Svitlana fled her village of Okhotnyche, in Zaporizhzhia Region, south-east of Ukraine after severe shelling by Russian forces began in April. She now stays in a shelter in Zaporizhzhia with her mother and 87-year-old grandmother, where she receives psychological support from an MSF psychologist. © Faris Al-Jawad/MSF
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Ukraine: 100 days of war take a significant toll on mental health

In Ukraine, people escaping shelling, living with war wounds, or worrying about their loved ones in conflict zones usually don’t consider their mental health, say Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) psychologists. As a result, the psychological consequences of the current conflict can seem invisible, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t there.

After 100 days of the war in Ukraine, our mental health teams across the country are raising the alarm on the worrying psychological symptoms they are seeing.

“Many children we’ve seen who have experienced bomb blasts suffer from insomnia, bedwetting and nightmares,” says Oksana Vykhivska, MSF Mental Health Supervisor in Kyiv. “The elderly, who often find themselves alone after being separated from loved ones, are constantly anxious and break down into tears.”

Our teams have been providing mental health support in shelters for displaced people, at mobile clinics in remote villages, and in urban metro stations.

Between mid-April and mid-May, MSF conducted over 1,000 individual and group mental health sessions in Ukraine. We have observed that people suffer from intense fear, constant stress, persistent worry, hopelessness, and panic attacks.

Normal reactions to an abnormal situation

Our teams have held consultations with displaced people in Berehove, Kharkiv, Chernihiv, Vinnytsia, Ivano-Frankivsk, Uzhhorod, Kropyvnytskyi, Dnipro and Zaporizhzhia.

Many of the most vulnerable people, such as the elderly, are isolated; having been separated from their neighbours and relatives who formed a support network. Meanwhile children often pick up on the stress that adults around them are feeling. 

“One issue we deal with is trauma-related stress; for example, people’s memories of hiding in basements during heavy shelling could be triggered by words, sounds, smells, or scenes that are reminiscent of the original trauma,” says Vykhivska.

Our mental health teams in Zaporizhzhia, where tens of thousands of people have arrived after fleeing intense shelling. Our teams have noticed a variation of symptoms including fear, stress, worry, hopelessness, and panic attacks.
Our mental health teams in Zaporizhzhia, where tens of thousands of people have arrived after fleeing intense shelling. Our teams have noticed a variation of symptoms including fear, stress, worry, hopelessness, and panic attacks. Faris Al-Jawad/MSF

“We also see people with a lot of anxiety-related symptoms, such as insomnia and constant worry about the future. People who normally are not affected are now stressed.”

“Struggling with the fear of death”

Kateryna had to flee her home in Irpin with her mother when their village was attacked. They were evacuated and are now living in a shelter in Mukachevo in the far west of Ukraine. Here, Kateryna sees an MSF psychologist – she has suffered from panic attacks since escaping her village.

“One of the things I’m struggling with is the fear of death. I’m scared that I will fail to do something, or that I’ll do something wrong and won’t make it. I think about it again and again, and it prevents me from doing anything,” she says.

These reactions are not unusual when living through war, says Lina Villa, MSF mental health activity manager in Dnipro and Zaporizhzhia. Our teams here visit shelters where hundreds of thousands of people have escaped the heavy fighting in the east and south of Ukraine.

Kateryna, with Yana Kulish, MSF psychologist, at the Mukachevo Center for Displaced Persons in a session.
Kateryna, with Yana Kulish, MSF psychologist, at the Mukachevo Center for Displaced Persons in a session. Nadia Voloboieva/MSF

Here, psychologists try to stabilize patients by identifying the issues they are facing, and then help them to find coping mechanisms.

“We try to help our patients to regain some level of control in a very uncontrollable and uncertain situation, by understanding and expressing what they feel. We try to reassure them that stress, fear, anxiety, sleeplessness are normal reactions to this abnormal situation,” says Villa.

“It’s vitally important that people can express and exercise their feelings and emotions after facing traumatic situations. If not addressed, these emotions can snowball and become more severe.”

Crafts and letters help calm children

In Berehove, MSF psychologists work with children who have been evacuated from conflict areas – from April 4 to May 20, 2022, 375 children participated in group and individual mental health sessions here. Children show symptoms from the trauma they have experienced both before and during their evacuation, including anxiety, low self-esteem, panic attacks and grief.

“Many have trouble sleeping, some have started to stutter, some wet their beds,” says Kucheriaviy Valerii, MSF psychologist in Berehove.

To help them cope, psychologists have different practical methods they work through with the children. One is making paper birds; children cut them out and fold the wings while putting their positive emotions and thoughts into this process.

Based on session, we see children show symptoms from the trauma they have experienced both before and during their evacuation, including anxiety, low self-esteem, panic attacks and grief.
Based on session, we see children show symptoms from the trauma they have experienced both before and during their evacuation, including anxiety, low self-esteem, panic attacks and grief.Nadia Voloboieva/MSF

“I recommend they sleep with this bird; it can help calm them down,” says Valerii.

Need for more mental health support

While MSF is providing mental health support and additional training to psychological staff in medical facilities across Ukraine, much more needs to be done.

“We need to see an urgent increase in mental health services across the country,” says Vykhivska. “Both the national health system and other organizations need to ensure that the response to mental health needs and the resources behind it reach the most vulnerable people, especially in rural areas, where people are often cut off and lack access.”

It is crucial this support is provided to people where they are and that it involves close collaboration with communities so that everyone who needs help receives it.