Kettenmenschen

Süddeutsche Zeitung, Wissen, April 2011

Traumatisiert vom Bürgerkrieg, verwirrt von der Droge Khat - in Somalia vegetieren Hunderttausende psychotische Menschen unter furchtbarsten Bedingungen in Gefangenschaft vor sich hin.

Von Maggie Schauer und Peggy Martin

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Ein psychotisch Erkrankter an der Kette.

Ein psychotisch Erkrankter an der Kette.


Afghani children suffering from post-traumatic stress

Science Daily, June 2009

Children who live in Afghanistan are particularly affected every day by a multitude of war time stressors which increase the likelihood of developing PTSD: trauma, child labor, and family and military violence. On a daily basis they are first-hand witnesses to the bombings, abuse, and the general upheaval of their home life and society as a result of war, including the effects of long-term poverty and familial turmoil.

You can read the full article here.
School in Kabul

School in Kabul


Los niños traumatizados por la guerra civil de Sri Lanka reciben ayuda psicológica

El Mundo, May 2009

En el norte de Sri Lanka, la antigua Ceilán, el tigre es el animal mítico por excelencia. Hasta el punto de que la guerrilla local tamil adoptó el nombre de este animal totémico. Los tigres tamiles han sido prácticamente derrotados por las autoridades cingalesas, pero años y años de guerra y las catástrofes naturales, como el tsunami, han dejado su huella casi indeleble en los niños de la región.

You can read the full article here .

Psychotherapy for the Poor

Scientific American, March 2009

It had been four years since 13-year-old Mohamed Abdul escaped civil war in Somalia, but he still had nightmares and flashbacks. When he was nine years old, a crowd fleeing a street shooting trampled him, putting him in the hospital for two weeks. A month later he saw the aftermath of an apparent massacre: about 20 corpses floating in the ocean. Soon after, militiamen shot him in the leg, knocked him unconscious, then raped his best friend, a girl named Halimo.

You can download the full article here.
IDP camp in Uganda

IDP camp in Uganda


Narrative Exposure Improves PTSD Symptoms

Clinical Psychiatry News, February 2009

Short-term narrative exposure therapy can be effective in treating posttraumatic stress disorder in child and adult survivors of war, even when carried out by lay counselors with limited training, new research shows. Narrative exposure therapy (NET) builds on the tradition of testimony therapy in which patients are asked to repeatedly talk about a traumatic event in detail and reexperience all emotions associated with the event. This leads to habituation of the emotional response to the traumatic memory and a subsequent lessening of PTSD symptoms.

You can download the full article here.
NET in a Ugandan IDP camp

NET in a Ugandan IDP camp