Doctors Without Borders MSF Mental Health support for people affected by the earthquakes in Türkiye
Mental Health

Mental health support for people affected by the earthquakes in Türkiye

In Türkiye, the consequences of this February’s devastating earthquakes are all too visible in destroyed buildings, makeshift camps and rebuilding efforts widespread in affected areas. With the coming of spring, heavy rain has caused flooding, creating further issues. The earthquakes have also led to less visible but still significant consequences for the survivors. Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is supporting local organisations in Türkiye in their efforts to provide psychosocial support to people as they try to rebuild their lives. 

People find temporary refuge in tents after earthquakes and flooding
People find temporary refuge in tents after earthquakes and flooding affected Polat village, Malatya, Türkiye.
Mariana Abdalla
Despite the problematic hygiene conditions and sometimes unfavourable weather conditions, most people are still too scared to enter buildings, they don’t feel safe. People are still outdoors out of survival instinct, Adiyaman Nazlı Sinem Koytak, a psychologist for İmece İnisiyatifi, a local NGO supported by MSF

In the days after the earthquakes struck, people would wait outside what remained of their homes while search and rescue teams tried to rescue people from the rubble. To add to the trauma during this first phase, people would have to identify every dead body that was found in the rubble, checking whether it was their loved one. As of early April, according to Turkish authorities, over 50,300 people were killed in Türkiye alone.

MSF is supporting local organisations in providing psychosocial support to people in affected areas, including Adıyaman and Malatya provinces through İmece İnisiyatifi, and in Hatay and Kahramanmaras provinces, through Maya Vakfi, reaching over 7,500 people in individual and group consultations as of March 24.

“In one of the villages, the participants said their houses ‘had now turned into monsters’. People used to take refuge in their homes, but now homes have turned into a place of fear, a place that kills them,” says Koytak.

Nazlı Sinem Koytak, a psychologist from an MSF supported organisation conducts a psychosocial support activity
People can’t get back to work or to their household routines. Adıyaman is a destroyed city, for instance. With time, this situation and fear will affect more and more people’s emotions and behaviours, making recovery a lot more difficult in the long run. Adiyaman Nazlı Sinem Koytak, a psychologist for İmece İnisiyatifi, a local NGO supported by MSF.

Mental health workers encourage people to share their emotions, stories, and challenges, letting them know their feelings are normal given what they’ve been through. Group sessions build a bond among participants, bringing people together so they can be there to support each other during difficult moments. 

People continue to be hyper-alert and have difficulty concentrating and sleeping. Some have nightmares every night, are forgetful and have lost their appetites. Aftershocks are still happening daily, and people constantly relive past experiences in their minds and believe another disaster could happen. According to the Turkish Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency (AFAD), over 25,000 aftershocks have occurred since the February 6 earthquakes, 47 of them higher than magnitude 5 on the Richter scale. Because of that, psychologists in the organisations MSF supports are noticing post-traumatic stress symptoms are not decreasing.

 The psychological toll of the disaster has also affected people physically, sometimes causing panic attacks, muscle pain and eating disorders. 
 

Eylül, 13, lives in Kayatepe (Rezip) village in Adıyaman. I can’t sleep well these days. I also can’t study. It feels like all the information I had in my mind is now gone. Whatever I used to know before, I don’t know anymore.
Eylül, 13 years old, Kayatepe (Rezip) village, on the outskirts of Adıyaman.

In rural areas, such as Başpınar (Küllüm) and Kayatepe (Rezip) villages in Adıyaman, where İmece İnisiyatifi (Imece Initiative) runs support activities, most of the families have lost at least one person and are trying to rebuild their lives and communities. They are also having to host relatives coming from other locations. People coming from the cities often feel like urban spaces are too dangerous, so go to the countryside. 

For the people who remain in urban areas, the needs created by the earthquakes can exacerbate pre-existing tensions between different groups over resources. The scale of the disaster means needs for food, water and sanitation, as well as tents and other non-food items, are overwhelming. Yardım Konvoyu (Aid Convoy Association), with the support of MSF, focuses on distributions to people in informal makeshift camps set up in parks and parking lots.

 

Mental Health support for people affected by the earthquakes in Türkiye
A camp for people displaced by the earthquakes in Antakya, Hatay province.
Tom Casey
Losing livelihoods creates yet another challenging situation people must adapt to, Adiyaman Nazlı Sinem Koytak, a psychologist for İmece İnisiyatifi, a local NGO supported by MSF.

“People can’t get back to work or to their household routines. Adıyaman is a destroyed city, for instance. With time, this situation and fear will affect more and more people’s emotions and behaviours, making recovery a lot more difficult in the long run”.

The local organisations that MSF supports provide psychosocial assistance to a wide range of people affected by the earthquakes: Turkish healthcare workers, Syrian refugees, volunteers, men, women and children. Psychosocial support can take many different forms, particularly for children who often benefit from simple activities such as drawing, dancing or listening to music.

In Türkiye, MSF is supporting local organisations such as Imece İnisiyatifi and Yardım Konvoyu.

İmece İnisiyatifi is a non-profit organization based in Izmir, Turkey and is centred around the traditional Turkish principle of "imece", which emphasizes collective action and mutual support. Focused on community development through community-based approaches, since the earthquakes, the organisation is conducting emergency relief items distributions and education and psychosocial support activities for vulnerable populations.

Maya Vakfi is a Turkish non-profit organisation focused on the mental, physical and academic development of children and young people aged 5 to 24 years old, as well as their caregivers. Currently, as part of its response to the earthquakes and its growing experience in disaster response, the organisation is conducting psychosocial activities and events to improve the coping skills and healing process of people affected by the earthquakes. Maya Vakfi also provides capacity-building and well-being activities focused on public employees responding in the long term.  

Yardım Konvoyu is an emergency response organisation based in Istanbul, working in disaster and crisis areas providing relief efforts, focusing on health, water and sanitation and food security. Since the earthquakes, the organisation has responded on the ground in Kahramanmaraş, Adıyaman, Hatay and Gaziantep.