Building Mental Health in Humanitarian Work: Healing the Helpers

Not all diplomats wear suits, some wear purpose – DeeEnvoy
Humanitarian aid is often portrayed as heroic men and women rushing into disaster zones to save lives. But behind the selflessness lies a quieter crisis: the psychological wounds carried by those who serve. Aid workers face not just physical risks but deep emotional scars. They witness famine, war, displacement, and suffering on a scale most of us will never encounter. And while their courage is celebrated, their mental health is too often ignored.
The Silent Burden
Humanitarian workers are disproportionately vulnerable to depression, anxiety, PTSD, burnout, and compassion fatigue (Cardozo et al., 2012). Many suffer secondary trauma, absorbing the pain of those they serve. A worker supporting survivors of sexual violence, for example, may themselves develop PTSD. Yet, most organizations remain ill-prepared to offer consistent support.
The Antares Foundation (2012) and UNHCR studies (Suzic et al., 2016) highlight that aid staff report far higher rates of psychological distress compared to the general population. But despite this, mental health services are patchy, often reserved for expatriates, leaving national staff the majority unsupported.
The Organizational Blind Spot
Humanitarian agencies excel at logistics and coordination but falter when it comes to staff wellbeing. Most interventions are reactive: crisis counseling after a breakdown, not preventive care. Workers fear stigma—seeking help might brand them as “weak” or unfit for deployment. The result? Silent suffering, high turnover, and a broken system. As Ehrenreich & Elliott (2004) note, resilience isn’t innate it must be nurtured. Yet, the assumption that aid workers should “just cope” perpetuates silence.
A Framework for Sustainable Wellbeing
If aid work is to remain sustainable, mental health must shift from the periphery to the center. This means embedding support at three levels:
1. Before Deployment (Prevention): Psychological screenings, resilience training, peersupport network.
2. During Deployment (Intervention): Regular check-ins, access to confidential counseling, mental health first aid.
3. After Deployment (Recovery): Debriefing, long-term therapy, reintegration support, career transitions.
The IASC Guidelines (2007) already recommend these strategies, but implementation remains inconsistent.
Why This Matters
Humanitarian workers are not superheroes. They are human beings with limits, vulnerabilities, and needs. If we continue to neglect their mental health, we risk weakening the very foundation of humanitarian response. As O’Donnell (2017) puts it, “Aid workers are not unbreakable.”
To build a truly sustainable system, mental health must be treated as a core operational priority, not an optional extra. Because a broken aid worker cannot fix a broken world.
Africa Always,
Lady Diana Ereyitomi Eyo-Enoette
Honorary Consul & Special Envoy on Sustainability | London Embassy to Africa (Sovereign Kingdom of Hawaii).
References
• Antares Foundation (2012). Managing Stress in Humanitarian Workers: Guidelines for Good Practice.
• Cardozo, B.L. et al. (2012). Psychological Distress Among International Humanitarian Aid Workers. PLOS ONE.
• Ehrenreich, J., & Elliott, T. (2004). Managing Stress in Humanitarian Aid Workers.
• Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC). (2007). Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings.
• O’Donnell, K. (2017). Unbreakable? Recognizing Humanitarian Stress and Trauma. Global Geneva.
• Suzic, D., Thomas, D., Jachens, L., & Mihalca, D. (2016). Staff Wellbeing and Mental Health in UNHCR.