At North Shore Child &
Family Guidance Center, the vast majority of our clients are from Nassau County
communities, but we recently had the opportunity to work with a young girl who
came to Long Island from Haiti.
Thirteen-year old Anabelle
traveled to the United States to receive life-saving surgery for an advanced
stage of scoliosis at Shriners Hospital for Children in
Philadelphia. Her condition was so serious that she would not have survived in
Haiti. She was placed with a generous and loving host family that lived in
Nassau County—far from home for a frightened and ailing teenager.
After about two weeks in the U.S.,
Anabelle became very withdrawn and refused to communicate with the family in
any way. They weren’t sure how to help Anabelle, who didn’t speak
English. The family was desperate to
figure out a way to ease her fears and draw her out.
During this period the host
family’s son, a recent college graduate, was working as a volunteer tutor at
North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center’s Westbury office, known as the
Leeds Place. He shared with his mom the broad scope of the work that we do with
a very diverse population. She decided to call the Director of the Leeds Place,
Dr. Nellie Taylor-Walthrust, to brainstorm about what could be done to help Anabelle.
The discussion led to a plan
that included one of our Haitian Creole-speaking outreach workers, Marmeline
Martin, who has extensive experience working with special needs children and in
training foster parents. Nellie asked the host mom if Marmeline
could make a home visit to meet her and Anabelle. She was so happy and
said, “Absolutely!” Then she asked, with a look of surprise on her face, “You
make home visits?”
She was assured that we do,
and added that seeing Anabelle in the home environment would be better, at
least to start, than bringing her to an unfamiliar setting.
Marmeline readily agreed and
made her way to the home where she met Anabelle who was sitting in her
wheelchair, head bowed, with a somber look on her face. Marmeline asked if
she could speak with Anabelle alone, and
the family agreed it was fine.
At first, Anabelle would not
speak to Marmeline. But in a short period of time, she opened up and revealed
feeling homesick and alone, sharing that she wished to see her mother and the
rest of her family back in Haiti. As Marmeline continued to speak to Anabelle
in Creole, Anabelle began to brighten up, feeling reassured because she could
be understood and feel comfortable enough to express her feelings. Marmeline
asked if it would make her feel better if she came back to visit with her and
she nodded in agreement.
Marmeline then met with the host
mom to reassure her that Anabelle wasn’t in need of psychotherapy but was
feeling low due to the separation from her family. She promised that she
would continue her visits and that Anabelle was going to be fine.
On the next visit Marmeline
brought some Haitian music to listen to that reminded Anabelle of being
home. As the weekly visits continued, Anabelle began to smile and became
more engaged with the family.
We reassured the host mom
that she was caring for Anabelle in a loving manner and that what she needed to
understand was that Anabelle’s adjustment to a new culture, environment and
language was naturally frightening to the teen.
Cultural competency and the
flexibility of home visits are key components of providing community-based
mental health care, whether preventive care as in the case of Anabelle, or more
intensive treatment for children with serious emotional disturbances.
As Nellie said, reflecting
back, “It’s the small things that often make a world of difference.”
https://longislandweekly.com/helping-girl-feel-home/
Bio: Andrew Malekoff is the Executive Director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, which provides comprehensive mental health services for children from birth through 24 and their families. To find out more, visit www.northshorechildguidance.org.
Bio: Andrew Malekoff is the Executive Director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, which provides comprehensive mental health services for children from birth through 24 and their families. To find out more, visit www.northshorechildguidance.org.
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