47 research outputs found
The Youngest Victims: Children and Youth Affected by War
In 1989, the United Nation Convention on the Rights of the Child declared, “[state parties] shall take all feasible measures to ensure protection and care of children who are affected by an armed conflict.” In addition to attempting to secure the welfare of children in armed conflict, the Convention went on to ban the recruitment and deployment of children during armed conflict. Despite the vast majority of sovereign nations signing and ratifying this agreement, this treaty, unfortunately, has not prevented children and youth from witnessing, becoming victims of, or participating in political, ethnic, religious, and cultural violence across the past three decades. This chapter offers an “ecological perspective” on the psychosocial consequences of exposure to the trauma of war-related violence and social disruption
A Framework for Disaster Vulnerability in a Small Island in the Southwest Pacific: A Case Study of Emae Island, Vanuatu
Factors That May Influence the Preparation of Standards of Procedures for Dealing with Mass-Casualty Incidents
Editorial Comments–Staff Procedure Skills in Management Groups during Exercises in Disaster Medicine
Implementation of an Emergency Measles Campaign— Aceh Province, Indonesia, January–March 2005
Arginine Thiazolidinecarboxylate in the Treatment of Chronic Active Hepatitis: Double-Blind Comparison with Placebo
Forty-four patients with chronic active hepatitis were given arginine thiazolidinecarboxylate (800 mg/day per os for 40 days) or placebo in a randomized, double-blind trial. The most important liver function parameters were measured in each patient at the beginning of the trial, after 20 days, and at the end of the trial. The active drug lessened the parameters of necrosis and cholestasis while protein synthesis improved in liver cells. The differences between ATCA and placebo groups were highly significant. No treatment-related side-effects were reported. </jats:p
