Mental health programming has really become a core aspect of our humanitarian medical response. When you're inside a high-intensity armed conflict, people are exposed to a tremendous level of violence. It's unpredictable. It's often indiscriminate. People are exposed to very high levels of psychological stress, and they're in need of mental health assistance and support.
There continue to be huge gaps in this kind of programming. I would also say, as well, for more severe mental health disorders and psychiatric conditions, there's almost little to no aspect of that included in many humanitarian responses, so there's a very significant need.
In terms of trauma-informed responses, this is exactly how we're implementing a package of psychosocial care. I would say it is a really important aspect that I think needs to be considered.
We're a medical humanitarian organization. We integrate these things into our programming, and particularly for a service package such as sexual and gender-based violence care, there's the medical response and the psychosocial response, which we provide as a comprehensive package, but then people also continue to need access to legal assistance. They need housing. They need shelter. They need protection and so on.
I think there's really a need to consider the full suite of services that people need in these kinds of acute humanitarian crises.