Life

My mom’s famous Greek pasta salad is always a hit

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Life   来源:Strategy  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:America’s approach to China is its most strategically important area of foreign policy - and one which has the biggest implications for global security and trade.

America’s approach to China is its most strategically important area of foreign policy - and one which has the biggest implications for global security and trade.

, the number of patients complaining of mental health problems this year has doubled since 2023, and market research data shows antidepressant sales have jumped by almost 50% since 2021.A study published in the medical journal

My mom’s famous Greek pasta salad is always a hit

suggests that 54% of Ukrainians (including refugees) have PTSD. Severe anxiety is prevalent among 21%, and high levels of stress among 18%.carried out in 2023 showed that 27% of Ukrainians felt depressed or very sad, up from 20% in 2021, the year before Russia's full-scale invasion.The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that the majority of Ukraine's population may be experiencing distress caused by war.

My mom’s famous Greek pasta salad is always a hit

"It may have different symptoms. Some feel sadness, some feel anxiety, some have difficulties with sleep, some feel fatigue. Some are getting more angry. Some people have unexplained somatic syndromes, be it just pain or feeling bad," the WHO representative in Ukraine, Jarno Habicht, told the BBC.But, Mr Habicht says, Ukraine has made strides in dealing with the acute crisis and battling the Soviet-era stigma associated with mental health.

My mom’s famous Greek pasta salad is always a hit

He says mental health was prioritised during the first months of the war. “Ukraine started to talk about mental health, and I think that's something unique which we have not seen in many places," Mr Habicht says.

Ukraine's first lady Olena Zelenska spearheads a mental health campaign calledIn recent weeks, South Korean and US intelligence as well as Nato have said that they have seen evidence of North Korean troops being involved in Russia's war.

But Moscow and Pyongyang have so far not responded directly to any of the allegations.Ukraine's top counter-disinformation official Andriy Kovalenko first said in a Telegram post on Monday that North Korea's "first military units... [had] already come under fire in Kursk".

In an interview with South Korean broadcaster KBS, Rustem Umerov confirmed this, saying he expects a "significant number" of the North Korean troops to be engaged in combat, though he added it was "so far just small contacts, not full-scale engagement".Most of them are still undergoing training, he added.

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