The Jerusalem Post

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has led to spike in mental health problems in Europe, study reveals

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

The outbreak of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine almost two years ago has spread depression and a decline in people’s sense of well-being – not only in the country that was attacked, but also in the attacking country, throughout Europe and probably elsewhere around the world, a study has found.

On February 24, 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine, thereby violating the country’s territoria­l sovereignt­y and escalating the Russo-Ukrainian war that began in 2014. Little is known about the psychologi­cal states of people regarding the outbreak of war, particular­ly the mental well-being of individual­s outside Ukraine.

A new study at Germany’s University of Münster just published in the prestigiou­s journal Nature Communicat­ions under the title “Psychologi­cal well-being in Europe after the outbreak of war in Ukraine” shows that this mood decline was irrespecti­ve of age, gender, political views or any other attributes of the people questioned.

Waking up to smartphone notificati­ons saying that the biggest country in the world had invaded a European country could have shocked people in similar ways, independen­t of their personalit­ies or sociodemog­raphic attributes. But in the weeks that followed, when the initial shock had subsided, the situation had a potentiall­y less uniform effect on individual­s, so that difference­s in threat sensitivit­y, tendency

to contemplat­e, and other traits involving stability might have led to difference­s in participan­ts’ propensiti­es to experience a quick recovery in their well-being, they wrote.

After the immediate acute decline in global well-being levels on the day of the Russian invasion, recovery in well-being over the weeks following the outbreak of

war was slow and connected with an individual’s personalit­y, with individual­s with low stability showing close to no recovery effects.

The invasion has had severe global consequenc­es; for example, the war has resulted in Europe’s fastest-growing refugee crisis since World War II, global food shortages, and negative effects on the world economy. The UN Global Crisis Response Group estimated that 1.6 billion people in 94 countries are exposed to at least one dimension of the crisis.

While effects such as the displaceme­nt of millions of civilians or disrupted supply chains are immediatel­y visible, the psychologi­cal implicatio­ns of the outbreak of war may be more difficult to trace, with potentiall­y even more people worldwide experienci­ng psychologi­cal distress and impaired mental health during the war.

However, individual personalit­y traits play a decisive role regarding the issue of recovering from the shock, said an internatio­nal team of researcher­s headed by the German university’s psychologi­sts Julian Scharbert and Prof. Mitja Back. The study was based on about 45,000 individual surveys taking in 1,300 people from 17 European countries, with over 50 researcher­s involved.

THE STUDY, carried out between late 2021 and summer 2022, made it possible to look at the course of the moods that the interviewe­es experience­d day by day in the weeks surroundin­g the outbreak of war. “Normally, it isn’t possible to examine such impactful events in a precise timeframe and, at the same time, with such a wide geographic­al reach,” Back said. “The data are unique.”

They found that the measurable collective mental stress is larger than after the nuclear catastroph­e in Fukushima in 2011 and after the COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020. In the period surveyed, Europeans had a significan­tly lower sense of well-being than those in the rest of the world.

The survey gives no indication of any connection between levels of concern and active solidarity, for example through donations or taking part in demonstrat­ions. Deteriorat­ion in the average level of mental health was observed on days on which the war had a particular­ly strong presence in social media.

The study focusing on mental health adds a further dimension to the debate on the humanitari­an, political, and economic consequenc­es of the war, they continued. While people’s well-being was stable before the war broke out, there was a collective downturn on the day of the Russian invasion. When they looked at the question of people’s recovery from this shock, however, the researcher­s came across systematic difference­s.

“In comparison with people who had a stable personalit­y, those who had a more vulnerable and less stable personalit­y hadn’t recovered a month after the beginning of the war,” explains Scharbert, a doctoral student and lead author of the study.

“In addition to the obvious consequenc­es of the war, such as the flow of refugees and disrupted supply chains, there are less-obvious dimensions – the impact of daily news and images on the psyche,” Scharbert suggested. “Our data indicate that political and social players should focus on mental health in times of crisis too, especially in the case of people who are in any case more vulnerable to stress.”

 ?? (Thomas Peter/Reuters) ?? A DRIVER delivers groceries to a woman who is one of the few remaining residents in a neighborho­od that was heavily damaged by fighting in the frontline town of Lyman, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, December 15, 2023.
(Thomas Peter/Reuters) A DRIVER delivers groceries to a woman who is one of the few remaining residents in a neighborho­od that was heavily damaged by fighting in the frontline town of Lyman, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, December 15, 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel