Counselors have a prominent response team role in the recovery phase of a disaster. Provided that a disaster have occurred as a dramatic event in the client life. The client life has changed for the worse and therapy support is needed. Established long after the acute response teams have completed their duties, counselors skilled in treatment of trauma continue to provide mental health service delivery to impacted and recovering communities in which they reside. Counselors provided assessment and treatment of clients with PTSD, substance abuse and other post disaster mental health issues, and they continue to provide crisis counseling and trauma intervention. The established recovery effort following Hurricane Katrina is an excellent example. Counselors provided work in programs such as Access to Care have provided behavioral health and education services to nearly 12,000 hurricane survivors and are continuing in the recovery effort (American Red Cross, 2007. Established and provided at all phases of emergency planning, response, and recovery, the counselor is recognized as a valuable and essential member of an emergency responds team. The care given before and after is always remembered. Counselors and behavioral health works as team to support the clients and communities in need. Responders can provide an evaluation on community resilience and rebuilding, provide assistance in future planning, and make recommendations on best practices. The counseling Profession has taken a committed, proactive stance to providing new counselors with knowledge and training through CACREP emergency preparedness initiatives . Counselors interested in the field can learn more about the role of the emergency res ponder through NIMS and ICS training. Finally, counselors can promote their own person al resilience and the resilience of the communities that they
Counselors have a prominent response team role in the recovery phase of a disaster. Provided that a disaster have occurred as a dramatic event in the client life. The client life has changed for the worse and therapy support is needed. Established long after the acute response teams have completed their duties, counselors skilled in treatment of trauma continue to provide mental health service delivery to impacted and recovering communities in which they reside. Counselors provided assessment and treatment of clients with PTSD, substance abuse and other post disaster mental health issues, and they continue to provide crisis counseling and trauma intervention. The established recovery effort following Hurricane Katrina is an excellent example. Counselors provided work in programs such as Access to Care have provided behavioral health and education services to nearly 12,000 hurricane survivors and are continuing in the recovery effort (American Red Cross, 2007. Established and provided at all phases of emergency planning, response, and recovery, the counselor is recognized as a valuable and essential member of an emergency responds team. The care given before and after is always remembered. Counselors and behavioral health works as team to support the clients and communities in need. Responders can provide an evaluation on community resilience and rebuilding, provide assistance in future planning, and make recommendations on best practices. The counseling Profession has taken a committed, proactive stance to providing new counselors with knowledge and training through CACREP emergency preparedness initiatives . Counselors interested in the field can learn more about the role of the emergency res ponder through NIMS and ICS training. Finally, counselors can promote their own person al resilience and the resilience of the communities that they