Pre-planning your affairs with attorney Michelle Reed of Legacy legal planning
Attorney Michelle Reed on the benefits of preplanning. Times of uncertainty highlight opportunities that we may have otherwise not thought about.
Attorney Michelle Reed on the benefits of preplanning. Times of uncertainty highlight opportunities that we may have otherwise not thought about.
The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention’s Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Christine Moutier, was a guest last night on a CNN special, A CNN Global Town Hall: Coronavirus Facts and Fears. Co-hosted by CNN’s Anderson Cooper and Dr. Sanjay Gupta, Dr. Moutier’s segment focused on a discussion on managing your mental health in light of recent news around the virus.
https://afsp.org/story/dr-christine-moutier-discusses-managing-your-mental-health-on-cnn-town-hall
For all members that are out in quarintine, positive or self monitoring we want to confirm you’re aware of what is available to you.
Housing: Contact Deputy Lee Alexander for child care concerns and housing options (symptomatic or non symptomatic
Self monitoring: If you’re home self monitioring you will recieve a message from the BEMS ChatBot twice daily, respond to the questions asked regarding symptoms, once you recieve the follow-up message respond via text with anything you need- peer support will recieve this directly and follow-up
Symptomatic/positive: If you’re in isolation due to being positive or symptomatic our goal is to get a care package out to you, if you allow the DICO to disclose to us, we will take care of the delivery- confidentially. The department sponsored care package includes Gatorade, tylenol, masks, hand sanitizer, thermometer, comfort snacks and cleaning supplies.
Peer support: Resources are available to all members and team clinicians are available via zoom and Doxy.me for 1 to 1 appointments. Virtual AA/NA meetings are available, the meeting numbers and zoom passwords are available in a separate post. We posted an alternative option for members wishing to speak with a non BEMS peer support clinician.
BEMSRA: BEMSRA remains available to any member in need, contact a member of the executive board if you need assistance.
Please contact me directly with any requests through any of these methods
Cell: 781-831-3223
Email: Calter@bostonems.org
ChatBot: Simply respond to the follow-up message with any needs you have
by Doreen Marshall, Ph.D.
Vice President of Mission Engagement, AFSP
Many of us are grieving right now. We are grieving people we have lost, in many instances not having had the opportunity to say goodbye or to be with them in their final moments. We are grieving not being able to have our in-person presence to support one another right now. We are grieving our rituals, our routines and the familiarity of our day-to-day assumptions. For those of us who have a history with grief (especially the unexpected kind), we may be having grief of those former losses stirred and awakened. This week alone, I had two separate dreams connected to previous losses (a death and a miscarriage). I had to remind myself when I woke that it was not those events reoccurring, but another, entirely distinct set of losses that I was currently experiencing.
Grief can be messy. It’s not linear, as in, “when I get through this particular feeling, I’m done with that.” It is cyclical and lingers around important events, words not said, certain songs, and moments captured like photographs in our minds. It is a place we can choose to visit or ignore, though it resides in the background as if waiting for us to notice.
If you are experiencing grief right now, here are some things you might remind yourself:
Please know, at this time, that others who have traveled the roads of grief are here for you and can serve as guides. Look to them for hope, healing and comfort during this difficult time, and know that days are ahead of you in which the intensity of your grief will be lessened, and replaced by loving memories.
Below are details and a link to the emotional PPE project which is an initiative by mental health clinicians nation wide to provide assistance free of charge. This is an option for anyone wishing to seek services not associated with BEMS Peer support.
The Emotional PPE Project is a directory that provides contact information of volunteer mental health practitioners to healthcare workers whose mental health has been impacted by the COVID-19 crisis.
Two types of services are offered by these mental health professionals:
1. Scheduled individual therapy sessions
2. Support groups held via group video (under development)
In addition, The Emotional PPE Project maintains a page identifying resources for those needing crisis support.
Whether it’s suddenly losing a coworker or feeling the weight of stressful situations during this prolonged event, dealing with painful emotions is an inherent part of being a provider here at Boston EMS. Our academy aims to prepare us for difficult calls, MCIs; but this is one like nothing we could’ve prepared for. In this line of work; unfortunately, death becomes familiar. EMTs and Paramedics are exposed to death so often in the field that it truly becomes ordinary; until the pandemic began.
Then the call comes in for a fellow public safety member, gravely ill after a possible exposure; you are the one dispatched to take care of one of our own. We as EMTs and Paramedics are facing an identity crisis: the “E” in EMS has effectively been removed. What I mean by that is every decision, every action, and every treatment we perform (or don’t) needs to be carefully thought through to minimize risk and keep us in the fight. The emergency begins with a delay in accessing the patient because you need to protect yourself and your partner. Time seems to drag on, you can’t tie the knot on your gown, the boot cover rips… you know there’s someone who actually needs our help inside. You finally make patient contact and realize the patient fits COVID19 criteria; low sats, tachypneic, anxious, and febrile. The reality sets in, this person was dressed like me just days ago, responding alongside me to the same calls, doing the same things.
The reality that we are not invincible to this disease sets in, our uniform which has been a shield from some trauma suddenly weakens, but you’ve got a job to do. You do your best to take care of your patient, discussing the inevitable with your partner. Do I tell them they’ll end up on a ventilator? Possibly never come off? They’re one of our brothers, I’d want to know… So, the discussion ensues: listen… your breathing isn’t getting any better you’re going to have a breathing tube put in and be placed on a ventilator. The discussion hits home, you begin to understand your morality in all this. Is everything of mine in order? What if I end up like this?
Days later you find out the inevitable: your patient, your fellow first responder passed away. No matter how close we were to the deceased, the simple concept of losing a brother or sister in public safety still has a deep impact on all of us. Grieving is difficult for everyone and should be done at one’s own pace. Everyone develops their own way of coping with loss, we need to honor our feelings during this process, both good and bad. Grieving is completely healthy, but if not handled properly, can lead to other problems such as depression or social isolation. More than ever, during this time we need to remember that social distancing is not social isolation and often just talking to someone is therapeutic. For the foreseeable future we’ll remain in a state of hyper-arousal during which the grieving process can manifest itself in different ways: fear, anger, irritability, or sleeplessness. Moving forward, working to maintain normalcy by setting schedules, sticking to routines, and ensuring you have time to yourself where you are disconnected from the current events including social media to decompress is beneficial in the healing process.
I pray this is the first and last time this topic arises; but in reality, we are all vulnerable, so I pose this question as closing: Are you prepared to have the difficult conversations? Have you taken the time to organize your personal matters? Have you thought about what has allowed you to be resilient in the past during traumatic events and how will those practices work given our current situations?
Please contact Kalena at Onsite academy for passwords as they change regularly to protect the privacy of our members. Kalena can be reached by email at kalenaj@onsiteacademy.org or by contacting onsite directly at 978-874-0177
First Responder web based (ZOOM app) recovery meetings
Monday 730pm-9pm
Meeting ID: 718 064 236
Password: 088456
Tuesday 6pm-7pm Middleboro
Meeting ID: 3938242392
Password: 387816
Tuesday 7pm Lawrence
Meeting ID: 7549274256
Wednesday Onsite Academy
Register through Kalena : kalenaj@onsiteacademy.org
Thursday Lynn 10am
Meeting ID: 8817112549
Friday 12pm-1pm Pizza meeting
Meeting ID: 166121397
Password: 543582
Saturday 6pm-730pm Leader meeting
Meeting ID: 241411081
Password: 089561
Sunday 10am Step Meeting Meeting
ID: 892 674 813
Password: 841306
Sunday New Bedford 12pm Discussion
Meeting ID: 3938242392