14: symptomatic, talking and replaying • Jeton: talked to journalists, well • Mimosa: sad, did not want to talk • Arben: Overactive, did not want to talk • Dita: reconnect with father • Therapeutic activities • Identifying bodies • Funeral (only Arlinda went) • Play • Medical evacuation and treatment in UK • All children in school • Family support from social services
Mental health and justice • Interviews with war crimes tribunal 2001 • All the children talked at length and in detail • War crimes trial in Belgrade 2003 • All the children wanted to identify perpetrator and be witnesses • Changed attitudes to Serbs • All doing well at school
Kailahun district, Eastern Sierra Leone • Conflict ended 2002 • Population c. 300,000 • 80% houses destroyed • > 80,000 displaced • > 8000 ex-combatants • 1 psychiatrist • 120 bed hospital(14 hours away)
Sexual abuse of a six year old girl Hysterical paralysis • HIV prophylaxis • Gentle mobilisation • Distraction techniques • Dream scripting • Protection issues - case conference • Prosecution and relocation • NB Local traditional approaches inadequate
Silent grief in Aceh • Tsunami 26 December 2005 • At least 155,000 died in one day • Landscape obliterated • Massive overwhelming loss
Using the story • Create a narrative that acknowledges her loss • Acknowledge and give permission for symptoms • Confirm her strength and courage • Let her know she is talented and loved • Give her the idea that pain will diminish over time
Some take home points • Cultural political literacy essential • Non psychological interventions protect mental health: • Address basic needs • Address protection and human rights issues • Reconnect children with families • Provide medical care • Re-establish normal routines activities—school family life • Access to justice
Take home points 2 • Assist mourning • Primary role to facilitate communication • Retelling trauma story not essential • Exposure can be helpful; timing up to child • Address sexual and gender based violence • Do not neglect children with preexisting problems (learning disability, epilepsy)
Guidelines for grieving children • Provide consistent, enduring appropriate care • Reunite children with their families or extended families as soon as possible • In the absence of family create enduring family type networks with a low ratio of caretaker to children. • Consistent care-giving by one or two caretakers, not multiple volunteers is essential to prevent attachment problems particularly in younger children • The more continuity with the child’s previous life the better. • Support the carers by attending to basic needs and their own mental states. • Facilitate normal grieving and mourning—with memorials for absent bodies, appropriate religious ceremonies • Don’t hide the truth • Children need clear, honest, consistent explanations appropriate to their level of development.
Guidelines for grieving children 2 • They need to accept the reality of the loss, not be protected from it. • Magical thinking should be explored and corrected. What is imagined may be worse than reality and children may be blaming themselves for events beyond their control. • Debriefing may not be therapeutic or appropriate. • Encourage a supportive atmosphere where open communication possible, difficult questions answered, and distressing feelings tolerated. • Allow children to express grief in manner they find appropriate to person they most trust, at a time of their own choosing, • Symptomatic relief: Help the family to cope with traumatic symptoms if they exist. Provide information as to what to expect and straightforward management advice. • Help the child maintain connection with the lost parents—find mementoes if possible or let the child draw pictures, make objects. Answer the child's questions about the dead relative. • Restart normal educational and play activities as soon as possible