WHO Mental Health
Considerations during COVID-19 Outbreak
Dr K K Aggarwal, Dr Rajan Sharma and Dr R V Asokan
This time of crisis is generating stress in the population.
These mental health considerations were developed by the Mental Health
Department of WHO as support for mental and psychological well-being during
COVID-19 outbreak.
General population
1. COVID-19 has and is likely to affect people from many
countries, in many geographical locations. Don’t attach it to any ethnicity or
nationality. Be empathetic to those who got affected, in and from any country,
those with the disease have not done anything wrong.
2. Don’t - refer to people with the disease as “COVID-19
cases”, “victims” “COVID-19 families” or the “diseased”. They are “people who
have COVID-19”, “people who are being treated for COVID-19”, “people who are
recovering from COVID-19” and after recovering from COVID19 their life will go
on with their jobs, families and loved ones.
3. Avoid watching, reading or listening to news that cause
you to feel anxious or distressed; seek information mainly to take practical
steps to prepare your plans and protect yourself and loved ones. Seek
information updates at specific times during the day once or twice. The sudden
and near-constant stream of news reports about an outbreak can cause anyone to
feel worried. Get the facts. Gather information at regular intervals, from WHO
website and local health authorities platforms, in order to help you
distinguish facts from rumors.
4. Protect yourself and be supportive to others. Assisting
others in their time of need can benefit the person receiving support as well
as the helper.
5. Find opportunities to amplify the voices, positive
stories and positive images of local people who have experienced the new
coronavirus (COVID-19) and have recovered or who have supported a loved one
through recovery and are willing to share their experience.
6. Honor caretakers and healthcare workers supporting people
affected with COVID-19 in your community. Acknowledge the role they play to
save lives and keep your loved ones safe. Health care workers
7. For health workers, feeling stressed is an experience
that you and many of your health worker colleagues are likely going through; in
fact, it is quite normal to be feeling this way in the current situation.
Stress and the feelings associated with it are by no means a reflection that
you cannot do your job or that you are weak. Managing your stress and
psychosocial wellbeing during this time is as important as managing your
physical health
8. Take care of your
basic needs and employ helpful coping strategies- ensure rest and respite
during work or between shifts, eat sufficient and healthy food, engage in
physical activity, and stay in contact with family and friends. Avoid using
unhelpful coping strategies such as tobacco, alcohol or other drugs. In the
long term, these can worsen your mental and physical wellbeing. This is a
unique and unprecedent scenario for many workers, particularly if they have not
been involved in similar responses. Even so, using the strategies that you have
used in the past to manage times of stress can benefit you now. The strategies
to benefit feelings of stress are the same, even if the scenario is different.
9. Some workers may unfortunately experience avoidance by
their family or community due to stigma or fear. This can make an already
challenging situation far more difficult. If possible, staying connected with
your loved ones including through digital methods is one way to maintain
contact. Turn to your colleagues, your manager or other trusted persons for
social support- your colleagues may be having similar experiences to you.
10. Use
understandable ways to share messages with people with intellectual, cognitive
and psychosocial disabilities. Forms of communication that do not rely solely
on written information should be utilized If you are a team leader or manager
in a health facility. 3 Team leaders or managers in health facility
11. Keeping all staff protected from chronic stress and poor
mental health during this response means that they will have a better capacity
to fulfil their roles.
12. Ensure good quality communication and accurate
information updates are provided to all staff. Rotate workers from high-stress
to lower-stress functions. Partner inexperienced workers with their more
experiences colleagues. The buddy system helps to provide support, monitor
stress and reinforce safety procedures. Ensure that outreach personnel enter
the community in pairs. Initiate, encourage and monitor work breaks. Implement
flexible schedules for workers who are directly impacted or have a family member
impacted by a stressful event.
13. If you are a team leader or manager in a health
facility, facilitate access to, and ensure staff are aware of where they can
access mental health and psychosocial support services. Managers and team leads
are also facing similar stressors as their staff, and potentially additional
pressure in the level of responsibility of their role. It is important that the
above provisions and strategies are in place for both workers and managers, and
that managers are able to role-model self-care strategies to mitigate stress.
14. Orient responders, including nurses, ambulance drivers,
volunteers, case identifiers, teachers and community leaders and workers in
quarantine sites, on how to provide basic emotional and practical support to
affected people using psychological first aid. For caretakers of children
15. Help children find positive ways to express disturbing
feelings such as fear and sadness. Every child has his/her own way to express
emotions. Sometimes engaging in a creative activity, such as playing, and
drawing can facilitate this process. Children feel relieved if they can express
and communicate their disturbing feelings in a safe and supportive environment.
16. Keep children close to their parents and family, if
considered safe for the child, and avoid separating children and their
caregivers as much as possible. If a child needs to be separated from his/her
primary caregiver, ensure that appropriate alternative care is and that a
social worker, or equivalent, will regularly follow up on the child. Further,
ensure that during periods of separation, regular contact with parents and
caregivers is maintained, such as twice-daily scheduled phone or video calls or
other age-appropriate communication (e.g., social media depending on the age of
the child).
17. Maintain familiar routines in daily life as much as
possible, especially if children are confined to home. Provide engaging age
appropriate activities for children. As much as possible, encourage children to
continue to play and socialize with others, even if only within the family when
advised to restrict social contract.
18. During times of stress and crisis, it is common for
children to seek more attachment and be more demanding on parents Discuss the
COVID-19 with your Children in honest and ageappropriate information. If your
children have concerns, addressing those together may ease their anxiety.
Children will observe adults’ behaviors and emotions for cues on how to manage
their own emotions during difficult times. For caretakers of older adults
19. Older adults, especially in isolation and those with
cognitive decline/dementia, may become more anxious, angry, stressed, agitated,
and withdrawn during the outbreak/while in quarantine. Provide practical and
emotional support through informal networks (families) and health
professionals.
20. Share simple facts about what is going on and give clear
information about how to reduce risk of infection in words older people
with/without cognitive impairment can understand. Repeat the information
whenever necessary. Instructions need to be communicated in a clear, concise,
respectful and patient way. and it may also be helpful for information to be
displayed in writing or pictures. Engage their family and other support
networks in providing information and helping them practice prevention measures
(e.g. handwashing etc.)
21. Encourage older adults with expertise, experiences and
strengths to volunteer in community efforts to respond to the COVID-19 outbreak
(for example the well/healthy retired older population can provide peer
support, neighbor checking, and childcare for medical personnel restricted in
hospitals fighting against COVID-19.) People in isolation
22. Stay connected and maintain your social networks. Even
in situations of isolations, try as much as possible to keep your personal
daily routines. If health authorities have recommended limiting your physical
social contact to contain the outbreak, you can stay connected via e-mail,
social media, video conference and telephone.
23. During times of stress, pay attention to your own needs
and feelings. Engage in healthy activities that you enjoy and find relaxing.
Exercise regularly, keep regular sleep routines and eat healthy food. Keep
things in perspective. Public health agencies and experts in all countries are
working on the outbreak to ensure the availability of the best care to those
affected.
24. A near-constant stream of news reports about an outbreak
can cause anyone to feel anxious or distressed. Seek information updates and
practical guidance at specific times during the day from health professionals
and WHO website and avoid listening to or following rumors that make you feel
uncomfortable.
Stay informed: Find the latest information from WHO on where
COVID-19 is spreading: https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-
2019/situation-reports/ Advice and guidance from WHO on
COVID-19 https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-2019
https://www.epi-win.com/
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