How to Help Kids Cope with Disaster: Ten Tips from Save the Children
How to Help Kids Cope with Disaster: Ten Tips from Save the Children
11 January 2011
published by www.psychology.org.au
Australia –The horrible images of death and destruction following the earthquake and tsunami that has killed more than 160,000 people and devastated tens of thousands of communities in south and south east Asia and affected Eastern Africa is having an impact on Australian children and young people as well.
Concerned about the emotional wellbeing of their children, many parents, teachers, grandparents and mentors are looking for advice on how to respond to questions from children and young people about unsettling and upsetting events taking place in Asia.
Following the events of September 11, 2001, Save the Children prepared the following ten tips to help adults support children through times of crisis. These ten tips are based upon Save the Children’s years of experience nationally and internationally and can be used as a guide for adults to support children and young people through the Asian tsunami crisis. The relevancy of different tips will vary depending upon a childs previous experience, age and where he or she lives in the world.
Young people often ask the adults in their lives to explain what they are seeing and to reassure them about what will happen next: “Will everything be OK? Why is this happening? What will happen to the children who have survived?”
How do we respond to these questions?
For more information contact:
Megs Alston
Save the Children
Email:megs.alston@savethechildren.org.au
Phone: 03 9811 4933
Elaine Grant
Australian Psychological Society
Email:e.grant@psychology.org.au
Phone: 03 8662 3300
Ten tips on how to help kids cope with disaster:
1. Turn off the TV. Watching television reports on disasters may overwhelm younger children. They may not understand that the tape of an event is being replayed, and instead think the disaster is happening over and over again. Overexposure to coverage of the events affects teenagers and adults as well. Television limits should be set for both you and your children.
2. Listen to your children carefully. Before responding, get a clear picture of what it is that they understand and what is leading to their questions. Emotional stress results in part when a child cannot give meaning to dangerous experiences. Find out what he or she understands about what has happened. Their knowledge will be determined by their age and their previous exposure to such events. Begin a dialog to help them gain a basic understanding that is appropriate for their age and responds to their underlying concerns.
3. Give children reassurance and psychological first-aid. Assure them about all that is being done to protect children who have been directly affected by this crisis. Take this opportunity to let them know that if any emergency or crisis should occur, your primary concern will be their safety. Make sure they know they are being protected.
4. Consider getting professional help. For children directly affected by this crisis–such as children who have lost a loved one overseas–parents should consider counseling, not just for the child, but also for the entire family. Other children may also be affected by the images they see and stories they hear. Parents should be alert to any significant changes in sleeping patterns, eating habits, concentration, wide emotional swings or frequent physical complaints without apparent illness. If present, these will likely subside within a short time. If prolonged, however, we encourage you to seek psychological support and counseling.
5. Expect the unexpected. Not every child will experience these events in the same way. As children develop, their intellectual, physical and emotional capacities change. Younger children will depend largely on their parents to interpret events, while older children and teenagers will get information from a variety of sources which may not be as reliable.
Understand that older teenagers, because of their greater capacity for understanding, may be more affected by these stories. While teenagers seem to have more adult capacities to recover as well, they still need extra love, understanding and support to process these events.
6. Give your children extra time and attention. They need your close, personal involvement to comprehend that they are safe and secure. Talk, play and, most important, listen to them. Find time to engage in special activities for children of all ages. Read bedtime stories and sing songs to help younger children fall asleep.
7. Be a model for your child. Your child will learn how to deal with these events by seeing how you deal with them. Base the amount of self-disclosure on the age and developmental level of each of your children. Explain your feelings but remember to do so calmly.
8. Watch your own behavior. Make a point of showing sensitivity toward the different countries affected by the disaster. This is an opportunity to teach your children that we are all part of one world and that we all need to help each other.
9. Help your children return to normal activities. Children almost always benefit from activity, goal orientation and sociability. Ensure that your child’s school environment is also returning to normal patterns and not spending great amounts of time discussing the crisis.
10. Encourage your child to do volunteer work. Helping others can give your child a sense of control, security and empathy. Indeed, in the midst of crisis, adolescents and youth can emerge as active agents of positive change. Encourage your children to help support local charities that assist children in need.