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BMJ Case Reports 2016; doi:10.1136/bcr-2016-215570
  • CASE REPORT

Factors affecting illness in the developing world: chronic disease, mental health and traditional medicine cures

  1. Hailemariam Alemu Astatk2
  1. 1Ben Gurion University, Medical School for International Health, Be'er Sheva, Israel
  2. 2Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar, Gondar, Amhara, Ethiopia
  1. Correspondence to Dr Nathan T Douthit, ntdouthit{at}gmail.com
  • Accepted 11 July 2016
  • Published 2 August 2016

Summary

This is a case report of a 24-year-old Ethiopian woman with a medical history of hepatosplenic schistosomiasis. She suffers from chronic liver failure and portal hypertension. She has been hospitalised for ‘hysteria’ in the past but did not receive follow-up, outpatient treatment or psychiatric evaluation. After discontinuing her medications and leaving her family to use holy water, a religious medicine used by many Ethiopians, she was found at a nearby monastery. She was non-communicative and difficult to arouse. The patient was rushed to nearby University of Gondar Hospital where she received treatment for hepatic encephalopathy and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Her illness is the result of neglected tropical disease, reliance on traditional medicine as opposed to biomedical services and the poor state of psychiatric care in the developing world.

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