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Disaster fatigued? How to manage the mental impacts of storms

Author
Luke Kirkness,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 May 2023, 2:58pm

Disaster fatigued? How to manage the mental impacts of storms

Author
Luke Kirkness,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 May 2023, 2:58pm

One of the best ways to manage disaster fatigue is to be as prepared as you can for the next disaster.

That鈥檚 the expert advice as the clean-up from the latest destructive storm of 2023听听, caused slips and flooding, closed schools and forced听.

The deluge caused ato be declared in Auckland while, in Northland,听听was tragically swept to his death in floodwaters during a school trip to Abbey Caves.

This week鈥檚 storms follow Cyclone Gabrielle in February and heavy rain on Auckland Anniversary weekend in January, which caused millions of dollars worth of damage to public infrastructure in the Bay of Plenty and took lives in other parts of New Zealand.

Massey University emergency management lecturer Dr Lauren Vinnell described disaster fatigue as a 鈥渟pecific type of exhaustion鈥 when events of the same nature repeated or multiple different events happened at the same time.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a general term. It鈥檚 not a specific disorder that you might get diagnosed with so it can look different for different people in a different context.鈥

Symptoms included tiredness, lack of sleep, difficulty making decisions and unusually strong emotions.

Vinnell, of the Joint Centre for Disaster Research, said these impacts were not uncommon following an event like this week鈥檚 major flooding.

It was when these symptoms persisted and had a negative impact on people day-to-day that it became a problem.

Vinnell said it was important people kept track of how they鈥檙e feeling and 鈥渋f it鈥檚 not getting any easier over time鈥 to start seeking help by talking to friends and family or professional help.

鈥淭here are things that people can do just generally to help themselves feel better when they鈥檙e moving on from these sorts of events.

Massey University emergency management lecturer Dr Lauren Vinnell. Photo / Supplied

Massey University emergency management lecturer Dr Lauren Vinnell. Photo / Supplied

鈥淭hings like practising self-care, which I know is a bit of a buzzword that basically just means if you can find time to do things that make you happy and refresh you, whatever that might look like.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really important that people don鈥檛 overload themselves with negative information. You need to know enough to know what鈥檚 going on but spending too much time scrolling social media or whatever can be harmful.鈥

It was worth thinking about what steps people could take so that if it happened again they were more prepared to psychologically deal 鈥渨ith these quite daunting problems鈥.

Vinnell said people should prioritise making a plan with their family or household so everyone knew what to do in an event.

Massey University School of Psychology senior lecturer and clinical psychologist Dr Ian de Terte told the Science Media Centre it was 鈥渞eally helpful鈥 for communities to be prepared and organised before disasters occurred.

鈥淚f emergency management says you should evacuate an area, listen to them. Don鈥檛 be shy to check on neighbours.

鈥淎nd don鈥檛 be afraid to ask for support if you need it. For example, getting essentials or picking children up.

鈥淲e know from the Canterbury earthquakes that you鈥檙e more likely to get through things if you have the support of other people in a similar situation.鈥

Vinnell and de Terte鈥檚 advice comes as cooler, wintery conditions move across the country heading into the weekend.

A property on Shaw Rd in Hawkes Bay following Cyclone Gabrielle in February. Photo / Warren Buckland

A property on Shaw Rd in Hawkes Bay following Cyclone Gabrielle in February. Photo / Warren Buckland

After what Niwa described as an 鈥渆xceptionally wet鈥 summer in the North Island and a wet and humid start to May, a reprieve from the most recent deluge is on the horizon.

MetService meteorologist Andrew James told the听Bay of Plenty Times听there was the possibility of a few showers and thunderstorms including hail for the region today as cold air from the Southern Ocean 鈥渢akes charge鈥 of the country鈥檚 weather.

鈥淭owards the weekend high pressure starts to take over and we have pretty clear weather through Friday and Saturday.

鈥淲e get a couple of cold days as this air arrives from the south and goes back to normal temperatures for this time of year but because it鈥檚 been so warm for the start of May it will feel cold.鈥

In Tauranga, the odd shower was expected today and possibly thunderstorms and hail before clearing to fine towards the evening with westerlies turning southerly for a high of 14C and low of 6C. Tomorrow鈥檚conditions were fine with a high of 16C and low of 7C with southwesterlies.

Conditions in Rotorua were similar with occasional showers, possible thunderstorms and hail, clearing to fine in the evening and westerly winds also turning southerly for a high of 11C and low of 2C. Tomorrow鈥檚 weather would be fine with southwesterlies, a high of 12C and low of 2C.

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