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Jeremy Bigwood

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Part Three | Ukraine Uses TV, Internet to Train People to Manage their Stress and Anxiety

The government has set up many projects intended to mitigate the effects of war on the psychosocial health of the population remaining in Ukraine. The projects range from interactive cellphone apps to websites and TV public service announcements.

Part Two | “Living under war tests the strength of the psyche and body”

An interview with Ukrainian psychologist Anna Katruk: "People are living in a so-called napiv stabilizovanyy – "semi-stabilized" – environment: That’s the term I use to describe the situation of people living inside Ukraine but away from the front lines – people must withstand high levels of tension, uncertainty and exhaustion."

Part One | ‘This Was Not a Dream’

War isn’t only about bombs, bullets and deaths on the battlefield. It is also about people away from the fighting, struggling to maintain a modicum of normalcy and hope in their daily lives. “We obviously became stronger, even though we are broken inside,” said multimedia artist Olha Spytsia.

Ukraine: Life During Wartime

War isn’t only about bombs, bullets and deaths on the battlefield. It's also about people away from the fighting, struggling to maintain a modicum of normalcy and hope in their daily lives. In this three-part series, we learn about the lives of people living away from the front line and we hear from a Ukrainian psychologist about the effect the war is having on people's mental health and the strategies they can take to protect themselves.

Join us Tuesday, Dec. 9 at 10:00 am PT for our next free webinar.

 

Some therapists who had trouble connecting with youth turned to another source of connection: Minecraft therapy, which follows the approach of play therapy. In this webinar, we’ll talk with two leading experts in the promising genre.

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How Minecraft Therapy Is Transforming Child and Teen Mental Health Care