A Must Read for All LP
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"Mass shootings transform how America talks, prays, prepares"
The Impact on Society & PTSD & Even The Stores
Pardeep Singh Kaleka has surveyed the
landscape of an America scarred by mass shootings.
Seven years ago, a white supremacist
invaded a Sikh temple in Wisconsin and killed six worshippers — among them
Kaleka’s father, who died clutching a butter knife he’d grabbed in a desperate
attempt to stop the shooter. Now, whenever another gunman bloodies another town,
Kaleka posts a supportive message on social media. Then later, either by
invitation or on his own initiative, he’ll journey to the community to shore up
others who share his pain.
He’s been to Newtown, Connecticut. Charleston, South Carolina. Pittsburgh.
“We’ve become kind of a family,” Kaleka says.
It’s true. The unending litany of mass shootings in recent years — the latest,
on Friday, leaving 12 dead in Virginia Beach, Virginia — has built an
unacknowledged community of heartbreak, touching and warping the lives of untold
thousands.
All the survivors, none of them unscathed. The loved ones of the living and
dead. Their neighbors, relatives and colleagues. The first responders, the
health care workers, the elected officials.
The attacks have changed how America talks, prays and prepares for trouble.
Today, the phrases “active shooter” and “shelter in place” need no explanation.
A house of worship will have a priest, a rabbi or an imam — and maybe, an armed
guard. And more schools are holding “lockdown drills” to prepare students for
the possibility of a shooter.
Post-traumatic stress disorder was once largely associated with
combat-weary veterans; now some police and firefighters tormented by the
memories of the carnage they’ve witnessed are seeking professional help. Healing
centers have opened to offer survivors therapy and a place to gather. Support
groups of survivors of mass shootings have formed.
Mayors, doctors, police and other leaders who’ve endured these crises are paying
it forward — offering comfort, mentoring and guidance to the next town that has
to wrestle with the nightmare.
Former Oak Creek Mayor Stephen Scaffidi, who’d been on the job just four months
at the time of the 2012 Sikh temple attack, remembers a call that night from the
mayor of Aurora, Colorado, where 12 people had been fatally shot at a movie
theater less than three weeks earlier. “He gave me the best advice I could ever
receive in that moment: ‘Be calm. Reassure your community. And only speak to
what you know. Don’t speculate, don’t pretend to be an expert on something that
you’re not,’” Scaffidi recalls.
Last year, two days after the fatal shooting of 17 students and staff at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School, Christine Hunschofsky, mayor of Parkland, Florida,
met the mother of a 6-year-old killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School who
offered a road map into the future.
“She forewarned me of many of the things that we would encounter,” Hunschofsky
recalls. “She said at first it will seem like everyone comes together. Then it
seems like a tsunami that hits the community. People become very divided. This
is all normal after a mass trauma.”
Three months later, it was Hunschofsky’s turn. She sent a message to the
incoming mayor of Santa Fe, Texas, where a school shooting left 10 dead. “She
told me this is not going to be the hardest day and harder days are coming,”
recalls Mayor Jason Tabor. ”‘Prepare for that.’ She was 100 percent right.”
The two mayors have since become fast friends and Hunschofsky visited Santa Fe.
“We’re bonded for life,” Tabor says.
Mass shootings account for a tiny percentage of homicides, but their scale sets
them apart. In 1999, the Columbine shooting shocked the nation with its
unforgettable images of teens running from the school with their hands up —
scenes repeated in other similar attacks years later. Today, the public sees and
hears about these events as they unfold, through live-streamed video or tweets.
Each tragedy is horrifying, but the sense of it-can’t-happen-here has worn off.
“We’re a desensitized society,” says Jaclyn Schildkraut, a criminologist at the
State University of New York at Oswego.
“There is an element of mass shooting fatigue where we’ve gone from ONE
MORE,” she says, her voice rising with exasperation, “to add another one to the
list. Everybody immediately goes for the gun argument ... and maybe throw a
little mental health in there, but we really don’t have a consistent, prolonged
conversation about these events and how to prevent them.”
Studies have offered some hints of their emotional wallop. The National Center
for PTSD estimates 28 percent of people who have witnessed a mass shooting
develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and about a third develop acute
stress disorder.
