Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is partnering with the local volunteer organisation, Way of Ukraine, who run a transit shelter in Zernove in Kharkiv region. The shelter receives people coming from Krasnopillya humanitarian corridor, where an average of 100 people per day cross the border between Russia and Ukraine, coming mainly from occupied territories in Donetsk and Luhansk.
Approximately 20 per cent of people crossing the border, travel initially to Kharkiv city, where they are hosted in Zernove transit shelter for an average of 1-2 days, before continuing their journey to other locations in the east part of Ukraine.
In the first months after the opening of the transit shelter, MSF provided mental health support to people in need; either through group sessions or private consultations for those requiring a more personal exchange.
One of these patients is Vitaly, a 75-year-old man from Kupyansk in the Kharkiv region, who endured occupation and relentless shelling for seven months, and now temporarily resides in the shelter. Vitaly made the difficult decision to leave Kupyansk after shelling shattered the windows and damaged the roof of his apartment. Situated a mere 50 kilometres from the Russian border, Kupyansk city now lays in ruins.