Literature DB >> 14727693

War, exile, moral knowledge and the limits of psychiatric understanding: a clinical case study of a Bosnian refugee in London.

Derek Summerfield1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This paper describes a Bosnian refugee, a survivor of war and ethnic cleansing, during a 3-year follow-up in a psychiatry clinic. DISCUSSION: This case throws light on the tension between medicotherapeutic and sociomoral ways of understanding the effects of such experiences, and of the limitations of morally and politically neutral psychiatric categories and technologies. Suffering always invokes questions of values: in this case the clinical picture represented a moral protest at what had been done with such impunity, and a refusal to accommodate to a world which now seemed unintelligible. The clinical picture also embodied the collective outrage, and sense of unfinished business, which many back in Bosnia itself were carrying in the wake of the 1995 Dayton peace accords which effectively legitimised the lines of ethnic cleansing.
CONCLUSIONS: DSM or ICD diagnoses of depressive disorder or post-traumatic stress disorder turned out to lack validity and explanatory power. Claims that victims of war and atrocity typically have an unmet need for mental health services are overstated. Recovery from the effects of war may depend on reestablishing a sense of intelligibility, a task that must primarily go on in social space rather than mental space.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14727693     DOI: 10.1177/0020764003494004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Soc Psychiatry        ISSN: 0020-7640


  6 in total

Review 1.  How scientifically valid is the knowledge base of global mental health?

Authors:  Derek Summerfield
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2008-05-03

2.  Mental Health System Reform in Contexts of Humanitarian Emergencies: Toward a Theory of "Practice-Based Evidence".

Authors:  Hanna Kienzler
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2019-12

3.  Posttraumatic stress disorder; combat exposure; and nicotine dependence, alcohol dependence, and major depression in male twins.

Authors:  Jeffrey F Scherrer; Hong Xian; Michael J Lyons; Jack Goldberg; Seth A Eisen; William R True; Ming Tsuang; Kathleen K Bucholz; Karestan C Koenen
Journal:  Compr Psychiatry       Date:  2008-01-10       Impact factor: 3.735

4.  Anger, PTSD, and the nuclear family: a study of Cambodian refugees.

Authors:  Devon E Hinton; Andrew Rasmussen; Leakhena Nou; Mark H Pollack; Mary-Jo Good
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2009-09-10       Impact factor: 4.634

5.  A Follow-Up on Psychiatric Symptoms and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders in Tuareg Refugees in Burkina Faso.

Authors:  Mauro Giovanni Carta; Daniela Moro; Fadimata Wallet Oumar; Maria Francesca Moro; Mirra Pintus; Elisa Pintus; Luigi Minerba; Federica Sancassiani; Elisabetta Pascolo-Fabrici; Antonio Preti; Dinesh Kumar Bhugra
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2018-04-24       Impact factor: 4.157

6.  Trauma- and stressor related disorders in the tuareg refugees of a cAMP in burkina faso.

Authors:  M G Carta; F Wallet Oumar; M F Moro; D Moro; A Preti; A Mereu; D Bhugra
Journal:  Clin Pract Epidemiol Ment Health       Date:  2013-11-13
  6 in total

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