Finding hope after violence
Clinicians are trained to heal, but providing care to refugee patients
who have suffered extreme trauma such as torture, sexual violence
and other human rights violations can be particularly complex.
The enormity of the experience may seem overwhelming, and often there
is a fear that the patient may never fully recover.
Fortunately,
this is not the case. Richard F. Mollica, MD, MAR, (left) member
of MGH Psychiatry and director of the Harvard Program in Refugee Trauma
(HPRT), has devoted his career to providing mental health services
to this marginalized and vulnerable segment of society. Since the
program's inception in 1981, Mollica and his colleagues have treated
more than 10,000 survivors of mass violence and torture. Based in
MGH Psychiatry, the HPRT is affiliated with the MGH Center for Global
Health, and the program recently celebrated its 25th anniversary as
well as the publication of Mollica's book, Healing Invisible Wounds:
Paths to Hope and Recovery in a Violent World.
Mollica stresses that it is the job of the mental health clinician
to foster a traumatized patient's innate capacity for self-healing,
something he believes all humans possess. To do so, the typical patient-clinician
relationship must be shifted so that the patient becomes teacher and
the clinician becomes the listener, "an act that is therapeutic
for the storyteller and beneficial to the listener," according
to Mollica. Also, the patient should perform some or all of three
self-healing activities: work, altruism and spirituality. By re-engaging
with society in these ways through actions as well as clinical
treatment the patient sets a foundation for rebuilding his
or her life or creating a new one.
Mollica reports that every patient he has treated has possessed some
capacity for recovery through self-healing. "Violence, whether
domestic abuse or genocide, is often associated with hopelessness,"
he says. "To know that a patient will recover, and to share this
knowledge with them, creates hope where there was none before."