Wars cause bodily injury to individuals, civilian or military, which results in either disability or death. Wars affect human mental health, resulting in psychological and mental disorders that may extend for long periods of time, and the impact of which may be transmitted from one generation to another.
Wars result in the destruction of the infrastructure that supports the general health of the community, such as: the sectors of food systems, medical care, hygiene, transportation, communications, and electric power.
Psychological effects of wars on humans Psychological effects on soldiers and their families Wars have many psychological effects on soldiers and their families, and the bulk of these effects appear after the soldiers return to their homes and families, and here are some points that clarify these effects on the soldier and his family members: The psychological impact on the soldier himself: Most soldiers, while away from their homeland, feel intense loneliness and an urgent desire for isolation due to many factors.
However, such symptoms can be reduced by communicating with their relatives and supporting them through the means of communication available at the time, while soldiers may face a new stage of psychological crises that may appear in the form of depression, disturbances, and anxiety, in addition to their suffering from other injuries in different areas of the body as a result of for these wars.
"I would like to officially stress that all mercenaries sent by the West to aid the Kyiv nationalist regime ... do not have the right to the status of prisoners of war," Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov was quoted by the Russian "Interfax" news agency as saying on Thursday.
Konashenkov added that anyone considering joining their ranks should "think seven times before leaving," as Russia will consider them "criminally responsible if they are arrested."
"They are coming to defend freedom and life, for us, for all of us," Zelensky announced.