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Several weeks after he was critically injured, Dmytro sips a coffee in a wheelchair outside the military hospital. He was rescued from a Russian artillery attack at a village close to Kharkiv, and has since found it challenging to get back to a normal life.
“I worry it will take me a lot of time to get back to living,” says the 45 year old. He declined the hospital’s offer of counselling sessions. “I think I am OK.”
Dmytro says pride may deter Ukraine’s fighters from seeking psychological support. “Some started to drink or even took drugs. A lot of [veterans’] families were broken,” says Dmytro. “Sometimes we say we are OK, but we are not.”
As the Russia-Ukraine war grinds on, the need for psychological support to manage emerging health risks is unprecedented. Ukrainian soldiers trying to keep up morale often overlook their mental health, but the consequences can be dire.
“Psychological support is crucial and it’s one of the most critical needs right now,” Andriy Sadoyvi, Lviv’s mayor, told The BMJ in his city’s office. Since 2015, many former soldiers who fought in Donbas have committed suicide, he says. A 2020 study by the Ukrainian Foundation for Public Health found that 57% of veterans need psychological support.1
The deputy minister for veterans’ affairs, Inna Drahanchuk, told the BBC in 2021 that about 700 veterans had died by suicide since 2014. Tracking how military personnel die is challenging, she said, and therefore the number of suicides may be underestimated.
Everything must be done to avoid repeating the irreparable losses of the previous war, says Sadoyvi. “We hope to make people aware of the new reality,” he says, “but at the same time, to believe that they still can have a complete life.”