Laura Wilson, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Mary
Washington in Virginia conducted a meta-analysis — an examination of data from
11 studies of PTSD symptoms among more than 8,000 participants who ranged from
those who’d witnessed shootings to those who just lived in the communities in a
20-year period. She found the greater the exposure — someone who was at the
scene or who lost a friend or family — the greatest risk of developing PTSD.
But, in her work, Wilson has found other factors, too, including previous
psychological symptoms and a lack of social support, also played a role in
increasing the likelihood.
“Mass shootings are a different type of trauma,” Wilson says. “People are
confronted with the idea that bad things can happen to good people. ... Most
people have a hard time reconciling the idea that a young, innocent person made
the good decision to go to school, was sitting there, learning and was murdered.
That does not make sense to us. ... It just rattles us to our core.”
And yet, some people don’t fully appreciate the lasting psychological wounds of
those who escaped physical harm.
A study conducted by a University of Nevada-Las Vegas professor after the 2017
Route 91 Harvest Festival shooting that left 58 people dead found PTSD levels
for those at the concert remained elevated at least a year later. Most of these
people had a friend, family member or co-worker asking — as early as 1½ months
after the event — why they were still troubled.
“Almost everyone had someone say, ‘Get over it. Why are you letting this bother
you?’” says Stephen Benning, a psychology professor who conducted the research.
Those kinds of remarks were associated with increased levels of PTSD, which
lasted longer than depression.
April Foreman, a psychologist and board member of the American Association of
Suicidology, likens exposure to mass shootings to a flu epidemic that affects
the entire community in different ways.
“When we have these mass casualty events it’s like an outbreak of a virus,” she
says. “Some people might be immune or not susceptible to that strain. Some
people are going to get a little sick, some people are going to be very sick.
Some people might have compromised immune systems and if they’re exposed they
have a very high risk for life-threatening illness. Suicide is like the extreme
outcome.”
In one week in March, two student survivors of the Parkland school shooting
killed themselves. Around the same time, the father of a 6-year-old killed girl
in Newtown died of an apparent suicide. He had created a foundation in his
daughter’s name to support research on violence prevention.
Austin Eubanks, a Columbine student who was shot and watched his best friend die
in the school massacre, died last month, possibly of an overdose. He struggled
with opioid use after the attack and later became an addiction recovery speaker.
A memorial fund established in his name is seeking funds for a trauma-informed
program for families and victims of mass violence.
After the Parkland suicides, Hunschofsky says, many people sought mental health
help for the first time. “They just told me, ‘I thought I was OK, but after this
happened, maybe I’m not. Maybe I do need to talk to someone.’” The community’s
wellness center, established after the Parkland shooting, extended its hours.
A similar program, the Resiliency Center of Newtown, is an informal gathering
place for those grappling with anxiety, depression and PTSD. Though the school
attack occurred 6½ years ago, the center still gets new clients and after every
mass shooting, more people stop by.
“Your heart hurts every time a new tragedy happens because you know what those
people who are impacted are going to have to go through and what the community
is going to go through, and that’s hard,” says Stephanie Cinque, the center’s
founder and executive director. “You don’t just get over it and move on.”
In Florida, Orange County Sheriff John Mina, Orlando’s police chief during the
2016 massacre at the Pulse nightclub, realized that when he reached out to law
enforcement peers — former chiefs of Aurora and Newtown — afterward. ”’What do
you think I should be doing six months, a year from now?” he asked. “They said,
’John, you’re not going to be dealing with this a year. You’re going to be
dealing with this five or 10 years. That was like a punch in the gut.”
There were some immediate lessons learned, he says. Among them: improved
communications with the fire department and better equipment. After the Pulse
shooting, officers were given Kevlar helmets and an extra layer of body armor
that will stop rifle rounds.
Mental health debriefings were held six months and a year after the shooting
rampage for Orlando officers who went to the nightclub that morning.
Some have reached beyond the department to UCF RESTORES, a clinic at the
University of Central Florida that helps trauma victims. It was originally
designed to serve the military, but has expanded to include first responders and
sexual assault victims, among others.
Deborah Beidel, the clinic’s director, says first responders called to mass
shootings face trauma similar to those in combat. About 50 firefighters, police
and paramedics who were at Parkland and Pulse have been treated, most in a
three-week outpatient program that exposes them to the sounds, smells and sights
they encountered that caused their PTSD.
For those inside the Pulse, Beidel says, “the sound of cellphones ringing and
ringing and ringing and no one answering them became a trigger for many people.
