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Mental Health Care Crucial During Coronavirus Pandemic

CDC

Thursday, Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb announced remote services for mental health, addiction services and prescribing would be expanded statewide. In the midst of a pandemic, those services are critical.

Being away from work, having kids at home, worrying about the coronavirus; all these things are realities right now, but are not so great for our mental health.

Kurt Carlson is the CEO of Bowen Center, a mental health care and addiction services provider based in Warsaw, Ind. He said keeping on top of mental health care is important in stressful situations like a global pandemic.

“There’s a general heightened fear and anxiety and if people are already anxious or depressed this simply exacerbates that.”

Carlson said people in isolation should be careful how much news they’re consuming.

“If they’re spending all their time watching the news, listening to the radio and just hearing one report after another they probably just need to turn that off. Not completely. Not forever. But limit that.” 

Carlson said that doesn’t mean people shouldn’t keep up with what’s happening. They should just limit it to certain times, and be aware of social media.

He said Bowen Center, and other mental healthcare service providers are moving those services to telemedicine. Technologies like video chatting, texting, or even old-fashioned phone calls are how counselors at the center are reaching patients. For their safety and for the safety of the patients.

Jennifer Weingart is a reporter and All Things Considered host. She holds a degree in broadcasting and journalism from Central Michigan University, prior work experience from WCMU in Mt. Pleasant, Mich. and WDET in Detroit. She likes stories that involve passionate people doing awesome things. Her work is heard on WVPE, the Michigan Public Radio Network, Indiana's regional journalism cooperative and a few times on NPR.