Mental Health Testimonies

Mental Health

In October 2020, a WHO survey revealed that the pandemic has disrupted or halted critical mental health services in 93 percent of countries worldwide, while the demand for mental health is increasing.

The psychological impact of delivering emergency aid can be severe. Our teams provide emergency medical aid in catastrophes all over the world — armed conflicts, natural disasters, famines and epidemics.

However, for people who have lived through these terrible events, survival goes beyond ensuring physical wellbeing.

These figures dramatically increase when factors such as violence, persecution, the need to flee, disasters or a lack of access to healthcare are involved.

For this reason, in 1998 MSF formally recognised the need to provide mental health and psychosocial care as part of our emergency work.

Our response to mental health

People caught in the wake of a humanitarian crisis can suffer from debilitating depression and anxiety, including conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). 

Many patients seen by MSF will have been separated from their families or witnessed the deaths of loved ones. Others may have been forced to flee, searching for shelter, supplies and safety. These events can immobilise people with depression and anxiety at a time when they need to take action for themselves and their families.

MSF professionals are there to listen and support so that traumatic experiences do not come to define our patients' lives.

In 2020, our mental health teams provided 349,500 individual consultations across our projects.

Mental healthcare also forms a crucial part of our services for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malnutrition, sexual violence and disease outbreaks.

Our primary aim is to reduce people’s symptoms and improve their ability to function. Often this work is done by local counsellors specially trained by MSF, while our psychologists or psychiatrists provide technical support and clinical supervision. 

At the same time, specialised clinicians are available to treat severe mental illness. However, this accounts for a minority of the cases seen by MSF.

People seek mental health support for many reasons — the agonising loss of a child in an earthquake, the trauma of sexual violence, getting caught up in a conflict. MSF mental health workers listen to their stories and focus on helping them find ways to cope and continue with their lives.

Being forced from home is a particular problem for people already suffering from mental health problems. They can lose access to existing treatment and routine care, which may cause them to develop further symptoms or more severe conditions.

However, treating severely disturbed people remains a challenge for MSF teams, given the complexity of managing psychiatric medication and treatment. Increasing our capacity to treat these illnesses remains a priority for MSF.

Establishing mental healthcare programmes in emergencies is not straightforward, mainly when violence and trauma may be ongoing, or language and cultural barriers may prevent people from seeking support. Our community outreach teams increasingly play an essential part in tackling this.

It is often difficult to guarantee continuity of care in unstable and dangerous settings. However, the needs are high, and MSF continues to expand its mental health programmes.

For MSF's emergency response work to be carried out, there is another crucial issue: the mental health of our teams.

Often away from home for long periods, working under pressure and required to process traumatic events, humanitarian aid workers must also be given the professional support and headspace they need.

Local MSF staff will often come directly from the communities receiving our care. While this is useful for our teams to understand social and cultural issues better, it also means that these staff members are closer to the same traumatic events experienced by our patients. Our local staff, therefore, receive psychological support.

For international team members, coming home from an assignment is often the time when mental health support becomes the most necessary. Many struggle with the knowledge that, for their patients, returning home may not be an option. However, MSF remains committed to helping our staff re-adapt to their routines and process their experiences.

 
Refugees trapped in Moria camp on Lesbos Island. The awful conditions at Moria camp/Olive Grove and arbitrary administrative situations have had a dramatic impact on their health and in particular their mental health. [ © Robin Hammond/Witness Change ]
Access to Healthcare

A disastrous policy: vulnerable people trapped on the Greek islands pay the price of inhumane policies of the EU-Turkey deal

Article 5 Sep 2019
 
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Mental Health

Childhood in conflict – children in displaced camps in need of immediate protection

Stories from the Frontline 14 Aug 2019
 
Twenty-year-old Mamma Mohammed was threatened, locked up and forced into marriage by members of an armed group. Pregnant, she finally escaped to the town of Pulka, in northeastern Nigeria’s Borno state, where she is staying in a camp for displaced people.
Mental Health

"Pulka is my new home"

Stories from the Frontline 5 Aug 2019
 
Local volunteers, health workers and MSF staff members celebrated the opening of mental health activities in West Point, Liberia. [© Clément Lier/MSF]
Access to Healthcare

Liberia: Providing psychiatric care close to home

Article 29 Jul 2019
 
Displaced people wait for a distribution of non-food items (NFIs) in Pulka town. [Igor Barbero / MSF ]
Mental Health

Nigeria: More mental health support needed for people in Pulka

Article 22 Jul 2019
 
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Access to medicines

More than medicine: a look at mental health needs in detention

Stories from the Frontline 9 May 2019