'Healing is possible' for refugees with emotional wounds from ordeal - Action News
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Hamilton

'Healing is possible' for refugees with emotional wounds from ordeal

Refugees will arrive in the city with little, but many will carry emotional and mental scars from the upheaval and conflict they have fled. In addition to needing housing and clothing, they will need help dealing with those traumas.

Refugee trauma will strain Hamilton mental health resources: Expert

Teddy bears and blankets are seen during a media tour of the arrival facilities for Syrian refugees, in Montreal. (THE CANADIAN PRESS)

Syrian refugees coming toHamilton will carry little with them when they arrive,but one thing many will carry areemotional and mental scars from the war zone they have fled.

Hamiltonhas the skilled and experienced professionals to provide trauma treatment,but mental health workerswarn thatmore funding and resources are needed to meetany spike in need.

When the right help is there and regardless of how long it takes, healing is possible.- Karen Smith, executive director,Thrive Child and Youth TraumaServices

Karen Smith, executive director of Thrive Child and Youth TraumaServices in Hamilton, says ithasthe skilled cliniciansbut their space is limited.

"The services are there but they're not currently geared up with a capacity to see a sudden influx of a thousand ormorepeople without some waiting time," she said.

Time spent waiting to address trauma symptoms makes things worse and if unresolved, can cause life-long problems.

"Education, employment, personal relationships, you name it, physical health, mental health, all affected, adversely affected,"Smith said.

Many factors affect trauma

The severity of symptoms depends on how long the physiological "fight or flight response" has been triggered followingtimein war zones or in refugee camps.

"Healing is possible," Karen Smith, executive director of Thrive Child and Youth Services in Hamilton. (Supplied by Karen Smith)

The effects of conflict, separation from family members, travel and displacement are varied. It's also true thataffectsdon't always present themselves immediately, experts say.

"The longer you're exposed, the more kinds of traumatic experiences you're exposed to and the age and stage ofdevelopment of that child, that's going to have different effects on different kids," explained Smith.

She adds: "When the right help is there and regardless of how long it takes, healing is possible after trauma for kidsas well as adults."

Refugees are resilient

"There is a huge capacity for resilience to get to Canada," saidMary Jo Land, a registered psychotherapist and program coordinator of the Outreach, Assessment and Specialized Intervention Services (OASIS) program in Hamilton.

Land has done extensive work in the field of trauma, witnessing first hand the effects it can have on daily life. She has spenttime working with war-affected families in Afghanistan, co-authoring a 16-part series, 'A Journey of Peace'.

It tells the storyof a rural family's struggle to cope with war trauma in Afghanistan.

She has worked on behalf of the 'Children of Afghanistan' to create a school-based curriculum to deal with war trauma and teach peace skills.

Land says, Post Traumatic StressDisorder orPTSDis a "western concept but is relevant across cultures...PTSDpresents itself differently in different cultures."

Varied symptoms

The list of potentialsymptomsand complications is alarming.

"Headaches, tummy aches, sleep disturbances, eating disturbances and in adults, high blood pressure, heart problems,asthma, asthma in children, feeling ill, diabetes... bed wetting and nightmares are very common in children.

"We even seeseizures," she said.

Government sponsored newcomers to Hamilton will be welcomed at Wesley Urban Ministries. Privately sponsored refugeeswill meet with their host families. The priority is to ensure everyone begins to feel "safe" before any trauma work can begin.

Mary-Jo Land, program coordinator of the Outreach, Assessment and Specialized Intervention Services in Hamilton, has done extensive work dealing with people suffeing from war trauma. (Supplied by Mary-Jo Land)

"Safety, shelter, food, these are the things that are going to be the immediate priorities," says Smith.

Families and children arrive at Thrive Child and Youth Services by referral.

The Oasis program is one of many offered tohelp newcomers address mental health and acculturation challenges.

The approach is gentle and resilience based,recognizing the strength of the refugee family and ensuring a dedicated "circle of care" is provided.

"Psychotherapy, art therapy, play therapy, attachment work. All of these are evidence based modalities or types of treatmentand intervention. It might be a combination of several of those," Smith said.

"We measuresymptoms, we measure the severity and frequency of symptoms and we want to see that going down. That'san ongoing indicator that the treatment plan is effective."

She has been running the Oasis program for more than three years and hopes additional funding will enable them to expand its school readiness program.

"If we can help kids off the bat self-regulate and feel safe, then they're going to have a much quicker start to school," shesaid.

Even though the work isn't easy, both Smith and Land agree, it is heartwarming.

"I can't think of anyone I've met in this work that I don't feel tremendous compassion, tremendous respect that I wouldn'treally do more for them... the effort that people go through, they're so appreciative. They really do appreciate whatever we'retrying to do."