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Ukrainian psychiatrists train in NSW as trauma grows

Four years into the full-scale war, Ukraine is grappling with a mental health crisis. Research from the International Rescue Committee from April this year estimates 15 million people in Ukraine need psychological support. At the coalface of the mass traumatisation is psychiatrist Antonina Pushko. Dr Pushko, along with six other mental health specialists, made the long journey from Ivano-Frankirsk in regional Ukraine to Australia as part of a government funded program in pursuit of new strategies to help the collective mental health of her nation.

“[The] number of the moral injuries among the civilians is very high because mostly everyone from the civilians has a family member who is serving in the army.” More than 15,000 kilometres away from Ukraine’s frontline, in Armidale in New South Wales’s New England region, local clinicians are well poised to assist their Ukrainian counterparts. Armidale is one of 24 of Australia’s designated refugee settlement area. Since 2018, hundreds of refugees from Iraq, Syria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo have made Armidale home.

Many have escaped harrowing war crimes and traumatic living conditions. Armidale is home to almost 20 per cent of Australia’s Ezidi community, also referred to as Yazidi. Along with the refugee population, mental health specialists in the region are often tasked to treat patients for stresses they too are experiencing, such as drought, fires and floods. No ‘safe place’ In Ukraine, Dr Pushko explained clinicians in the war zone were struggling to provide treatment in such unsafe environments. “Sometimes we have an air alarm at

night, and for example a mental health specialist, psychiatrist, has not slept and he is coming to his room to consult a patient and the patient says, ‘Oh I haven’t slept’ and a mental health specialist says, ‘Me too,'” she said. “It is a pathological normalisation. As the war rages on, mental health specialists are facing situations not seen before, including soldiers who have been held in captivity and have intergenerational trauma. Dr Pushko said the approach to care she had seen in Armidale could

be key to improving the service offerings back home, particularly developing trust between provider and client. “Very often there is a stigma if the person talking with you has not witnessed these traumatic events, he could not understand you,” she said. “Sometimes it is just a need to talk and to be heard by a specialist … this is the thing that we could learn from you.” The Armidale approach Local rehabilitation coordinator and social worker Eaowyn Vaughn-Johnson works closely with refugees in Armidale who

have experienced torture, conflict and displacement. Ms Vaughn-Johnson said community building and coordination between different services were the most important strategies for rehabilitation. “We provide acute mental health care, but the people that we work with have so many other needs that we just can’t meet,” she said. “Supporting people holistically and giving them the best care relies on collaboration, trust and strong relationships, whether it be with housing providers, domestic family violence, drug and alcohol services or refugee services.” Ms Vaughn-Johnson also believed the

use of telehealth in the regions would be well suited to Ukraine. “I feel that if someone in the Ukraine was bedbound in hospital, isolated in a different part of the country, using telehealth they could still get the best care for their mental health,” Ms Vaughn-Johnson said. Lessons in reintegration Olena-Kvitoslava Yatskiv is a social worker from Lviv, in western Ukraine. Ms Yatskiv works at a war trauma centre as head of social reintegration. Most of her patients have amputations or trauma. She said

there was high demand for her services but providing them was not simple. “A lot of our patients still want to be useful for Ukraine,” she said. “We don’t integrate our patients to the peaceful life; it’s a life a little bit far from front line, but the war is not over.” Ms Yatskiv said the holistic approach to reintegration in Armidale would help close gaps in care that existed in Ukraine. “We have a huge gap between social services and medical treatment we don’t

have the psycho-social support what you really have developed here in Australia,” she said. “You have highly developed this community support here, everyone works like a multidisciplinary team. “I think it’s the best practice … how you provide this complex support for the clients.”

Ukraine mental health, Antonina Pushko, Armidale, NSW refugee settlement, trauma training, telehealth, Ezidi Yazidi community, reintegration, war trauma centre, International Rescue Committee

4 Comments

  1. So they’re training psychiatrists in NSW… good but I don’t get how that helps the people back there.

  2. Moral injuries?? like mental wounds from everything going on. It’s wild we’re dealing with drought/fires here too and still sending training over there. Wish they had more resources, but I guess this is at least something.

  3. Wait so the article says Ukrainians went to Australia to learn new strategies, but isn’t that backwards? Shouldn’t Australia be the one needing the trauma help with all our refugees and stuff? Idk, just seems like a lot of travel.

  4. Armida-lay? I’ve never heard of it but apparently it’s a refugee spot, and Yazidi community too. Kinda messed up how there’s no “safe place” in a war zone, like the psychiatrist can’t even sleep because air alarms. I just hope they don’t burn out, because treating trauma on top of drought/flood stress is a lot.

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