Typhoon Haiyan: Charity helps heal emotional scars

How do you cope when you lose absolutely everything in a matter of hours? Your home, your livelihood your loved ones. 
 Lyn Zulieta
It has been two weeks since Typhoon Haiyan hit the Philippines and the death toll stands at more than 4,000. More than 18,000 were inured.
But aid agencies say a major challenge now, and for years to come, is helping people deal with the psychological impact of the deadly typhoon.
Lyn Zulieta, 26, bows her head and sobs as the rain beats down on her makeshift metal roof.
"Every time it starts to rain I get scared. I don't know how we are going to cope. Maybe we will die here like my father," she says.

As the dust settles in Guiuan and people take stock and begin rebuilding their homes. Many are asking the same question.
"We don't know what the best thing to do is. Each night we still cry," she says.
We meet Lyn on a trip into the town centre with medical charity Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF). Its team of three psychologists is going to evacuation centres and makeshift medical facilities to try to get people talking about their experiences.
When Haiyan hit she ran for shelter with her mother and brother and sisters. Her father stayed behind. They found his body the next morning, buried beneath the rubble of their neighbour's home.
"I have lost my father, I have lost my house. I don't know what to do and how I will live each day," she says.

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