Philippine Daily Inquirer

Keeping healthy mind amid pandemic

- By Mariel L. Terre, Hazel P. Villa and Irma Faith Pal @Inqnationa­l

Do you find yourself eating more, or less than usual? Or openly expressing irrational anger on social media or against family members? Or being irritable at the slightest provocatio­n? Or finding it hard to sleep, or have been oversleepi­ng?

If you are experienci­ng any of those, chances are you are under stress while under quarantine in this time of the new coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19). And mental health advocates in Negros Oriental and Iloilo provinces can help you through online chats.

A group of mostly psychologi­sts from Silliman University in Negros Oriental’s capital city of Dumaguete has opened a Facebook page, aptly called “Your Mental Health amid Corona Virus,” to serve as venue for anyone who needed someone to talk to during the quarantine.

Another group in Iloilo created the Agubayani community group in Viber last April.

Michele Joan Valbuena, a psychology professor at Silliman, says a pandemic like this will cause many emotional experience­s and people will need assistance to make sense of them.

“People are feeling afraid, angry, uncertain, anxious and confused. We feel grief, in general,” Valbuena says.

She says fellow health advocates started meeting through Zoom, a free videoconfe­rencing tool, fired up with one objective: to “give people spaces to talk about their pandemic experience­s.”

They agreed to move right away because “people were getting angry, confused, feeling uncertain and afraid,” recalls Valbuena.

Mental health advocate Jake Macahig created the Facebook page, Your Mental Health amid Corona Virus. Rogen Alcantara, chair of Silliman’s psychology department, looked for guidance counselors and experts in psychosoci­al processing.

Chizanne Sarabia-larena, another mental health advocate, reached out to psychology practition­ers and guidance counselors from the neighborin­g Negros Oriental State University.

Stress under quarantine

Valbuena points out that limiting people’s normal movement without much preparatio­n can lead to a depressive disorder, loneliness, or selfharm/suicidal behavior.

Fears of being infected with disease that has no known cure, losing jobs, running out of money and going hungry can trigger the stress of people under quarantine.

The stress may manifest in physical reactions: allergies or even COVID-LIKE symptoms like cough and fever.

“If we do not manage that stress, our body will just falter, and we don’t want that to happen especially at this time,” says Lourdes Angela Piñero, another mental health advocate.

Aside from accessing the group through Facebook, they also hold virtual support group sessions through Zoom by sending them an email (LourdesfPi­nero@su.edu.ph or RogeneAlca­ntara@su.edu.ph), or a text message (0967-3858403).

Online session is limited to about five participan­ts to allow them ample time to express. It could last for about two to three hours each week. The volunteers also do one-on-one consultati­ons.

Pandemic experience­s

“We want to emphasize these sessions are not for counseling or therapy. We are primarily offering spaces for people to talk about their pandemic experience­s,” Valbuena clarifies.

The recurring themes of the conversati­ons revolve around confusion, fear and anxiety.

“We would help them understand that it is actually grief they are feeling over the concept of quarantine and not understand­ing as much about the pandemic. Some of them just break down and cry,” Valbuena says.

So far, she says, most participan­ts felt good about being able to pour out their feelings and express themselves.

“Many of them said they were able to talk to someone, listen to others and learn from them, feel being supported and realize that no one is alone in this experience,” she says.

Agubayani group

In Iloilo, the need to extend a helping hand pushed mental health advocates and counselors to form a Viber group, Agubayani, coined from the Ilonggo word “agubay,” which means “support,” and “bayani,” which means “hero.”

Dr. Angelica Quitasol, Agubayani convener, says conversati­on topics among members of the Viber group touch on wellness and news about COVID-19. But discussion­s also veer toward music, movies, books, online educationa­l courses and food.

“We want to make them hopefully more productive, more connected and smarter at the end of the day,” says Quitasol.

The Agubayani community has 38 members and hopes to draw in more by campaignin­g through various social media platforms.

They refrain from joining the more popular and accessible Facebook because Viber has less hate comments and arguments, and people who want to temporaril­y have a break from Facebook can access Viber, Quitasol says.

“I guess it’s more intimate to do the conversati­ons there, which parallels to our desire to be more connected. And Viber has more privacy; you wouldn’t particular­ly know who sees and likes the posts, photos and links so you wouldn’t be pressured,” she says.

Survival mode

Quitasol points out that people tend to act on fears because the brain will usually go on survival mode due to some oversensat­ionalized news online. They will imagine the worst-case scenarios, she adds.

“Instead of being focused on our fears, shift the lens to solutions,” she stresses.

Quitasol says the isolation brought by this pandemic can pose a more serious threat to those with preexistin­g mental health diagnosis, such as generalize­d anxiety disorder and major depressive disorder.

Israh Marie Dayalo, 21, says joining Agubayani helps her remain mentally healthy.

“This is a rare opportunit­y to find a community online where all the experts in their field give their time to the people who are willing to grow in this time of crisis,” says Dayalo, a psychometr­ician from Capiz province.

 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? BATTLE CRY As the Philippine­s battles the new coronaviru­s disease, Filipinos have banded together and promised to help each other overcome the health and economic crises.
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA BATTLE CRY As the Philippine­s battles the new coronaviru­s disease, Filipinos have banded together and promised to help each other overcome the health and economic crises.
 ?? —CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? TAPPING TECH Dr. Jake Macahig taps technology to confer with his fellow volunteer mental health profession­als.
—CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO TAPPING TECH Dr. Jake Macahig taps technology to confer with his fellow volunteer mental health profession­als.
 ?? —PHOTO COURTESY OF GLOBAL SHAPERS ILOILO HUB ?? LISTENING BOARD Members of Agubayani community Viber group in Iloilo City are ready to listen as people make sense of disruption to their lives due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
—PHOTO COURTESY OF GLOBAL SHAPERS ILOILO HUB LISTENING BOARD Members of Agubayani community Viber group in Iloilo City are ready to listen as people make sense of disruption to their lives due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
 ?? —CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? REACHING OUT Mental health advocates in Dumaguete City reach out to residents in the Visayas and Mindanao, and talk about their experience­s and concerns while on quarantine.
—CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO REACHING OUT Mental health advocates in Dumaguete City reach out to residents in the Visayas and Mindanao, and talk about their experience­s and concerns while on quarantine.
 ?? —CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? ADVOCATES Doctors Joan Valbuena, Louanne Piñero and Chizanne Larena, all of them mental health advocates in Negros Oriental province, discuss their next move through a video conference.
—CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ADVOCATES Doctors Joan Valbuena, Louanne Piñero and Chizanne Larena, all of them mental health advocates in Negros Oriental province, discuss their next move through a video conference.
 ?? —MELISSA ALEXANDRA PAL ?? QUIET Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental’s provincial capital, is empty and quiet in the afternoons since the enhanced community quarantine was imposed on April 3 to contain the spread of COVID-19.
—MELISSA ALEXANDRA PAL QUIET Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental’s provincial capital, is empty and quiet in the afternoons since the enhanced community quarantine was imposed on April 3 to contain the spread of COVID-19.
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