Despair, depression set in a month after storm
Survivors of Hurricane Katrina coping with emotional wreckage
![]() | Johnny Mann is surrounded by rubble as he talks about his experience riding out Hurricane Katrina in the storm ravaged beach town of Gulfport, Miss. |
Ric Feld / AP |
Health hurricane news |
Mental health videos |
Austim on the rise Dec. 18: A new CDC study has found a jump in the number of children diagnosed with Autism. NBC's Erika Edwards reports. |
Most popular |
| |||||
GULFPORT, Miss. - Tom Leynes once was a carpenter, a popular man with an apartment just a block off the beach, “a happy guy.”
Today Leynes lives in a fly-covered pup tent. He’s bearded and haggard, each day wearing the same camouflage green shorts and thousand-yard stare. He’s trying to fend off a deepening depression with cans of beer and Valium, and on some days the 49-year-old man is barely coherent.
But the sedatives and the passage of time are not helping. It’s getting harder to sleep, harder to smile, harder not to cry at the memory of discovering the hand-in-hand corpses of two little girls.
“I’m losing my mind,” he says.
It’s been nearly a month since Hurricane Katrina wrecked the lives of thousands of people. But many of the storm’s survivors are finding it harder to cope today than immediately after the storm.
“People are recognizing this isn’t like a tornado where things will be rebuilt and life will get back. Life will not be the same. So there is a despair and a depression that is setting in,” said Dr. Dorothy Dickson-Rishel, a psychologist at Memorial Hospital at Gulfport.
Dickson-Rishel said that in the past week, she and her colleagues have heard increasing reports of sleeplessness, anxiety and even domestic violence. “And these are not folks who have had trouble with violence or rage before,” she says.
And then there are the tears. Many people, even those who seem in high spirits, begin to cry when asked about their daily routine, or their home, or relatives who were forced to shelter miles away.
Experts say it’s the same phenomenon that’s played out after terrorist attacks, house fires, car accidents and other traumatic events.
“As things subside a little and the immediate threat disappears, some of the processing of what actually happened occurs,” said Dr. Israel Liberzon, a University of Michigan psychiatrist who specializes in post-traumatic stress disorder.
Gone is the adrenaline rush that came with surviving the hurricane, and much of the esprit de corps that helped people deal with the primitive conditions immediately afterward. The adventure is over, but life has not returned to normal.
People who lost homes have now spent weeks living with friends or relatives, and it’s getting to them. Even people who still have homes find themselves shaken by their inability to return to comfortable routines.
“You don’t know where your friends are. The kids aren’t in school. Even the way a lot of people drive to work is different,” said Julie Bosley, a Waveland resident who commutes to work at Gulfport’s Garden Park Medical Center.
“There are just so many changes.”
Katrina’s flooding forced Robert Bryant, 69, to swim for three hours inside his Gulfport house alongside a floating couch bearing four dogs. He said he’s been able to avoid depression by working hard all day, every day, on cleaning up his properties.
But he said his wife, Michelle, who wasn’t at home during the storm, recently buckled. “Flipped,” Bryant said, explaining that she has had emotional problems in the past and went for psychiatric treatment last week.
That’s not to say Gulf Coast therapists are being inundated with patients. Therapists say scheduled appointments are off. Admissions are down at Memorial Behavioral Health, the 81-bed Gulfport facility that is the largest inpatient psychiatric treatment center on the Mississippi coast.
Patients have been displaced by the storm or they are focused on day-to-day living, said Michael Zieman, the facility’s administrator.
But other types of counseling are on the rise. Zieman said his center was called on by about a half-dozen businesses to offer counseling to workers. One new request just came in this week from Keesler Federal Credit Union. A third of the credit union’s work force is homeless and anxiety has been mounting.
Volunteer counselors have descended on the Gulf Coast. Among them is Lynne LeHocky, a Holland, Mich., counselor who was part of a religious outreach effort in west Gulfport.
LeHocky has been visiting people. Not many ask for counseling help, but many seem to need it. “They’re overwhelmed,” she said.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM MENTAL HEALTH |
| Add Mental health headlines to your news reader: |
Resource guide


