By Lauren Rutledge | Senior Manager
The War in Ukraine
On the morning of February 24, 2022, Russian forces launched a multi-pronged invasion by land, air, and sea into Ukraine.
Three years after the invasion, 12.7 million people need humanitarian assistance. In Ukraine, 3.6 million people are displaced internally and nearly 7 million refugees from Ukraine have been recorded across Europe.
Three years of war has caused widespread destruction, reducing some cities to rubble, damaging or destroying hundreds of thousands of homes along with critical infrastructure and leaving millions of people with limited or no access to electricity, water or heat. Many people are living either in collective centers or damaged buildings, without basic needs for daily life and vulnerable to a range of health threats.
Since the start of war, Americares has been working closely with local organizations to meet health needs. Many stories have emerged. Scroll down and meet some of the extraordinary people and organizations who have shared their stories.
Americares has helped those impacted in Ukraine since the war began in 2022
To date, we have provided over $147 million in aid to 83 local partners, focusing on activities like:
Shipping 544 tons of medicine and relief supplies to 37 partners in Ukraine.
Americares emergency response team is coordinating shipments of medicine and supplies into Ukraine to support local organizations assisting those affected by war. Since the start of the invasion, Americares has shipped more than 544 tons of medicine and relief supplies – valued at more than $115 million – to health facilities and first responders in Ukraine, with more shipments planned.
There is a critical need for medicine and medical supplies, including specialty medicines and medical supplies to care for cancer patients, newborns and others with complex medical needs. Americares is prepared to meet those needs — and more.
In medicine, a quick diagnosis can save a life.
Ultrasound imaging is a critical diagnostic tool for doctors and first responders, especially in Ukraine, where deadly bombs cause injuries far too often. In one instance, through the Institute of Emergency Medicine in Poland, Americares provided handheld Butterfly iQ ultrasound probes to 15 hospitals in Ukraine.
Funding 41 mental health grants supporting frontline workers, children, and families.
Americares supports social service and mental health organizations in Ukraine and Poland so they have the infrastructure, technical and professional skills to ensure they can meet immediate and long-term needs. To support the mental health of people affected by the war, Americares has provided program support to 24 partner organizations in Poland, Romania and Ukraine. Of the 141 total grants, 41 grants totaling more than $1.4M support mental health.
These include:
The Americares team continues to develop educational resources in Ukrainian and has delivered capacity-building training for health care and frontline workers on psychological first aid and other topics relevant to mental health. Americares also provides psychosocial support activities to partner staff, including sessions on preventing burnout, coping with stress, building resiliency and strengthening community-based support.
With Americares assistance, our partners have also trained frontline clinicians in therapy techniques that address the unique trauma of war for both children and adults.
Strengthening local organizations to ensure long-term, sustainable health care solutions.
Americares partner network in Ukraine comprises lean, community-rooted organizations that can reach vulnerable populations not being served by health facilities, as well as large, highly specialized partners fully integrated into the national health system.
To promote the sustainability of aid efforts in Ukraine, six Ukrainian partners participated in a local capacity-building project in which local partner Divchata provided mentoring in strategic planning, development initiatives and operational support. Divchata also hosted a four-day off-line workshop and retreat in November 2024 for the teams of these organizations. Participants could also
access ongoing psychosocial assistance to support professional and personal resilience and growth.
To help improve the infrastructure of Clinical Center for Pediatric Medicine, Americares partnered with Tabletochki to support the installation of a heating system, to ensure heat during outages and make the hospital eligible for National Health System of Ukraine funding. Previously, Americares helped the hospital achieve accreditation for its Bacteriology Laboratory, which allowed the hospital to secure Ukrainian government funding.
Links:
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.
Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.
Start a Fundraiser