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Monday, January 17, 2011

Mental Health In Focus After Shooting In Arizona for Responders Too

One of the reasons I trained as a Chaplain with the International Fellowship of Chaplains was to be able to help the "helpers" the rest of us depend upon. They are the last people to ask for help, which makes it more difficult for them to get any. We never think they need help after the crisis is over for us. Think about it. They put out fires, save lives but they also have to recover bodies, often bodies of children. They have to respond to accidents, save lives but they also have to recover bodies and body parts. We never think of them after they've done their jobs.

After Katrina, responders had to recover the bodies of people they were too late to save. No one thought of them. After September 11th, few people in this country thought of the survivors among the personnel responding to give aid and again, recover bodies and body parts. The countless hours of hoping, praying for survivors ended with just praying they could find all the bodies for the sake of the families.

Here again, another crisis with more responders needing help to recover. The next time you see a firefighter, police officer or other emergency responders, remember this story and then think of all they go through after the crisis is over for us. It was one time out of our lives but it is endless days of one crisis after another for them.

Mental Health In Focus After Shooting In Arizona
by JEFF BRADY

January 16, 2011
The two have relied mostly on each other for support because patient privacy laws make it difficult to talk about specifics with anyone else. In fact, Southwest Ambulance says it can't even confirm that Rogers and Magnotta transported Giffords, but the Pima County Sheriff’s office released the information in a time line of events from that day.

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) is still listed in critical condition at a Tucson, Ariz., hospital. Doctors say her recovery has been "exceptional" so far. She's opening her eyes, responding to commands and Saturday she was taken off a ventilator.

Outside the hospital, in the community she represents, mental health has been a recurring discussion topic since the shooting that left six people dead. There are questions about the alleged gunman and concern for the victims who survived. The police and firemen who responded also require special care.

Paramedic Aaron Rogers and EMT Wes Magnotta treated Giffords right after shooting and transported her to the hospital in the back of their ambulance.

Rogers and Magnotta had four days off after the shooting and are back at work now. The gruesome details of what they experienced will be with them for a long time.

"One thing that stood out for me was smell," Rogers says. "There was so much blood on-scene and it being warm, from the sun, that that's what I smelled. It was that iron-y smell."
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Mental Health In Focus After Shooting In Arizona

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