Children's Wisconsin offers mental health resources for those struggling to cope with the Waukesha tragedy
By:
CBS 58 Newsroom
Posted: Nov 23, 2021 7:41 AM CDT
-
3:51
Milwaukee Art Museum Research Center
-
2:59
943 Wisconsin bridges are ’structurally deficient’; engineer...
-
2:03
One year later, family remembers missing woman who disappeared...
-
2:05
Mayoral candidates in Kenosha campaign for votes as election...
-
1:26
Marquette Keeps Dancing: 1-on-1 with Kam Jones
-
0:54
’Hack the Dream’ event held downtown at Northwestern Mutual...
-
1:40
Community reacts to 6-year-old shot on Milwaukee’s northside
-
1:17
’This is a great team’: Fans send off Marquette team with...
-
2:11
What to know about the two constitutional amendments on your...
-
1:42
Ballot referendum may ease staffing concerns for the Germantown...
-
2:09
New automatic semitruck to enhance truck driver training at MATC
-
0:57
Milwaukee penguins get a new habitat
MILWAUKEE (CBS 58) -- People around the state are struggling with the events that took place at the Waukesha Holiday Parade.
If you were at the parade, or you're just part of the Waukesha community, there are mental health professionals available to help you cope.
Jenny Walczak, a doctor of psychology and the clinical director of mental and behavioral health at Children's Wisconsin joined CBS 58 on Tuesday, Nov. 23 with ways to process help process what happened.
A Crisis line was established by Children’s Wisconsin less than 24 hours after the tragedy. That number is 414-266-6500.
Sign up for the CBS 58 Newsletter