In 1998, MSF formally recognised the importance of providing mental healthcare as part of its emergency work. A decade later and, in 2017, MSF staff performed 306,300 individual mental health consultations and 49,800 group sessions in 52 countries. The psychosocial support MSF provides through these consultations and groups focuses on helping people to develop coping strategies after they have lived through traumatic experiences. The immediate goal is to reduce their symptoms and help them be able to lead a normal life.
For people caught in their wake, humanitarian crises can cause intense mental suffering. Many of the people assisted by MSF have been separated from their families or witnessed the deaths of loved ones. Others have spent much of their time on the run, searching for shelter and safety. Being forced from home is a particular problem for people who are already suffering from psychological disorders, as they lose access to treatment and routine care, which can cause them to develop more severe conditions.
The Malakal Protection of Civilian site, in South Sudan, was designed to provide protection to the local population affected by violence. Yet, difficult living conditions, a loss of hope, feelings of imprisonment and limited opportunities for work have affected the mental health of those living inside the camp. In 2016, MSF saw increasing numbers of suicides and attempted suicides, even among children.
In Moria camp, on the Greek island of Lesvos, the policy of indefinitely detaining asylum seekers has had a severe impact on the mental health of the 9,000 people held there. The uncertain situation affects all those detained there, but children especially. During a group mental health activity for children (between 6 and 18 years) in 2018, an MSF team observed that nearly 25 percent of them had self-harmed, attempted suicide or had thought about committing suicide. Many children suffer from panic attacks and constant nightmares. Fatima* tells how her youngest daughter, aged 14, was affected by the conditions in Moria: "She always walks with a knife and says she will harm herself. I've already found a knife twice under her pillow. When I leave her alone, she always keeps her head down and cries."