“…The evidence for high levels of stress is seen in the steep increases in male suicide rates and mental disorders that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union (Andreev, Pridemore, Shkolnikov, & Antonova, 2008;Brainerd, 2001;Leon & Shkolnikov, 1998;Pietila & Rytkonen, 2008;Plavinski, Plavinskaya, & Klimov, 2003;Tomkins, et al, 2012;UNICEF, 2001;WHO/Europe, 2013). Even now, post-Soviet societies continue to be characterised by many established risk-factors for poor mental health, such as impoverishment, social instability, isolation and low levels of social welfare, and generally poor quality mental health services (Jenkins, Klein, & Parker, 2005;McDaid, Samyshkin, Jenkins, Potasheva, Nikiforov, & Ali Atun, 2006;Roberts, Abbott, & McKee, 2012;Tomov, Van Voren, Keukens, & Puras, 2007;UNDP, 2011). However, precise evidence on the burden of mental ill-health in the region remains limited (Fister & McKee, 2005;Jenkins, et al, 2005).…”