Anything she will have to get used to in the west will be easier, more organized & a hell of a lot safer & user friendly than what she is used to here!! 
I disagree. I have the advantage (or the disadvantage) of speaking Russian and I have read what Russian women post on Russian language sites about their life overseas. You cannot imagine how much complaining goes on....
The big complaint will be the issue of language and work. The first may be quite the challenge and in the second it might take years before you even think of building a career or finding a job that you think suits the education you had in Russia or Ukraine.
Then, the complaints will expand to cover issues that deal with relationships. I have heard women complain that yes life in the West is easier, but it lacks in "soul." They miss the homeland and Russians with their wide, expansive, good-natured, hospitable soul. They even miss at times the Russian men that are nostalgically depicted as more romantic and passionate.
Then, many will complain that they cannot find true friends in their new countries, that their friends back home were so much more sincere and they could talk soul-to-soul with them. They will go on and on explaining how in the West people are not as sincere as they are back home.
You have to keep in mind that once you are living in your new country, then you can come up with a nostalgic ideal that may or not exist in reality. And, the very things that we think are good, will be devalued as really bad. One Russian woman, who is engaged to be married in Canada, told me that she finds people in Canada too materialistic when compared to people back home. Here, they are only interested in big houses and cars. I had to remind her that Russians also love material things and given the opportunity will happily buy big houses, apartments and cars, but to no avail....
Simply put then, some women will be happy because they are now living in a country that is less chaotic and safer than what they experienced back home. However, many will also suffer from nostalgia and loss of homeland. For some this is a passing phase (a few months, perhaps a year) for others they are still complaining how much things are better back home after 4 or 5 years living in Canada.