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1.
Med Confl Surviv ; : 1-14, 2024 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38768959

ABSTRACT

This study aimed to vividly describe the direct and severe health impacts of conflict in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR) using data from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD). It also sought to quantify the staggering portion of economic damage attributable to the health burden of conflict and terrorism. From 1990 to 2019, the region endured the devastating effects of conflict and terrorism. These circumstances led to 64%, 50%, and 35% of all causes of Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) in Libya, Syria, and Palestine, respectively, in 2011, 2016, and 2008. These figures represent not just statistics but the profound human cost of these conflicts. The health-related economic burden (HEB) due to conflict was estimated at $4.6 billion in Iraq, $3.7 billion in Afghanistan, and $1.7 billion in Libya in current international dollars. However, due to missing data, the HEB could not be calculated for Yemen and Syria despite significant conflict-related DALYs. In 2019, the HEB to Current Health Expenditure (CHE) ratio, which indicates the proportion of the health-related economic burden compared to health expenditure, was 30% in Afghanistan and 25% in Iraq. This high ratio underscores the significant strain that conflict places on the health systems.

2.
Pak J Med Sci ; 38(7): 1952-1957, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36246678

ABSTRACT

Objectives: To explore the experiences and perceptions of school children of Karachi after the Army Public School (APS) attack. Methods: It was a qualitative transcendental phenomenological study. Data collection started nine months after the attack, in September 2015, and continued till November 2019. Study participants were school children from Army, Government, and Private schools. The sampling strategy was convenience. Data collection of 53 students was done by focus group discussions and in depth interviews. Data analysis was performed using the phenomenological analytical techniques of Colaizzi. Results: Inductive analysis of the qualitative data gave rise to three themes - The journey beyond fear, Response of parents and schools and Role of media. Conclusion: The study concluded that the APS attack was the source of emotional distress and fear for the school children of Karachi as they personalized the event due to the nature of the attack. Immediately after the incident, they were in anger, grief, and fear, which altered their daily life activities and caused apprehensions in socializing and attending school. However, later they became highly motivated to study and gained courage. This motivation is revenge from terrorists as they wanted to keep children away from schools.

3.
Curr Psychiatry Rep ; 24(3): 181-193, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35199301

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This paper reports a review of the empirical research examining the association between mass trauma media contact and depression in children, the factors that may influence the association, and the difficulties encountered in the study of media effects on depression. RECENT FINDINGS: All of the included studies assessed general population samples. Pre-COVID-19 research focused primarily on television coverage alone or on multiple media forms including television, while COVID-19 media studies examined various media forms including social media. Most studies used cross-sectional design and non-probability sampling. The review revealed inconclusive findings across studies. The study of mass trauma media effects on depression in children is complicated by a number of potential confounding factors and by the relatively high prevalence of depression in the general population. Media contact was a relatively minor consideration among other interests in the extant studies which failed to explore numerous issues that warrant attention in future research.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Depression , Child , Communication , Cross-Sectional Studies , Humans , Mass Media
4.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 14(5): 620-622, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31685062

ABSTRACT

Wars, terrorism, and embargos destroyed facilities and shattered the public health system of Iraq. Today, there is limited documented knowledge about the health situation of the Iraqi population, particularly because health data are not systematically collected. Therefore, the capacity of the health system to address the major health problems of the population is considerably reduced. This report describes the implementation, started in 2015, of an electronic system for epidemiological monitoring and health surveillance, designed to collect and manage health care data in Iraqi Kurdistan. The aim of the program is to network all of the main health centers and hospitals of the region, then of the whole country, and to train medical and administrative staff in the management and analysis of health data. In countries recovering from war, a functioning health monitoring system is essential in guiding the development of appropriate public health interventions, a key instrument to prepare the health system to respond to future emergencies.


Subject(s)
Population Surveillance/methods , Public Health/methods , Warfare/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Iraq , Public Health/trends
5.
Agora USB ; 18(2): 512-526, jul.-dic. 2018. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-989230

ABSTRACT

Resumen Desde mediados del Siglo XX, Colombia ha estado inmerso en un conflicto armado, que aún pervive a pesar de que las FARC-EP se desarmaron luego del proceso de paz que se firmó en el 2016. Aún existen otros actores armados que son importantes conocer, a fin de tener una mejor comprensión de la actualidad del conflicto, en este caso el "Clan del Golfo". Este artículo tiene como objetivo establecer si las causas que dieron origen a la formación de las AUC, son análogas a las que originaron al Clan del Golfo. Se sostendrá desde premisas de vigilantismo que la aparición, desarrollo y fortalecimiento de los grupos paramilitares son una respuesta a la crisis estatal para proveer seguridad pública y a un proceso de construcción de Estado, donde se evidencia debilidad para ejercer el monopolio legítimo del uso de la fuerza.


Abstract Since the mid-twentieth century, Colombia has been immersed in an armed conflict, still alive even though the FARC-EP was disarmed after the peace process that was signed in 2016. There are still other armed actors, which are important to know, in order to have a better understanding of the current situation of the conflict, which is the case of "the Gulf Clan." - Clan del Golfo. - This article aims to establish whether the causes that gave rise to the formation of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia - AUC - are analogous to those that originated "the Gulf Clan." It will be held from premises of vigilantism that the emergence, development, and strengthening of paramilitary groups are a response to the state crisis to provide public security and a State-building process, where there is evidence of weakness for exercising the legitimate monopoly of the use of force.

6.
Mens Sana Monogr ; 2(1): 5-13, 2004 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22815596

ABSTRACT

Along with political, economic, ethical, rehabilitative and military dimensions, psychopathological sequelae of war and terrorism also deserve our attention. The terrorist attack on the World Trade Centre ( W.T.C.) in 2001 and the Gulf War of 1990-91 gave rise to a number of psychiatric disturbances in the population, both adult and children, mainly in the form of Post-traumatic Stress disorder (PTSD). Nearly 75,000 people suffered psychological problems in South Manhattan alone due to that one terrorist attack on the WTC in New York and the Pentagon in Washington. In Gulf War I, morethat 1,00,000 US veterans reported a number of health problems on returning from war, whose claims the concerned government has denied in more than 90% cases. Extensive and comprehensive neurological damage to the brain of Gulf War I veterans has been reported by one study, as has damage to the basal ganglia in another, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) in a third,possibly due to genetic mutations induced by exposure to biological and chemical agents, fumes from burning oil wells, landfills,mustard or other nerve gases. The recent Gulf War will no doubt give rise its own crop of PTSD and related disorders. In a cost-benefitanalysis of the post Gulf War II scenario, the psychopathological effects of war and terrorism should become part of the social audit any civilized society engages in. Enlightened public opinion must become aware of the wider ramifications of war and terrorism so that appropriate action plans can be worked out.

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