Disaster Mental Health Guide for HICS MH/BH Lead

Published May 22, 2025

Disasters affect more than people’s physical health. They often have a big impact on mental and emotional health, too. Psychological concerns can show up immediately after the disaster or develop over months to even years after the initial event. In some cases, the mental health needs are more profound than the physical needs. Pediatric hospitals should address these mental health impacts by collaborating with community partners, assessing needs and available resources, and making plans to triage, assess, stabilize, and provide effective care guidance or referrals for appropriate care when disaster strikes.

Below is a checklist of what we think is important, but every response is different. You know your community best. Create your own resources and guidance as needed, like this one from Children’s Mercy Kansas City.

General Considerations

Leverage your existing tools

  • Make your mental/behavioral health disaster lead known: highlight the role in your response leadership outline both within the hospital and to as many community partners as possible
  • Integrate mental and behavioral health knowledge and resources into as much of the broader response operation as possible (e.g., family reunification, triage, and surge capacity).
  • Leverage your teams (psychology, psychiatry, social work, chaplains, etc.) to provide immediate support where you can (e.g., open more patient slots, provide support in the ED)
  • Prepare for a potential mental health surge, assess the hospital and community resources and re-align if necessary
    • Consider using triage tools (e.g., PsySTART) to help identify higher risk patients
    • Implement an evidence-informed approach to help survivors in the immediate aftermath of disaster, such as Psychological First Aid (PFA), and actively train staff to proficiency

Use a community-focused and transparent approach

  • Engage in supportive listening with community partners. Be open and honest with how you create your resources. Tailor your disaster response to incorporate local culture and experiences as your resources allow.
  • Pay special attention to people with additional needs, particularly those with disabilities or language barriers.
  • Don’t forget about your frontline workers. Recognize responder fatigue, support staff, prioritize rest, and encourage self-care when possible

During the Disaster: Responding to Mental and Behavioral Health (MBH) Needs

Acute Stage (Immediate–4 weeks)

Chronic Stage (1–6 months)

After the Disaster: Recovery and Learning from the Experience

Review your response

  • Assess how well the mental health response worked and where things can improve, use a formal After Action Review (AAR) and Improvement Planning process to structure your review.
  • Assess staff capacity, training, resources, and what gaps can be addressed.
  • Incorporate what you learned into your disaster drills and into your hospital emergency operations plan; Establish parameters that would activate the disaster mental health plan in the future.

Look for patterns

  • Be actively involved in building a resilient recovery. Leverage hospital resources to help community partners address new mental health needs or overcome struggles.
  • Work with new community partners to improve mental health support in the future, especially in your rural, tribal, or lower resourced areas need

Prepare for the unexpected

  • Create a quick-response plan for any unexpected issues or sudden increases in mental health needs after the disaster.
  • Consider mental health crisis/behavioral health referral navigator options such as 988

Created by the Pediatric Pandemic Network Dissemination, Sustainability, and Policy Committee

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