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Swelling Ukraine mental health crisis will be felt for generations: WHO

By AFP
May 16, 2026
The World Health Organisation logo is pictured at the entrance of the WHO building, in Geneva, Switzerland, December 20, 2021. — Reuters
The World Health Organisation logo is pictured at the entrance of the WHO building, in Geneva, Switzerland, December 20, 2021. — Reuters

GENEVA: Over four years into Russia´s full-scale invasion, Ukraine´s mental health crisis is palpable and growing, the World Health Organisation said on Friday, warning the effects could be felt for generations.

The mental strain of the grinding war in Ukraine has long been a priority for the government and for the health response in the country.

Jarno Habicht, the WHO representative in Ukraine, pointed out that already in March 2022, a month into the full-scale war, the United Nations health agency had estimated that 10 million people would need support on mental health in the country.

“These needs have been increasing,” he told reporters in Geneva, pointing WHO´s latest data showing that “71 percent of people have episodes of anxiety, stress, sleepless nights”.

“So, when we look to the mental health, we see the impact now (and) we know that there will be impact for generations to come,” he warned.

“From my personal perspective, we have work to do until the end of the century.”

Habicht said the cumulative stress was clearly taking a broader toll on health as well, with two-thirds of people in the country reporting their health has worsened since the start of the war.

There was also “an increase of chronic diseases and burden of non-communicable diseases”, he said warned, pointing to an 11-percent rise in hospital admissions for stroke and a seven-percent hike for myocardial infarction.