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Coronavirus Crisis | When mental distress comes home

Across the country, the coronavirus pandemic has scrambled mental health services, forcing thousands of people with disabling psychological distress, and their families, to adjust on the fly

April 25, 2020 / 14:59 IST
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Connor Langan, 17, who has been on leave from high school due to panic attacks, at home with his father, Stephen, in Bedford, N.H., April 22, 2020. Across the country, the coronavirus pandemic has scrambled mental health services, forcing thousands of people with disabling psychological distress, and their families, to adjust on the fly. (Elizabeth Frantz/The New York Times)
Connor Langan, 17, who has been on leave from high school due to panic attacks, at home with his father, Stephen, in Bedford, N.H., April 22, 2020. Across the country, the coronavirus pandemic has scrambled mental health services, forcing thousands of people with disabling psychological distress, and their families, to adjust on the fly. (Elizabeth Frantz/The New York Times)

Benedict Carey

The panic spirals up from somewhere in Connor Langan’s midsection, and so quickly that his face changes; wild in the eyes, his upper lip trembling, he sometimes punches a wall in frustration. Such episodes resulted in Connor, 17, being placed on leave from high school late last year, and in early March he agreed to enroll at Mountain Valley, a New Hampshire residential program well known for addressing anxiety problems in young people.

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But on March 27, in response to the growing threat of coronavirus, the facility temporarily suspended operations and began sending home some two dozen teenagers and young adults. The facility’s therapists have set up virtual connections to continue providing support for some individuals, but the change was abrupt for everyone.

“The night before I had this panic attack, almost a full-on psychosis, and the next day I really wanted to talk about it,” said Connor, who is now back at home with his parents in Bedford, New Hampshire. “There was so much uncertainty, I knew it would be difficult to now bring these problems back into the family.”