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Volume 336:1251-1253 April 24, 1997 Number 17
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Self-Mutilation and Malingering among Cuban Migrants Detained at Guantanamo Bay

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In the late summer of 1994, thousands of Cubans tried to flee to the United States, using crude rafts to make the trip across the Caribbean to the Florida coast.1 The reason for this exodus was their increasing frustration with deteriorating economic conditions in Cuba, brought on by a dramatic decline in Russian economic support and a tightening of economic sanctions by the United States.2,3 In contrast to previous U.S. policy, which allowed relatively free immigration, the U.S. Coast Guard intercepted most of the Cubans and transported them to hastily assembled tent camps at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Injections of Foreign Substances

Burns from Molten Plastic

Other Types of Self-Mutilation

An Epidemic of Malingering

Discussion


Source Information

Wilford Hall Medical Center
Lackland Air Force Base, TX

References


Related Letters:

Human Costs of Economic Sanctions
Shemesh E., Rudnick A., Withers M. R., Funke B. J., Sartin J. S., Child S. B., Eisenberg L.
Extract | Full Text  
N Engl J Med 1997; 337:642-644, Aug 28, 1997. Correspondence

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