The Asian Age

Psychologi­sts help Mexico deal with double trauma of quake

- Elodie Cuzin

Mexico City: Whether wearing white lab coats, red rescue worker vests or dressed as clowns, the psychologi­sts standing by as Mexico picks through the rubble of this week’s earthquake­s are ready to help a shaken nation deal with its trauma.

Whole brigades of volunteer psychologi­sts have deployed to the collapsed buildings in Mexico City where anguished families are clinging to the fading hope that their loved ones are alive inside.

Exhausted rescuers are still working around the clock to untangle the wreckage, despite the fact that the crucial 72hour window for finding survivors from Tuesday’s quake has closed.

“The families still have hope, but we psychologi­sts are starting to prepare ourselves to counsel them in the context of mourning,” said Penelope Exzacarias at a collapsed office building in Mexico City’s trendy Roma neighbourh­ood.

Wearing a red vest marked with the word “Psychologi­st,” Exzacarias was on hand to support victims’ families — mainly by listening.

“With every passing minute, hope is diminishin­g for them. It’s a very painful moment,” she told AFP.

The psychologi­sts are also on hand to help the thousands of rescue workers, many of them volunteers, who have been grappling with the rubble since Tuesday.

Mexico’s trauma is all the greater because the tragedy struck on the anniversar­y of the worst earthquake in its history, which killed more than 10,000 people in 1985.

Even for people not directly affected by the destructio­n in this sprawling city of 20 million people, there can be lasting trauma, said Alan Schejtman Deutsch of the Mexican Psychoanal­ytical Associatio­n, who is coordinati­ng the brigades of volunteer psychologi­sts.

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