Updated On: 03 August, 2024 06:03 AM IST | Wayanad | Vinod Kumar Menon
While the state provides sanitary pads and addresses health concerns, long-term counselling and psychiatric support are crucial for recovery.

Volunteers helping at site. Pic/Courtesy District Information Office
The external injury scars may heal, but the mental scars will remain for a long time. Those who survived are finding it difficult to come to terms with the tragedy, a challenge Kerala will need to address. They require counsellors and psychologists to help them overcome grief and loss, says Annie Raja, who is stationed in Wayanad and meeting survivors at camps.
Although the state is providing sanitary pads for menstrual hygiene at camps and public toilets, there are also concerns about communicable diseases, and steps are being taken to address them. City-based psychiatrists admit that the immediate need for survivors will be long-term counselling and psychiatric support, and returning to routine will be an uphill task.