Afterward, any time they heard a cellphone, particularly that Marimba ring on
the iPhone, they would have a flashback.”
Beidel says the goal isn’t to make workers forget but to “put that memory in a
file where it no longer affects every other aspect of their life, so that they
no longer are restricted in what they can do because ... of flashbacks or panic
or whatever they might be experiencing.”
Jimmy Reyes, a 35-year-old Orlando firefighter, enrolled in the program about
five months after Pulse. He’d been haunted by the memory of tending to more than
two dozen bloody, wounded people carried from the club, sprawled over a parking
lot, screaming in agony.
After more than four stressful hours caring for the wounded, not knowing who’d
live or die, he returned home. As he and his wife watched the TV news, he began
sobbing. She held him. “We did the best that we could,” he told her.
Less than a week later, Reyes had a panic attack while working a second job — he
was on a safety team in a jet ski race. “I couldn’t breathe,” he says. “I kept
telling myself, ‘You’ll be fine. It’ll pass.’” It didn’t. He dreaded another big
call at work.
Firefighters, he says, “kind of bury a lot of stuff. It gets put in a file in
the back of your head. That’s what I thought this was going to be.”
But it didn’t stay there. He was short-tempered with his family. He had little
interest in doing anything but sitting at home. Finally, Reyes decided to seek
help.
For three weeks, he relived his experiences, answering questions from a
therapist as he told his Pulse story over and over, recalling everything he saw,
including one man talking on his cellphone who’d been shot in the head and
another critically wounded who asked, “Am I going to die?” At certain points,
the therapist would cue up sounds he’d heard — gunshots from inside the club,
the wail of the sirens, an explosion.
At first, he says, he cried. By the end of the sessions, he was dry-eyed and
calm.
Reyes is better now and remains a firefighter. He never considered quitting. But
he’s changed.
“I felt like I was normal before Pulse,” he says. “I was a very happy guy, no
problems, no issues with mental health. Now I still deal with depression. I
still deal with anxiety. ... I look back at those days. ... June 11th, I was
normal. Then June 12th happened. I’m a completely different person.”
So is Las Vegas trauma surgeon Dave MacIntyre.
He talks in a rapid-fire, breathless way about the chaos 19 months after the
Route 91 shooting. More than 90 severely injured patients in 113 minutes. He
repeats that phrase as if it still hasn’t completely sunk in. After 20 years,
he’s now a part-time trauma surgeon looking to get out of the operating room
completely. MacIntyre enrolled in January in an executive MBA program for
doctors, with plans on becoming a consultant for helping hospitals deal with
similar challenges. He’s trying meditation, too.
MacIntyre didn’t realize he had PTSD until an MBA program coach picked up on his
symptoms — anxiety, stress, short temper, avoidance. His marriage has suffered.
His work, too. “I find it very hard to talk to family members and give them bad
news ... much more so than before,” he says.
After the shootings, his hospital brought in therapy dogs and counselors for the
staff but not everyone participated. “As physicians we’re not going to want to
show weakness. We’re not going to want to go into an auditorium full of people
or get on the floor and pet dogs,” he says. “A lot of physicians internalize.
You get to the point where it’s unbearable.”
It was different for Brian Murphy. He says he didn’t have any psychological
trauma after the shootings at the Sikh temple.
Murphy, the first officer on the scene, was shot 15 times. His face, hands, arms
and legs were riddled with bullets. One bullet remains
lodged in his skull; another in his throat after slicing one vocal card and
paralyzing the other, leaving him with a permanent rasp.
Medically retired from the Oak Creek police department, Murphy completed the
master’s degree in criminal justice administration he’d started before he was
injured.
He now works for the company that makes the bulletproof vest that stopped three
rounds that struck him that August day. He counsels other wounded officers,
talking about something deep in his DNA — resiliency.
Murphy gets injections in his throat every three months to stop scar tissue from
tightening and has some trouble swallowing, but he has no complaints, noting he
was first told he’d never talk or eat on his own. “Once I knew I wasn’t going to
die, everything else was butter,” he says.
He credits his family’s support for rebounding. And he refuses to let the
shooting dominate his thoughts.
“It’s not like I wake up and say, ‘I can’t believe this happened.’ It’s just
life now. I don’t think there’s a tremendous amount of good that comes from
looking behind.”
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