Source · Select Committees · International Development Committee

Recommendation 41

41 Accepted

Provide flexible funding to local organisations for culturally appropriate aid worker psychological support.

Conclusion
Psychological support and wellbeing strategies need to be appropriate to the context and culture of the aid workers in question. Sufficient flexibility in funding must be built in to ensure that local organisations are supported in designing and implementing their own recovery strategies for their volunteers and employees. (Recommendation, Paragraph 80) 54
Government Response Summary
The government agrees, detailing that FCDO's existing guidance, due diligence framework, and funding guidelines already enable partners to budget for staff psychological support and wellbeing, including for local organisations, and ensures flexible cost recovery.
Government Response Accepted
HM Government Accepted
Agree. FCDO takes seriously issues of health and safety, including mental health and safeguarding, for our partners. FCDO internal guidance on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support (MHPSS) advises that funding to meet mental health needs should be prioritised within humanitarian budget allocations. FCDO’s due diligence framework, which considers risks relevant to the programme in question, requires partners to demonstrate sufficient capacity and capability to meet several obligations, including those relating to physical and mental health, safety, security and safeguarding measures. FCDO funding guidelines enable partners to budget for staff psychological support and wellbeing, including for local organisations. Where there is an identified gap in available service provision in a given context, FCDO may also fund additional mental health services on a case-by-case basis. A good example is the FCDO-funded Humanitarian Action through Volunteers, Enablers, and Networks (HAVEN) consortium in Ukraine, which provides a resilience programme to local humanitarian workers and volunteers, allowing them to access online and offline psychological support. By prioritising their psychological health and wellbeing, the resilience of local humanitarian workers and volunteers is strengthened, allowing them to sustain their vital contributions to humanitarian efforts. Where the UK is funding a local organisation through another partner (e.g., INGO, UN Agency), FCDO expects the lead organisation to ensure full cost recovery of downstream partners, including for MHPSS, security and safeguarding needs. The lead partner must also pass on our non-project attributable cost (NPAC) rate, or 10% (whichever is the highest) to the implementing partner. The NPAC can be used by local organisations flexibly, according to identified priorities. The UK also seeks to leverage its influence to raise awareness about the critical need for MHPSS among other international donors, such as the World Bank and Global Health Institutions, governments, and humanitarian agencies.