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    Authors
    Candib, Lucy M.
    UMass Chan Affiliations
    Department of Family Medicine and Community Health
    Document Type
    Journal Article
    Publication Date
    2002-09-01
    Keywords
    *Homicide
    Humans
    Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic
    *Work
    Community Health
    Other Medical Specialties
    Preventive Medicine
    
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    Link to Full Text
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0738-3991(02)00098-8
    Abstract
    The past century has shown that human beings are capable of genocidal destruction of millions of other humans based on ethnicity or race. Clinicians today are likely to encounter patients who are survivors of inflicted atrocities and abuse. People fleeing horrendous circumstances bring persisting memories that produce symptoms even for the next generation. Families carry the knowledge-personal, cultural, familial, and sometimes individual-of the depths of destruction that human beings can do to one another. Suffering derives from the memory, both physical and mental, of what other persons inflicted; it has multiple dimensions that patients may not express explicitly; instead they may frame their experience of suffering in terms of pain. Diagnostic labels such as post-traumatic stress disorder or somatization are inadequate to convey human comprehension of suffering. Clinicians around the world need to be willing and able to acknowledge and witness the profound sources of experiential pain in the lives of their patients.
    Source
    Patient Educ Couns. 2002 Sep;48(1):43-50. Link to article on publisher's website
    DOI
    10.1016/S0738-3991(02)00098-8
    Permanent Link to this Item
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/31006
    PubMed ID
    12220749
    Related Resources
    Link to Article in PubMed
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1016/S0738-3991(02)00098-8
    Scopus Count
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