Are health care systems insensitive to needs of suicidal patients in times of conflict? The Kashmir experience

Zaid Ahmad Wani (Department of Psychiatry, Government Medical College Srinagar Kashmir)
Arshad Hussain (Department of Psychiatry, Government Medical College Srinagar Kashmir)
Abdul Wahid Khan (Department of Psychiatry, SKIMS Medical College Srinagar Kashmir, India)
M Maqbool Dar (Department of Psychiatry, Government Medical College Srinagar Kashmir)
AkashYousf Khan (Department of Psychiatry, Government Medical College Srinagar Kashmir)
Yasir H. Rather (Department of Psychiatry, Government Medical College Srinagar Kashmir)
Sheikh Shoib (Department of Psychiatry, Government Medical College Srinagar Kashmir)

Mental Illness

ISSN: 2036-7465

Article publication date: 22 February 2011

182
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Abstract

Suicide and attempted suicide is an important health issue and the number of people who die of suicide exceeds that of conflicts. Kashmir has been suffering from a low intensity war since last 20 years in which thousands have been killed or injured. There has been phenomenal increase in cases of psychological disorders along with suicide and and suicide attempters. Suicide in a conflict zone is viewed with indifference due to focus on the physical part of trauma. Difficulties faced by the suicidal patient and his attendants are seldom highlighted. 1408 patients who reported to emergency room for suicide attempt from 2000 to 2008 were taken for the study. All the patients underwent the hospital protocol for poisoning management. Patients were subjected to detailed psychiatric evaluation and questions were specifically asked about the difficulties encountered during management. Most of the cases were females with 92.11% belonging to the Muslim religion. 76.20% cases were from a rural background. 32.5% had been referred because of the lack of specific antidotes. Forty-three percent required arrangement of transportation by their own family members. Fifty-seven percent had been stopped for security checks along the way. Seventy-three percent felt that the attitude of the staff hostile. Twenty-three percent of patients had to share a bed. Almost all patients were questioned by security agencies within the hospital. More than 68% patient reported hostility amongst their neighbors. Suicidal poisoning is a significant health problem in Kashmir and management of these cases is fraught with difficulties across the spectrum of health care. Educating the doctors at primary care about first aid, improvement in community services followed by long term resolution of the conflict would go some way in alleviating the difficulties faced by a suicidal patient and his family in a conflict zone.

Keywords

Citation

Wani, Z.A., Hussain, A., Khan, A.W., Dar, M.M., Khan, A., Rather, Y.H. and Shoib, S. (2011), "Are health care systems insensitive to needs of suicidal patients in times of conflict? The Kashmir experience", Mental Illness, Vol. 3 No. 1, pp. 11-13. https://doi.org/10.4081/mi.2011.e4

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011 Z.A. Wani et al.

License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (by-nc 3.0).


Corresponding author

Zaid Ahmad Wani, H N O 178 (Pahalgam House) Block C Badshah nagar Natipora Srinagar Kashmir 190010, India.

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