PTSD From Your Covid-19 Experience?

Experiencing intense flashbacks, nightmares, irritability, anger, and fear?

While many people associate post-traumatic stress disorder with something like war, it’s a chronic psychiatric disorder that can occur in people who have experienced or witnessed a traumatic event, such as a serious accident, terrorist attack or a physical assault.

Experiencing intense flashbacks, nightmares, irritability, anger, and fear? In the face of a traumatic event like the Covid-19 pandemic, it’s common to feel this way.

The Covid-19 pandemic could have a similar effect, according to experts. Even if you aren’t clinically diagnosed with PTSD, you may have a strong emotional reaction to the trauma of Covid-19 that can last long after an incident.

“When we think about traumatic events, it’s not just what the event is, it’s really your interpretation and what the event causes for you,” Luana Marques, clinical psychologist and associate professor in the department of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and president of the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, tells CNBC Make It.

For example, healthcare workers providing frontline services, as well as people who have lost loved ones or jobs due to the disease may be at greater risk for developing long-term difficulties. Those who struggle with other mental health conditions, such as anxiety or depression, or who have a prior history of trauma, may be at increased risk of more ongoing distress.

Be aware of symptoms…

There are a number of symptoms that people can experience after a traumatic incident, including: invasive thoughts like nightmares or upsetting memories and flashbacks, being really stressed out or irritable, having trouble sleeping, Rheingold says. People often feel hyper-vigilant or have trouble concentrating. They may avoid thinking about an incident as a way of coping, too.

To be diagnosed with PTSD, someone would have a certain number of all these symptoms over a long period of time. But even if you’re not diagnosed with full-blown PTSD, people can experience those symptoms after a traumatic or stressful event, she adds.

How long they last

It’s normal to have an intense emotional response to a significant threat or traumatic incident like a pandemic, Marques says. But typically, symptoms tend to naturally recover over time.

“So, there’s a huge bump in symptoms right away, and then about four months out of the trauma those symptoms get better on their own,” she says.

However, sometimes the symptoms don’t get better with time.

If you’re still having symptoms that interfere with your daily life (meaning you feel paralyzed or like you can’t do your job or sleep), then it’s worth getting help from a therapist or mental health professional, she says. In fact, timing is key; PTSD can’t be diagnosed until one month after a traumatic incident, Michele Bedard-Gilligan, associate professor at the University of Washington, who specializes in trauma, tells CNBC Make It.

Use the acronym ‘TEB’

It stands for: thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. “People should be watching what they’re saying to themselves, and how that’s making them feel and what they do,” Marquez says.

For example, if you spend all day ruminating that you’re going to get sick or lose your job, then you might go home and drink to feel better and wake up feeling worse the next day.

If your thought patterns tend to be “black and white or catastrophic,” that’s not a good sign. 

“That leads to distorted thinking and dysfunctional behavior,” she says. Instead, find a coping mechanism that can “anchor” you, like calling a friend or exercising. 

Shut off the news

One of the best coping strategies when it comes to trauma is “making media consumption incredibly intentional,” Bedard-Gilligan says. If the news is making you feel bad or negative, stop and ask yourself: Is this helping me? What is this doing for me?

Studies suggest that simply watching news coverage of a traumatic event can trigger acute stress symptoms, Marques says. “You should unplug from the news a little bit and try something that slows you down,” she says. “Anything you can do to cool off your brain right now is really helpful.”

Remember

“Most people are incredibly resilient, even those of us who are feeling really distressed or struggling right now,” Bedard-Gilligan says.

Although it might feel difficult at the moment, many people have great coping mechanisms and social supports that will help get through this, she adds. Maintaining the strategies that you know tend to work is one way you can make sure you’re not suffering months down the road.

However, if you notice that your normal coping strategies aren’t working, or you’re so anxious that it gets in your way of being able to do anything you enjoy.

4 thoughts on “PTSD From Your Covid-19 Experience?

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