Suzanne Potter, reporter/producer, California News Service, a bureau of Public News Service.
Mental health experts are sounding the alarm about “fire brain” – a condition caused by exposure to toxic wildfire smoke. One study found that wildfire smoke can cause brain inflammation that lasts for a month.
Suzie Dukes, Chico LMFT and survivor of the Paradise Fire said the massive Park Fire is now re-traumatizing a community already devastated by the Camp fire, which incinerated the nearby town of Paradise in 2018.
“People are in kind of a constant state of stress afterward, the feeling of being out of control, unable to prevent anything, and this deep-seated fear of losing yet again, more things. The Park Fire is triggering PTSD symptoms all over again,” she explained.
A study released in July at the Alzheimer’s Association conference found that exposure to wildfire smoke can raise the risk of being diagnosed with dementia. Families in need of mental health assistance can call the California Parent and Youth Helpline at 1-855-427-2736 or go online to live chat at CA Parent Youth Helpline.org.
The trained counselors at the helpline can help get you through an emotional crisis.
“Reaching out and feeling like you belong to a community is essential in healing. Calling to a helpline can be a way out, a way out of the terror, because the human touch is essential in being able to reconnect and get your feet under you again,” Dukes said.
Parents Anonymous, which runs the helpline, also offers free weekly support groups.