Austin American-Statesman

Find mental health services for children reunited with parents

- NEAL WATKINS, AUSTIN

As the Trump administra­tion moves slowly toward reuniting refugee parents and children, we are hearing reunificat­ion stories from the front lines. Accounts from families, journalist­s, activists, political leaders and clinicians tell of the enormous distress that refugee children and parents have endured.

A Honduran father reunited with his 3-year-old son after three months said: “He just kept looking at me, crying. He wouldn’t talk to me.” The boy won’t let anyone except his father hold him. It has been difficult to gain his trust as it was before. His son felt that he was abandoned.

A mother reunited with her two sons, ages 7 and 11, after a month said the boys don’t leave her side. They keep asking their mother to hold them for fear that immigratio­n officers will take them away again

Versions of these stories will be enacted by countless refugee families who fell under the “zero tolerance” and “family separation” policies that ripped children from their parents at the border. As more reports come out, we will truly know the scale of damage wrought by a policy as inexplicab­le as it was heartless. These families are facing a mental health crisis.

Not only young children will show the ill effects of separation and detention, children of all ages have suffered in different ways depending on age, health and the conditions of separation and detention. It is self-centered thinking; it’s what young children do. All children, younger and older, will show behavioral and emotional reactions: bedwetting, nightmares and night terrors, clinging, mistrust, nervousnes­s, defiance, opposition, depression, somatic complaints, separation anxiety, fears of new people and places — just about every known symptom of post-traumatic stress, depression and disrupted attachment­s.

The damage inflicted by the policy and practice of separating families under such chaotic and punitive circumstan­ces will take a long time to heal and be treated. Now that the damage is done, we bear the responsibi­lity of fixing the damaged family bonds and the psychologi­cal traumas of children and parents. As two experience­d mental health researcher­s and practition­ers, we know how these children and parents will appear in our schools and clinics. Fortunatel­y, competent contempora­ry mental health practices can help repair these broken lives.

The process starts with screening children and parents to identify those most harmed and most in need. Screening helps answer these questions: Who are the ones most troubled? Who are the ones showing the most disturbanc­e? Which ones had a health or mental health problem now exacerbate­d by separation? Good clinical screening with valid instrument­s and skilled clinical observatio­ns will certainly help us make these distinctio­ns.

Screening should be followed by a full assessment, in which multiple clinicians collect and evaluate more details to make sure nothing is missed. Together, members of this team will recommend the treatment. How do we repair the trauma of the child? How do we treat the “odd” or regressed behavior the child is showing, like the cases above? What is the best treatment for the parents’ mental health reactions?

These are the next steps that our nation must take to undo the damage that has been done. There’s much that state leaders and Congress can do. States can work with nonprofits that can provide the mental health services that will initiate this healing process. But they must be cautious: The same organizati­ons that imprisoned children and parents cannot screen, assess and provide treatment. These families need people and services they can trust and that won’t hurt them. Congress can move swiftly to release funds so that they reach every town, every social service agency in our country.

None of this can be done or done well until families are together and children securely in their parents’ arms. The children, like the 3-year-old boy, deserve our attention and care. We owe it to them, and we owe it now. We must earn their trust.

Re: Aug. 5 commentary, “Myth, not renewable energy, generates Georgetown’s buzz.”

Cutter W. Gonzalez’s piece overlooked the government support for fossil fuels that annually amounts to $20 billion (https://bit.ly/2g8DXWW)

I heard on the news today that the administra­tion is considerin­g cutting the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion budget.

I guess that’s because nothing has happened. That “nothing” is a huge success story that people don’t recognize.

As a retired IBMer, I remember the Y2K problem. Remember that? The public perception was also that it was a big nothing. Nothing happened: Y2K came and went without a problem. But I know that my company spent a huge amount of time, resources, money and people to fix it before it happened. That nothing was also a huge success. The public’s perception of Y2K is like a grain of sand on top of the Great Pyramid at Giza.

I fear that the possible TSA cuts are a result of the same ignorance. The fact that nothing happened is the huge success we all want. We need to continue our efforts and always increase them.

 ?? RALPH BARRERA / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? A recent column about Georgetown’s 100 percent renewable energy purchase has sparked responses that point out government subsidies for fossil fuels, as well as “worn-out ultraconse­rvative arguments,” as one writer put it.
RALPH BARRERA / AMERICAN-STATESMAN A recent column about Georgetown’s 100 percent renewable energy purchase has sparked responses that point out government subsidies for fossil fuels, as well as “worn-out ultraconse­rvative arguments,” as one writer put it.

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