MSF LAUNCHES INTERVENTION IN MUMBAI TO TACKLE SHARP MALARIA INCREASE
MSF is an independent humanitarian medical aid agency committed to two objectives: providing medical aid wherever needed, regardless of race, religion, politics or sex and raising awareness of the plight of the people we help. 
Search
 
 Email
 Password
If you wish to volunteer
(Not for positions in India!)
Sign up
 
 
Indian Medical Association felicitates MSF
 
 
 
     
 
Latest Field News

“THREE TIME VICTIMS” - COLOMBIANS CONTINUE TO FACE VIOLENCE,

NEGLECT AND STIGMA IN THE CONFLICT

 

MSF calls for more and better mental health care for the victims of the armed conflict

 

July 27, 2009 – The victims of the Colombian conflict not only suffer from the direct consequences of violence caused by the on-going conflict but also suffer from social and institutional stigma and neglect in Colombia. The Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) report “Three time victims” demonstrates how this triple victimization impacts the mental health of people living in Caquetá department (southern Colombia). In this report, MSF calls for mental health services to be adapted to the needs of this vulnerable population.

 

Our teams witness the appalling reality endured by most of the population in Caquetá”, explained Teresa Sancristóval, Head of MSF Operations in Colombia. “On the one hand, people are exposed to the violence perpetrated by the different armed groups and on the other hand authorities and society fail to provide them with the attention they deserve. The consequences of this situation for mental health include severe psychological suffering that should be addressed by the authorities.”

 

Between March 2005 and September 2009, MSF saw 5,064 patients in its mental health project in Caquetá. 49.2% of these patients had been directly exposed to the conflict, caught in the fighting between armed groups, as well as violent incidents involving threats, injuries, forced recruitment, displacement, movement restrictions or killings of family members.

 

Furthermore, the victims of the conflict not only endure the consequences of direct violence, but also face social stigma. “In Colombia, the stigmatization surrounding the people affected by the conflict forces them to keep silent about their condition and suffering, which prevents their social integration and recognition and sense of belonging”, explains María Cristóbal, MSF mental health officer in Colombia. This prevents people’s access to employment, housing, education and health.

 

In addition to direct violence and social stigma, victims are often excluded from receiving state support through social services. This institutional neglect can be clearly seen through the scant recognition of the forced displacement phenomenon in Colombia. “The Colombian Government should live up to its responsibility in terms of tending to the needs of these people,” affirms Sancristóval. “Based on our experience in Caquetá, we can say that offering mental health care with limited resources in conflict contexts is possible and that this care can effectively improve patients’ conditions”, concludes Teresa Sancristóval.

 

Médecins Sans Frontières has been working in Colombia since 1985 offering medical and psychological care as well as guidance and support to thousands of people affected by the conflict. The organization also responds to epidemic or natural disasters. Currently, nearly 370 people are working in the MSF projects in 13 Colombian departments.

 

Since 1999, MSF has worked in the Caquetá department, carrying out specific mental health activities since 2005. Currently, the MSF teams regularly visit the municipal administration centres of Cartagena del Chairá, San Vicente del Caguán and Curillo, where they carry out mental health promotion and prevention activities and have set up fixed clinics within municipal hospitals. Moreover, mental health is an additional component of the care provided by MSF through its mobile primary healthcare clinics in the rural area within the municipalities of Cartagena del Chairá and San Vicente del Caguán. On the other hand, MSF worked for four years at the mental health centre in Florencia, the department capital. The mental health activities conducted at the centre were handed over to the Open National University in May 2009.

 

For more information see the MSF report: Three time victims. Victims of violence, silence and neglect. Armed conflict and mental health in the department of Caquetá, Colombia.

