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PUBLISHED 5:03 PM ET May. 20, 2021 PUBLISHED 5:03 PM EDT May. 20, 2021
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Pandemic restrictions in New York and around the country are starting to ease. Tens of thousands of people are vaccinated everyday, while the COVID-19 positivity rate continues to decline from a wintertime spike.
But a longer-lasting concern of the pandemic could be the mental health shock created by the year-long crisis.
Mental health advocates like Glenn Liebman, the CEO of the Mental Health Association of New York, are concerned a lasting legacy of the pandemic will be ongoing mental health struggles and New York needs to respond. There are really two pandemics here, Liebman said. There s the pandemic that we all know about where almost 600,000 people died. But there s also the mental health pandemic and all that surrounds it.
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How We Can Start Fixing Our Brains After Living Through the Trauma of COVID-19 ELLE 2 days ago Annie Werner © Getty Just as we adapted at the start of the pandemic, we ll adapt again to post-quarantine life but we ll need to lean on each other to heal.
Imagine walking into a crowded bar. A crowded bar full of unmasked people, talking and laughing and breathing and spewing aerosol particles into the air without the threat of an airborne virus looming over the room.
We should be stoked, right? This no longer feels like a far-off fantasy. The mass tragedy of COVID-19, where millions of people have lost loved ones, jobs, and their sense of normalcy, may relatively subside before the end of the year.
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Mental health a greater challenge during COVID; crisis doesn’t get attention it deserves, doctor says | The Daily Gazette
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Police and mental health professionals have been busy throughout the pandemic.
Police in Schenectady continue to meet with mental health professionals from Northern Rivers Family of Services when certain emergency calls warrant that type of response.
And at Capital Region TMS, a depression treatment facility on Union Street in Schenectady, director of clinical services Mary Ruhle said she’s out straight with patient appointments, and Ruhle is logging 60-plus hour work weeks.
Her colleague, Dr. Thomas Qualtere, said the pandemic has broadened feelings of isolation, stress and even the mourning of loved ones who died of the coronavirus.
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