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Lancet 1991 Mar 16;337(8742):660-2
Hospital management of voluntary total fasting among political
prisoners. Kalk WJ, Veriava Y
Department of Medicine, University
of Witwatersrand Medical School, Johannesburg, South Africa.
In 1989 20 political detainees, held
without trial for up to 32 months, were admitted, on hunger strike, to the Johannesburg
Hospital, South Africa. Most were held under the regulations of the State of Emergency (since revoked) and 5 were held incommunicado
under section 29 of the Internal Security Act (still in force). Guidelines for ethical
management were based on the Declaration of Tokyo, which included the understanding that
such detentions constituted mental torture. Conditions of detention in hospital were
complicated by police interference in medical and nursing care, and by the chaining of
some prisoners to their beds. Doctors are in a unique position to protest against inhuman
treatment of prisoners, and should use this authority.
Comments:
Comment in: Lancet 1991 Mar 16;337(8742):647-8
PMID: 1672002, UI: 91155632 |
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