advertisement

Mental health is next crisis for front lines

This past year has been tough. It has been unpredictable, heartbreaking, stressful and fearful due to the COVID-19 pandemic that turned everyone's life upside down. The people that may be able to understand this the most is our frontline healthcare workers. It is unarguable that they have had one of the toughest years yet.

I found an article in the Daily Herald that touched on this. The author, who has a background in mental health and crisis response situations, expressed her concerns about frontline workers' mental health. She talked about her experience with a group counseling session with ICU nurses. They shared their experience with having to deal with their patients and staff dying from COVID-19 and how they are absolutely exhausted.

As a graduate student of social work, I am a huge mental health advocate. I have witnessed firsthand from many friends who are frontline workers how mental health has been affected from this pandemic. People have lost their jobs, lost loved ones and had to put a halt on life. That alone can affect someone's mental health negatively. Now imagine watching patient after patient, day after day, die from the COVID-19 virus.

The next crisis will be the mental health crisis. People will need help processing and healing. But our frontline workers need it the most. They will need to process everything that they have seen and gone through this past year and find healthy ways to cope.

It is important that as a community and a country we recognize this and take away stigma surrounding mental health. I hope that in my community I see more awareness surrounding mental health and more community resources. I hope that all communities reach out, specifically to the frontline workers telling them that it is okay to seek help for the mental stress and burnout they are experiencing. I hope that in a time where we have been separated, we can come together and support those struggling with their mental health. After all they have done for us, we need to make sure they are taken care of as well.

Rachel Nicholson

Schaumburg

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.