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Home Opinion

Emmanuel Twumasi: Unseen floods after the waters recede

Georgina Appiah Amponsah by Georgina Appiah Amponsah
July 5, 2026
in Opinion
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Emmanuel Twumasi: Unseen floods after the waters recede
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The floodwaters across Greater Accra are finally receding. We can easily see the damage left behind. Submerged cars. Ruined furniture. Washed-away roads and many more. The media and authorities are quick to count these physical losses. But as a student of Public health and a mental health advocate, I see a second flood happening right now.

This one is invisible. It is the flood of psychological trauma. While we rush to rebuild physical homes, we are ignoring the shattered minds of the victims. Our disaster response must look beyond structural repairs. Mental health care is not a luxury for after the crisis. It is the crisis.

Psychological Anatomy of a Flood

When a severe flood hits, the human brain instantly enters survival mode. The sudden, violent rush of water activates our fight-or-flight response, sending adrenaline spiking as families scramble in the dark to safety.

This primary stress is a profound psychological shock. It instantly shatters a person’s foundational sense of security and control.

However, the trauma does not recede with the water. Once the physical danger passes, the secondary stressors begin a slow, exhausting assault on the nervous system.

Victims must confront the gruelling reality of shovelling toxic sludge from their homes while calculating the crushing financial ruin of their losses.

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This chronic, everyday strain wears down psychological resilience over weeks and months.

The constant, terrifying watch for the next grey sky keeps the body trapped in a state of hyper-alertness.
Over time, this persistent pressure alters the mind’s chemistry, keeping the brain stuck in survival mode long after the sun comes out.

This is exactly how temporary acute stress develops into lasting clinical conditions like Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), severe anxiety, and deep depression.

For thousands of displaced residents across Accra, the disaster is far from over. They are physically safe, but mentally, the water is still rising.

Global Blueprint for Recovery

We do not have to guess how to solve this. Other countries have faced severe flooding and successfully adapted their response strategies.
For instance, the United Kingdom.

Following major floods, health officials discovered a shocking statistic. Mental health issues were responsible for the vast majority of long-term suffering and lost productivity.

In response, the National Health Service (NHS) integrated psychological first aid into its primary emergency plans.

The results were undeniable: early mental health intervention sharply reduced the rates of long-term PTSD. Communities recovered faster, both mentally and economically.

Vietnam saw similar success in Hue City. After catastrophic floods, mental distress spiked among the population. The state responded by deploying mental health teams right alongside their physical rescue units.

Communities that received this targeted counselling bounced back much faster. They showed significantly lower anxiety levels compared to areas that received only physical aid.

This is proof that psychological support works. It is a measurable, highly effective tool for national recovery.

A Plea for Digital Empathy

The digital world has created a dangerous disconnect in how we process human suffering. When disaster strikes, social media feeds quickly turn real tragedy into mere viral content.

Behind the safety of a screen, it is easy to forget that these videos feature real, breathing human beings.

This emotional distance fuels a toxic wave of victim-blaming. People are quick to type harsh lectures about illegal structures or poor urban planning.

But for a flood victim scrolling through a phone in a crowded shelter, these comments are devastating.

They log online hoping for solidarity or news about relief. Instead, they find digital cruelty. This mockery acts as a form of secondary trauma.

It could deeply wound their dignity at a time when they have already lost control over their lives.

Cyber-bullying does not just fade away; it intensifies the feelings of isolation and despair. If our fingers cannot type words of comfort, or if we have no support to give, we may have to practice restraint.

The absolute minimum we owe our suffering neighbours is the charity of our silence, rather than a digital stone thrown at their broken lives.

Beyond Blankets and Rice

The time to update our national strategy is now. The National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) must modernise its approach by recognising that a complete disaster response kit requires far more than just mattresses, blankets, and bags of rice.

True relief must bundle psychological first aid alongside physical aid.
This integration is entirely achievable through strategic, multi-sectoral partnerships.

NADMO does not have to shoulder this psychological burden alone.By forming a formal operational alliance with the Ghana Health Service (GHS), clinical psychologists and community mental health officers can be deployed directly to displacement locations to screen victims for acute stress and other mental health issues to provide immediate counselling or support.

Furthermore, the private sector and civil society could also provide substantial subsidies for these efforts.

Telecom companies can channel their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiatives toward establishing toll-free emergency mental health hotlines during flood crises.

Crucially, NADMO could collaborate with non-governmental organisations (NGOs), dedicated mental health advocates, and the Ghana Psychological Association (GPA).

By establishing a structured registry, the state could mobilise a passionate network of qualified psychologists and advocates willing to volunteer their time and expertise to create safe spaces for victims to process their trauma.

Healing a city means healing its people. Let us not wait for the physical waters to dry up before we address the unseen tears. Victims of the flood in Greater Accra and all the affected regions deserve an extensive and modern recovery plan that treats the whole person, mind, body, and home.

Author
Emmanuel Twumasi
Fred N. Binka School of Public Health
University of Health and Allied Sciences (UHAS)

Tags: Emmanuel TwumasiUnseen floods
Georgina Appiah Amponsah

Georgina Appiah Amponsah

A devoted writer for Angel Online. Passionate about sharing innovation and fostering meaningful connection through storytelling.

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