Mental Health

Treating invisible wounds in the aftermath of conflict in South Sudan

When MSF launched an emergency intervention in Tambura, South Sudan, in December 2021, the level of devastation was clear – 80,000 people had been displaced, a significant proportion of the community had been brutally killed, and the looting and destruction of the only hospital meant that people had no access to medical care. The conflict in Tambura, which largely ran along ethnic lines, began in early 2021 but escalated significantly between June to September, and quite literally decimated the population. A retrospective mortality survey carried out by MSF in March 2022 found an average of 5.5 deaths in 10,000 people each day over a period of nine months("Retrospective Mortality, Nutrition, and Measles vaccination coverage survey in the MSF catchment area in Tambura and Source Yubu, South Sudan" MSF, April, 2022). Many people living in displacement camps still haven’t found their loved ones, while others know their family members were killed, but feel too unsafe to go retrieve their bodies.

Due to the destruction of the hospital, lives were also lost due to lack of medical care. Mothers had no safe spaces to deliver their babies, and children had nowhere to receive vaccinations against infectious and often deadly diseases. As part of MSF’s emergency intervention in Tambura, our team began providing essential healthcare, including vaccinations and maternity care. A weekly cargo plane brought supplies for the community and MSF also provided clean water, and began rebuilding and refurbishing the hospital in Tambura. However, after all the trauma the community had experienced, one of the biggest needs was mental health services.

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Riba Kasiano and her son, Eddy Emmanuel, sit in the newly refurbished paediatric ward of Tambura hospital. [©Scott Hamilton/MSF]

Living in fear, experiencing and witnessing extreme violence, and huge uncertainty for the future are factors that continue to prey on the minds of those displaced in and around Tambura. Without an appropriate outlet and space to process traumatic experiences, the symptoms can deepen, become worse, and in some cases manifest themselves in physical symptoms.

The most common symptoms we see in people are stress, sadness and grief, as well as anxiety about their future and returning home – as some people had their houses robbed and burned, so now have nothing” said Ariadna Alexandra Pérez Gudiño, MSF’s Mental Health Activity Manager “Without really discussing their experiences, without coming to terms with what happened to them, this can provoke a physical response from the body. In psychological terms, this is like having an open wound that goes untreated.

To address the mental health needs of the population in Tambura, MSF decided to provide comprehensive community-based mental health services. Working with a team of four counsellors from Tambura, Mental Health Activity Manager, Ariadna, began by discussing expectations with her team: “There is a collective experience here – everyone has been displaced, they have witnessed violence. We are not going to change their experiences and the reality they are living in – our objective is to help people process what’s happened, and support them with coping mechanisms to help reduce their suffering.

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At an MSF organised mental health group session for women, the participants sing and dance, as a means of relieving stress. [©Scott Hamilton/MSF]

The mental health team began working in and around the displacement camps to discuss the mental health problems many people were experiencing, to normalise speaking about them, and provide outlets for those in need of support. This included one-to-one counselling sessions, referral pathways for those in need of further treatment or medication, and group psychosocial health sessions.

Six of my family members were killed in this conflict, including my husband, son, brother and nephew. After I heard the news, I wasn’t in my right mind – I lost sense of who I am,” said Severna.

Joseph, who is one of the many people in the displaced persons camp in Tambura who have lost loved ones. “I went to MSF for some counselling sessions and after a while I started to find my feet again. The mental health counselling with MSF has been a big help. I am still struggling and things are not perfect, but now I am beginning to understand what happened to me, I am beginning to work through these things, and for the first time in a while, I now have some hope for the future.

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After losing his brother in the Tambura conflict, Joseph, his wife and daughter fled to the bush. [©Scott Hamilton/MSF]

For Mark Moses Tagiapaite, this is the second time he has been displaced due to conflict – once as a child during the war for independence, and now again from the intercommunal violence in Tambura. Mark, like thousands of other people in Tambura, fled with his wife and children, leaving everything behind.

It was 1 July 2021 when we fled to the camp – it was just too dangerous for us to stay. We made it here, but many more didn’t. A lot of people died in this conflict; innocent people died for no reason,” said Mark. “This conflict has destroyed many things – the hospital, healthcare centres, and schools… this conflict destroyed Tambura.

Mark recognises the psychological burden that comes with having little certainty or agency over the future, and having no home to return to. Despite facing his own challenges, Mark is working as an MSF Health Promoter to support others in the camp in Tambura; sharing information on available health services, referral pathways, preventive measures to stop people getting sick and coordinating activities like the measles vaccination campaign, which took place in March 2022.

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MSF Health Promoter, Mark Moses, speaks through his megaphone to encourage parents to bring their children for essential measles vaccinations. [©Scott Hamilton/MSF]

There are a lot of us working here – a team for health promotion, a team for mental health and others. The mental health team plays an important role; there are people here who lost their loved ones and their homes, and now they live in a camp with nothing to do apart from eat and sleep. It’s important that they have somewhere to turn,” says Mark.

The psychosocial group sessions ran in the camps by MSF included activities like making bracelets, drawing, and singing and dancing. The team also encouraged people to maintain social connections that many of them had already developed, such as playing football or chatting with friends over coffee or tea. When people are confined to heavily populated displacement camps, psychosocial activities like these can quite literally be a lifeline by providing a way of relieving stress and grief and helping people to collectively process trauma.  Through the sharing of experiences, people have begun to collectively process their trauma and come to terms with what happened to them. ( Read their testimonies )

In conflict-torn South Sudan people continue to live through the vast and catastrophic consequences of violence, from death to long-term lifechanging injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder; destroyed livelihoods, infrastructure, and healthcare systems; as well as being uprooted and forced to leave everything behind. Between January to July 2022, MSF conducted more than 11,500 individual and group mental health consultations in seven projects in different parts of the country.

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Overview of MSF mental health and psychosocial activities in South Sudan in 2022.

With improvements in the humanitarian situation, the rehabilitation of the hospital and other health structures, and healthcare providers having returned to Tambura, MSF handed over our activities June 2022. We ensured referrals of critically ill patients and donated an ambulance to the hospital.

We continue to monitor the situation in Western Equatoria State and remain prepared to respond if conditions deteriorate and emergency needs arise. We recently started an emergency intervention in Magwi county in Eastern Equatoria State where fighting escalated earlier this year, displacing tens of thousands of people. Our team integrated mental healthcare and psychosocial support in our healthcare services, and ensured access to clean, safe and adequate water and sanitation for over 100,000 people.