Empowering Ukrainian healthcare and humanitarian aid workers: cocreating a peer support staff wellbeing curriculum
Courtney Welton-Mitchell, Nawaraj Upadhaya, Andrew Riley, Julius Torres Kellinghusen, Alexa Hansen, Halyna Skipalska, Peter Navario, Theresa P. Castillo

TL;DR
This paper describes the development of a peer support wellbeing curriculum for Ukrainian healthcare and humanitarian aid workers during the 2022 invasion.
Contribution
The study introduces a participatory approach to cocreate a wellbeing curriculum tailored to Ukrainian aid workers' needs.
Findings
Top stressors for Ukrainian aid workers included personal safety, family concerns, and financial hardships.
Most respondents showed interest in peer support groups and prioritized coping skills and psychological preparedness in curriculum content.
A 6-module peer support curriculum was developed and refined through workshops based on survey and workshop feedback.
Abstract
In February 2022 Russia launched an invasion of Ukraine. National aid workers responded to the crisis, at the risk of their own wellbeing. This case study details the cocreation of a peer support intervention by a global public health non-profit working with national staff in Ukraine. As a first step in peer support wellbeing curriculum development, an online survey was developed and administered for 530 Ukrainian healthcare and humanitarian aid workers. The survey resulted in 300 valid responses, for a 57% response rate. Top stressors included: personal safety and security (43%), concerns for family and friends (32%), and financial hardships (29%). Just over one-third of respondents indicated that stress was interfering with their ability to do their job. Common forms of coping included distraction (73%), and use of alcohol or drugs (32%). Nearly all (97%) indicated interest in a peer…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth, psychology, and well-being · Resilience and Mental Health · Healthcare professionals’ stress and burnout
