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Building resilience in a community

K-State extension specialist talks about the importance of community well-being following a pandemic

Dec. 5, 2022

By Lisa Moser, K-State Research and Extension news service

MANHATTAN, Kan. — When disaster strikes, people who are most directly impacted turn to the helpers to begin the recovery process. Often, recovery takes years.

In terms of disaster, the COVID-19 pandemic created a ripple effect that many people are continuing to process, said Elaine Johannes, the Kansas Health Foundation’s Distinguished Professor of Community Health at Kansas State University.

“This disaster didn’t hit everyone the same way,” she said, “and the ripple effects are different depending on how well prepared our community was at addressing large scale health issues.”

One of the effects is mental health, Johannes said.

“Mental health is fluid and changes over a lifespan, and the trauma from a disaster will be experienced differently by the families and individuals in a community,” Johannes said.

Often when talking about resiliency, Johannes said people think about the individual, but she believes it is important to look at the well-being of the whole community.

“A resilient community isn’t necessarily a city, county or township, but it can be a community of friends, a community of workplaces and a community of faith,” she said.

“A healthy community requires the same kinds of characteristics that you or I as individuals need, and that is to be adaptable and be aware of our own mental and physical state.”

She said it is important for community members to “check-in” with one another, and that local extension personnel are part of the resources for a community.

“Extension professionals are embedded in our communities, and we have well-trained experts across the state who can offer mental health first aid,” Johannes said.

She believes there are key people in each community that help build resiliency.

“It takes those key informants in the community -- such as those who work in extension, education, public health, faith and local businesses -- to notice a friend or colleague in need and reach out and ask, ‘How are you doing?’,” Johannes said.

“And be ready for the answer,” she adds, “because it may be different than what we think but at least we’ll be there and be willing to help.”

A longer discussion with Johannes is available on the weekly radio program, Sound Living, produced by K-State Research and Extension. More information on healthy living is also available from local extension offices in Kansas.

At a glance

K-State community health specialist Elaine Johannes talks about the importance of community well-being following a pandemic.

Website

K-State College of Health and Human Sciences

Notable quote

“A healthy community requires the same kinds of characteristics that you or I as individuals need, and that is to be adaptable and be aware of our own mental and physical state.”

— Elaine Johannes, Kansas Health Foundation’s Distinguished Professor of Community Health at Kansas State University.

Source

Elaine Johannes
785-532-7720
ejohanne@k-state.edu

Written by

Lisa Moser
785-532-2010
lmoser@ksu.edu

 

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K‑State Research and Extension is a short name for the Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service, a program designed to generate and distribute useful knowledge for the well‑being of Kansans. Supported by county, state, federal and private funds, the program has county extension offices, experiment fields, area extension offices and regional research centers statewide. Its headquarters is on the K‑State campus in Manhattan. For more information, visit www.ksre.ksu.edu. K-State Research and Extension is an equal opportunity provider and employer.