top top top
left Latest News right
left
Red Sea State: North Sudan
right
left
Pak: Relieving Malnutrition in Sukkur, Sindh Province - Story
right
left
MSF Boosts Relief Work in Sukkur, Sindh Province -Story
right
left
Pakistan: Floods Update - Sukkur
right
left
Gaza Strip: MSF opens a new surgical programme
right
left
PAKISTAN: MSF expands emergency response into newly flooded areas in the south as concern mounts for waterborne diseases
right
left
MSF increases capacity in response to kala azar outbreak in South Sudan
right
left
MSF responds to flash floods in Jammu and Kashmir
right
left
Pakistan Story: Patient Despite Their Plight
right
left
Pakistan Story: Clean water is back in town
right
left
Baluchistan - Aleem Shah interview
right
left
MSF takes over Mon hospital
right
left
Baluchistan - James Kambaki interview
right
left
Pakistan Floods - Interview ( Dr. Awais )
right
left
Article on meternal health - Sierra Leone
right
left
MSF calls for respect of medical activities and facilities as forced to suspend medical aid in a health centre in Jonglei state, Sudan
right
left
MSF’s response to violence in southern Kyrgyzstan
right
left
MSF continues to support treatment
right
left
Pakistan: Bomb Blast in Swat District Leaves 5 Dead and 58 Wounded
right
left
Haiti: MSF distributes tents after storm destroys shelters in camp
right
left
“No Weapons, No Fees” - MSF in Afghanistan
right
left
Afghanistan: Working to Improve Pediatric Care in Boost Hospital
right
left
Afghanistan: Reinforcing Emergency Healthcare in Helmand
right
left
Brazil: MSF helps population affected by flooding in Alagoas State
right
left
Interview by Francois Dumont
right
left
MSF increases its medical and humanitarian support in southern Kyrgyzstan
right
left
G8: Reform Food Aid System and Generate Sustained Funding Resources
right
left
Kyrgyzstan Violence – MSF External Update
right
left
Measles Programs
right
left
Measles Overview
right
left
The false victory over measles
right
left
The number of malnourished children being treated at Marere Hospital
right
left
Somalia - MSF resumes activities in Hawa Abdi
right
left
Kyrgyzstan Violence
right
left
Measles in Malawi web story editing
right
left
MSF TB departments in two health centres
right
left
More than 2.5 million children vaccinated
right
left
Eye surgery camp with 'Right To Sight' returns vision to hundreds in Galcayo, Somalia
right
left
Haiti: Time passes, medical needs persist and just a few months to hurricane season
right
left
World Health Assembly: MSF and DNDi call for a more rounded resolution on Chagas disease
right
left
MSF statement on Turkmenistan
right
left
Haiti - Patient story
right
left
With ongoing violent clash in Somalia, MSF calls for respect of the neutrality of medical facilities
right
left
A story from Manipur, India.
right
left
Zambia: MSF responds to worst cholera outbreak in years
right
left
CHAD - MSF vaccinates 500 000 children against measles in N'Djamena
right
left
Pakistan: Bomb Blast Leaves 44 Dead and 88 Severely wounded in North West Frontier Province
right
left
New York donor conference: As needs remain, Haiti must be given capacity to ensure access to medical care for its population
right
left
Malaria emergency in northern Burundi
right
left
Diagnosing children with TB: A terrible neglect
right
left
DR TB in Armenia
right
left
The daring hope of a 13-year-old girl
right
left
Dr. Laura Trivino Duran is the Médecins Sans Frontières
right
left
SELIBENG SA TŠEPO: How the people of a mountain kingdom haunted by TB/HIV have found a wellspring of hope
right
left
Interview with Iraqi doctor
right
left
World TB Day
right
left
DRC: Armed Congolese soldiers enter MSF hospital in Hauts Plateaux, South Kivu, and remove wounded patients
right
left
Earthquake in Chile: Houses were literally swallowed by the tide
right
left
You're trading away our lives! Voices of people living with HIV rise up in protest in Delhi
right
left
DRC: Thousands of displaced civilians trapped by conflict
right
left
PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV/AIDS:INDIA MUST NOT SACRIFICE US IN TRADE AGREEMENT WITH EUROPE
right
left
MSF March 2010 Afghanistan - A Return to Humanitarian Action
right
left
Two Abducted Medecins Sans Frontieres Staff Released in Haiti
right
left
Fighting kala azar in the Indian state of Bihar
right
left
Breathing Life into Maternal Healthcare in the Somali Region, Ethiopia
right
left
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has now started supporting the regional Boost hospital in Lashkargah
right
left
Republic of Congo: the forgotten people of the Ubangi River
right
left
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been supporting the district hospital
right
left
Haitians facing "intolerable breach of human dignity"
right
left
Expansion of post operative care in Haiti
right
left
A girl called 'Good News'
right
left
In Burundi becoming pregnant and giving birth is a great risk
right
left
Plight of Zimbabweans attacked while crossing into South Africa
right
left
MSF BACKGROUNDER: Medical Humanitarian Situation Musina, January 2010
right
left
Letter from Jenna in Papua New Guinea
right
left
Sri Lanka: Hundreds of wounded patients need reconstructive orthopedic surgery
right
left
Medecins Sans Frontieres closes hospital outside Sri Lankan government-run camps, begins surgical project in Mannar district
right
left
Violent crackdown fuels humanitarian crisis for unrecognised Rohingya refugees
right
left
Stateless Rohingya victims of violent crackdown in Bangladesh
right
left
12 Jan: Haiti, Earthquake damages medical centers in Port-au-Prince
right
left
Violence in Southern Italy exposes extreme neglect and exploitation of seasonal migrant workers
right
left
MSF Clinics overflowing with malnourished children in Galcayo, Somalia
right
btm btm btm
top top top
left Read Blogs right
left
Daniela Widmer, a Swiss/Canadian nurse in CAR
right
left
People in India and other developing countries may lose access to affordable generic drugs
right
left
Treating patients from the lowest caste and the poorest background
right
left
The way we treat patients without discrimination is what makes most difference
right
left
Mermaids in a Landlocked Country
right
left
Boy versus Buffalo
right
left
A Girl called Safina
right
left
Muddy Business.
right
left
Outsmarting the floods: watsan in Bangladesh
right
btm btm btm
Home | Apply with us | About MSF | MSF in India | Join Us | Events | Contact Us
MSF is registered in India as a Public Charitable Trust under Reg. No. 5691 Copyright © Médecins Sans Frontières. All Rights Reserved
Site Developed by: Go For Solution