AI Article Synopsis

  • - The peace agreement with the FARC in Colombia aimed to foster peace and assist victims rather than merely ending the conflict, prompting research on the health impacts of this conflict in the Meta region.
  • - Through ten focus groups with conflict victims, the study revealed that women’s unique experiences and widespread mental health issues among all victims emerged as significant concerns regarding post-conflict recovery.
  • - Victims face barriers to health care access, including stigmatization and discrimination, exacerbated by systemic limitations in the health system that affect not just victims, but the general population.

Article Abstract

The peace agreement with the Colombian guerrilla group Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia-Ejército del Pueblo represented an opportunity for peacebuilding and victims' reparation, rather than the end of the internal armed conflict. In this context, this study aimed to uncover the consequences of conflict on victims' health and on health service provision, and their perceived health status during the post-accord stage in the Meta region, located in the country's eastern plains. Historically, this region has been one of the territories most affected by the presence of conflict-related groups and armed confrontations. Through focus groups, this research explored the health perceptions and experiences of victims of armed conflict. Ten focus groups were conducted with men and women, victims of the armed-conflict, in four municipalities with different degrees of armed conflict intensity. The focus group transcripts were coded using NVivo. The results show that the way women have experienced conflict and the effects of conflict on mental health in general for men, women, and children were recurrent themes in the dialogue of victims. Likewise, it highlights the need to understand the barriers that the current health model imposes on the right to health itself. From the victim's perspective, they experience stigmatization, discrimination, and revictimization when accessing health services. These barriers co-occur along with structural limitations of the health system that affect the general population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8890648PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0264684PLOS

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