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"Jorge in isolation"
30/09/2003 Asuncion, Paraguay, Neuro-Psychiatric
Hospital. Abandoned at birth, seventeen-year-old Jorge has been held for six
years in a tiny cell that has a hole in the floor for a toilet and no
electricity.
Summary:
Few human beings are subject to as much
misunderstanding, cruelty, and neglect as the mentally ill and mentally
retarded. People with mental disabilities are often abandoned or hidden away
in public institutions, which are grossly overcrowded and unsanitary, and
which offer little in the way of medical care or training. The
developmentally disabled are mixed with the mentally ill, young with the old,
unhealthy with the healthy. Deprived of medical and dental care, proper
nutrition, education, and counseling, the mentally disabled have little
chance of living productively and safely within these institutions, and
little opportunity of ever leaving. Working as a volunteer for a human rights
organization I traveled to Asuncion, Paraguay, with the intention of gaining
entry into the Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital, the country's single public
psychiatric facility. This frighteningly substandard institution warehouses
460 patients, a great many of them 'abandonados,' people placed there because
they have absolutely nowhere else to go. I photographed patients living out
their lives in filthy dormitories, sleeping on bare mattresses, utilizing
open, dirty toilets, bathing in ice-cold water. Among the patients being
supervised by what can only be called a sub-custodial level of staff were two
teenaged boys who'd been held for six years in tiny, unlit, cage-like cells.
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