World Mental Health Day: MSF work in Italy with migrant minors

Agrigento, Italy- Since July 2024, the MSF team working on the ‘People on the Move’ project has been supporting migrant minors in Agrigento, in Italian island Sicily which receives the majority of people crossing the deadly route of the Mediterranean Sea. The project is being carried out in collaboration with local health authorities.

Many of these children arrive with severe trauma after long and difficult journeys. At the reception centre for migrant children, they receive medical and psychological assistance and a safe place where they can live their lives and their actual age.

Here, they are not defined by the difficulties they have faced, but recognised for their voices, their talents and their dreams.

Every day, the MSF team of intercultural mediators builds bridges between languages and, above all, between cultures and people. Empathy is their most powerful tool: it opens the way to the hearts of young people who have often lost the ability to trust.

Our intervention aims to bring these young people to a place of balance. They have the right to be minors.
Sergio Di Dato
MSF project coordinator in Agrigento
Mental health support

The MSF teams in Agrigento run psycho-educational workshops with migrant minors to help them from a psychological point of view: through colours, the young people can express the emotions they feel, learning to recognise and represent them. Each colour represents a different emotion, and the children colour their hands according to how they feel. Many of them often express their happiness at having survived the difficult journey, but also their fear of being separated from their travelling companions, of not finding work and of not being able to support their families.

The children carry a very heavy burden. They made the journey as young children and arrived in Italy as teenagers, but already feeling like adults. The opportunity to participate in recreational activities allows them to reconnect with a more adolescent, childlike part of themselves.
Federica Curci
MSF psychologist in Agrigento
The young migrants are working at the psycho-educational laboratory: through colours, they talk about the emotions they feel, learning to recognise and represent them. Each colour represents a different emotion, and the kids colour their hands according to what they feel. Many of the young people often express their happiness at having survived the difficult journey, but also their fear of being separated from their travelling companions, or not finding work, and of not being able to support their families. ©️Giuseppe La Rosa/MSF
The young migrants are working at the psycho-educational laboratory: through colours, they talk about the emotions they feel, learning to recognise and represent them. Each colour represents a different emotion, and the kids colour their hands according to what they feel. Many of the young people often express their happiness at having survived the difficult journey, but also their fear of being separated from their travelling companions, or not finding work, and of not being able to support their families. ©️Giuseppe La Rosa/MSF
Federica Giannotti, the project's Psychologist Focal Point in Agrigento, explains the psycho-educational laboratory to young migrants and shows them the colours associated with different emotions. ©️Giuseppe La Rosa/MSF
MSF’s work in Agrigento

In Agrigento, MSF works in reception centers for adults and minors, offering both medical and psychological support.

In one year of work (between August 2024 and August 2025), we carried out over 1,500 medical examinations and more than 500 psychological support sessions. A total of 176 people participated in our psychosocial support workshops.

Some members of the MSF team in front of the mobile clinic in Agrigento: Valentina Scala (Project Medical Referent), Seydou Konarè (ICM Sud-Saharian), Sergio Di Dato (Field Coordinator) and Dario Zagarella (Digital Content Creator). ©️Giuseppe La Rosa/MSF





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