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PSYCHIATRY IN A BATTLE ZONE
Authors:IZET PAJEVI?  MEVLUDIN HASANOVI?  ALINA KOPRI?
Institution:1. School of Medicine, University of Tuzla where he specializes in Neuropsychiatry;2. Department for Psychiatry at the University Clinical Centre, Tuzla;3. Royal Inverclyde Hospital, Greenock, Scotland
Abstract:The authors describe the arrival and treatment of 164 severe chronic psychiatric patients who were displaced from the Serbian army‐controlled Jakes psychiatric hospital and off‐loaded on the afternoon of 28th of May, 1992 at the gates of the Psychiatry Clinic in Tuzla. Through analysis of their incomplete medical records, which arrived with the patients in Tuzla, and analysis of their activities during and after the war, they found that 83 of the patients (50%) were males and 147 (89.6%) were admitted to the Psychiatry Clinic in Tuzla. Of the patients, 86 (58.5%) were found to be Serbs. The majority of them were incapable of independent living and required ongoing medical and social care. They were from all regions of Bosnia‐Herzegovina, 81.6% had schizophrenia and 70 (47.6%) were over 50 years of age. For its humanitarian work, its contribution to peace and for the maintenance of the multi‐ethnic Bosnia‐Herzegovina, the Psychiatry Clinic in Tuzla received the Golden Award for Peace from the International Legion of Humanists in May 1998.
Keywords:war  human rights  psychiatry  Bosnia‐Herzegovina
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