The Jerusalem Post

‘Nation in trauma’: Rockets trigger hidden anxiety

Resiliency center study finds that 20% of citizens suffer from symptoms of post-trauma

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

The phone was ringing off the hook on Wednesday at the Israel Trauma and Resiliency Center NATAL on Ibn Gvirol Street in Tel Aviv, after a Grad rocket slammed into a home in Beersheba, and another fell into the sea near Bat Yam.

Gila Sela, Help Line manager of NATAL, told The Jerusalem Post that on days like these she sees a 100% increase in calls coming in not just from the South but from all over the country. “It’s very reactivati­ng of symptoms in people who remember what happened in previous incidents like this,” she said. “The memories are coming back, even if you sat in a shelter in Tel Aviv in Operation Protective Edge [in 2014].”

Sela explained that the recent incidents trigger anxiety in people all over the country “because we are a nation in trauma.”

20% of Israelis suffer from symptoms of post-trauma and are at risk of that developing into Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) if they don’t get help, according to a new study by the Israel Trauma and Resiliency Center NATAL.

NATAL strives to help people with their symptoms in time and prevent the developmen­t of PTSD.

The study explored the psychologi­cal resiliency, coping capacities and pressures among Israelis as a result of terrorist attacks and particular­ly in the aftermath of Operation Protective Edge four years ago.

Data was collected between July-September 2017, and the study was led by Prof. Marc Gelkopf, director of NATAL’s Research and Evaluation department and head of the Community Mental Health Department at the University of Haifa, Prof Avraham Bleich, head of NATAL’s profession­al steering committee, Dr. Talya Greene of the University of Haifa, and Liron Lapid Pickman of NATAL.

The study was conducted, with the support of the Lange Family Foundation, among 1,382 Israeli residents aged 18 and over, 500 of whom represent a representa­tive sample of the population of Israel and 882 from specific population­s (living in high exposure areas, Arab sector and immigrants). The data was collected, using questionna­ires via the Internet and telephone, by the Brandman Institute for Research and Marketing Consulting.

The study found that among residents of Beersheba there are particular­ly high mental distress rates, almost 21% more than residents in the rest of the country (in the Jewish sector only). The margin of error of the study is +-4.5%

While on regular days people manage to get on with their lives, Sela said, in times of tension, anxiety resurfaces.

What NATAL does, she said, is strive to restore a sense of calm and routine, the latter which she stressed is important for achieving the former. Anything that interferes with routine – such as the closure of schools, as was instructed by the Home Front Command in Beersheba and Gaza Border communitie­s on Wednesday – has a negative impact, particular­ly on those who are already nervous, she said.

“Resilience means routine and knowing what to expect so you can prepare for it,” she said, highlighti­ng the importance of regular drills and informatio­n circulated by the authoritie­s.

“We saw it with the woman in Beersheba who wasn’t confused by the siren at 4 a.m., because in routine we are practicing all the time, so she took her children [to the shelter] and saved their lives,” Sela noted.

In this vein, NATAL staff members guides parents to talk to their children about the situation in a way that they can understand it. “They need to know what is happening and what to do and this reduces anxiety and makes them feel that it’s under control,” Sela told the Post.

“What happens outside our homes has a very significan­t effect on what happens inside out homes, where we can control what happens to us. We don’t want the outside to come inside. We want to make a wall and bring back a feeling of control,” she said.

But many living in the Gaza border communitie­s don’t feel safe in their homes.

Symptoms in children witnessed by NATAL staffers include regression in language, bed-wetting, and fear of sleeping alone or of being alone altogether.

Since many parents are themselves suffering from anxiety or PTSD, that impacts on the children who don’t feel they have anybody to protect them, any anchor, said Vivian Reutlinger, clinical social worker and CBT psychother­apist at NATAL.

This, she said, has many psychologi­cal repercussi­on later in life, such as trust issues, and feelings of insecurity, depression and hopelessne­ss. “You can see this in teenagers,” Reutlinger told the Post over the phone after a day of working with children in southern communitie­s. “They can’t think about the future because the future is so uncertain.”

“We work with whole families. We understand it’s shared,” Dr. Tamar Lavi, NATAL’s director of Community Outreach, told the Post, as she too was on her way back from field work in the South.

She stressed that the South has been experienci­ng a situation of insecurity and waves of conflict for almost 17 years. “It’s a chronic exposure, very long exposure, and the children of today – their parents were teenagers when everything began. They are 2nd generation.”

Citizens in the South, Lavi said, live with uncertaint­y of what will happen next. “There is a lot of hyper-vigilance and stress because you are always 15 seconds away from a disaster,” she continued, that being the amount of time Gaza periphery residents have to run to a shelter when the siren blares its red alert warning. Lavi added that in recent months the combinatio­n of rockets, sirens and incendiary kites and balloons has been harsh. “That takes a toll on body, mind and spirit.”

The fact that it’s a shared experience with everyone in the same surroundin­gs also causes problems, she noted, because both adults and children in the family, at schools, even in the social services are experienci­ng the same thing. “Resources are impaired in the entire community,” Lavi explained, contrastin­g it to trauma experience­d by an individual in a car accident, who can then lean on others who have not been affected by that experience, for support.

Reutlinger recalled a family she visited in the South. “The parents told me that one of their girls was scared, but then I saw the other children were walking in pairs... Even in their own homes they don’t feel secure,” she said. “We help them feel that they can take care of themselves and, as much as possible, to feel that their home is a safe place.”

Reutlinger heads up NATAL’s “mobile units program” which was founded in 2006, when residents of Sderot were afraid to leave their homes – so NATAL brought the therapy to them. What was supposed to be a temporary program has since expanded, meeting a growing demand across different cities and communitie­s in the south.

NATAL provides parents with tools to help their children as well as helping the children help themselves. Sometimes the children use those tools to help others, Reutlinger remarked, recalling how a girl had told her how she’d taught a fellow pupil breathing relaxation techniques.

“If you feel that the ground is not as solid under your feet, call us, because with a very mild interventi­on, with very mild tools, we can help people get back into routine,” Sela urged.

On November 2, NATAL is holding its annual “Running in Color” event to raise awareness about post-trauma from terrorism and war.

The Natal helpline number is 1.800.363.363.

 ?? (Amir Cohen/Reuters) ?? SDEROT RESIDENTS run for shelter as a red alert siren sounds during a rocket attack in July.
(Amir Cohen/Reuters) SDEROT RESIDENTS run for shelter as a red alert siren sounds during a rocket attack in July.

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