WHO marks the Day focuses on women’s physical mental health globally

BY Anjali Sharma

UNITED NATIONS – World Health Organization on Sunday highlighted a critical issue for global health: the vulnerabilities faced by women and girls around the world.

WHO said that over 300,000 women continue to die during pregnancy or childbirth each year.

More than 2 million babies die in their first month of life and around two million more are stillborn, said he WHO as it kicks off a year-long campaign on maternal and newborn health.

According to WHO, the data adds up to one preventable death every seven seconds.

The Healthy beginnings, hopeful futures campaign is asking governments and health policy makers to ramp up efforts to end preventable maternal and newborn deaths, and prioritize women’s longer-term health and well-being, it said.

WHO aims to not only save lives but ensure both mothers and infants thrive. In collaboration with partners, it will focus on empowering healthcare professionals and sharing crucial information about healthy pregnancies, safe childbirth, and postnatal care through a series of strategic actions.

WHO emphasized that access to high-quality, compassionate care is essential for women and families everywhere.

Health systems must evolve to address a wide range of health concerns, including obstetric complications, mental health issues, non-communicable diseases, and family planning ensuring that women’s needs are met both before, during, and after childbirth.

The proportion of women and girls caught in conflict zones has skyrocketed in the past year, with women now making up 40 per cent of all civilian deaths in armed conflicts.

Over 600 million women and girls live in areas affected by violence an  alarming 50 per cent increase since 2017.

WHO stated that as conflict intensifies across the globe, women and girls are bearing a heavy mental health toll.

Millions are grappling with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, anxiety, depression and trauma, with limited access to support and care from Afghanistan and Gaza to Georgia and Ukraine.

Some 1 in 5 people affected by a humanitarian crisis will develop long-term mental health conditions.

It said that only two per cent of those in need receive the care they require.

Mental health funding globally represents between one and two percent of health spending.

The gap between high and low-income countries in mental health services is stark.

In developed nations, there are over 70 mental health workers for every 100,000 people. In contrast, in low-income countries, that number drops to fewer than one.

The number of affected women continues to rise, making this crisis even more urgent.

UN Women, spoke to women in Afghanistan, Gaza, Georgia, and Ukraine to understand how these conflicts are stoking a mental health crisis.

In Gaza, relentless bombing, displacement, and deprivation have created a humanitarian catastrophe. Living under siege and the constant threat of violence, women and girls face extreme levels of fear, trauma, and exhaustion.

Data from UN Women shows that 75 per cent feel regular depression, 62 per cent cannot sleep, and 65 per cent suffer from nightmares and anxiety most are left to cope alone.

Women are not only dealing with their own trauma they are also trying to care for their children.

Alison Davidian, UN Women’s Country Representative in Afghanistan warned that 4 years of Taliban decrees have “eviscerated” women’s autonomy. The return of the Taliban has dealt a crushing blow to women’s rights and mental health.

With no women in leadership roles and 98 per cent reporting no influence over local decisions, many feel trapped in a life of isolation and despair.

“Three years ago, an Afghan woman could run for president. Now, she may not even be able to decide when to buy groceries,” Davidian said.

The result is overwhelming psychological distress, with 68 per cent of women in Afghanistan reporting their mental health as “bad” or “very bad.”

In Georgia, ongoing displacement and conflict have left many women with no access to adequate mental healthcare. Over 200,000 people remain internally displaced, with nearly 40 per cent living in shelters under dire conditions.

Mental health issues are widespread, with 23 per cent suffering from PTSD, 10 per cent reporting depression, and 9 per cent dealing with anxiety. Yet only about a third of those affected have sought care.

“We saw a sharp increase in antidepressant use, particularly in areas with high numbers of displaced people,” said Elene Rusetskaia of the Women’s Information Centre. “The mental health problem is very

In Ukraine, the war stemming from Russia’s invasion has pushed women’s mental health into crisis. Gender-based violence has surged 36 per cent since 2022, and women are shouldering more unpaid care work – up to 56 hours per week. Forty-two percent are now at risk of depression, while 23 per cent report needing counseling.

Displaced women, many of them refugees, are facing some of the worst mental health challenges, with limited access to support services.

International Migration Organization survey found that 53 per cent of internally displaced people in Ukraine suffer from depression, yet assistance remains scarce.

UN Women has provided protection, legal aid, and psychosocial support to more than 180,000 women and girls in Ukraine through the Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund.

UNHCR said that the current humanitarian funding crisis, exacerbated by declining health spending in host countries, is affecting the scope and quality of public health and nutrition programmes for refugees and host communities.

In Jordan, 335,000 women of reproductive age are at risk of losing essential maternal health. Without enough funding, prenatal care, safe delivery and newborn health services will disappear.

In Bangladesh, a million Rohingya refugees face a severe health crisis due to the funding freeze, threatening access to essential medical services.

UNHCR-supported programmes, over 40,000 pregnant women may lose access to critical antenatal care, with 5,000 at risk of delivering in unsafe conditions.

In Burundi, the suspension of nutrition programmes in several camps means that thousands of refugee children under five may not receive adequate treatment for malnutrition.

UN agency said that for women and girls in conflict zones, mental health care is a critical need, not a luxury. Recovery, dignity, and survival depend on access to trauma care, counseling, and community-based services.

The need for mental health support becomes more urgent than ever as conflict goes on.

UN Women emphasized that countries must invest in mental health as a core part of humanitarian response in conflict settings, called on governments to listen and act.

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