Difference between revisions of "Asylum seekers with apathetic refugee children"
m (Don't do a "see also" = see style guide. If you wanna talk about Stolberg, take half an hour to add a "FA" or forward redirect, a paragraph or copy from WP. The article doesn't even mention why or how the term came to...) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
|ON_constitutes=Humanitarian intervention | |ON_constitutes=Humanitarian intervention | ||
|image=Sweden.svg | |image=Sweden.svg | ||
− | |image_caption=The case of the apathetic refugee children. | + | |image_caption=The case of the apathetic [[child refugee|refugee children]]. |
|image_width= | |image_width= | ||
|start=2006 | |start=2006 | ||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
|description=Political controversy in [[Sweden]] | |description=Political controversy in [[Sweden]] | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | '''Asylum seekers with apathetic refugee children''' was a medical and political debate in Sweden in 2006 concerning asylum seekers who came to Sweden with apathetic children. psychiatrist Thomas Jackson, the state investigation expert believed that the children were being abused and should be separated from their parents. The debate ended with a more generous refugee policy that formulated a new condition for the apathetic children titled "[[resignation syndrome]]".<ref>https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/family_law/2005/11/childabuse_scam.html</ref> | + | '''Asylum seekers with apathetic [[child refugee|refugee children]]''' was a medical and political debate in Sweden in 2006 concerning asylum seekers who came to Sweden with apathetic children. psychiatrist Thomas Jackson, the state investigation expert believed that the children were being abused and should be separated from their parents. The debate ended with a more generous refugee policy that formulated a new condition for the apathetic children titled "[[resignation syndrome]]".<ref>https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/family_law/2005/11/childabuse_scam.html</ref> |
+ | |||
+ | ==Background== | ||
+ | The debate involved several doctors, reporters, and activists who all engaged with the goal of understanding whether the children were simulating or if they were victims of severe abuse. According to an article published in Svenska Dagbladet by chief physician Hans Bendz, simulation is a known phenomena and it is not impossible in the case of the apathetic children. A study conducted in 2016 stated that the children were either catatonic as a result of psychogenic stress due to waiting for asylum or that they were a victims of malingering by proxy, rendering them unable to eat, drink or talk. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The hypothesis was that the children had become severely catatonic once they had found out that they were being deported as families lacked asylum. The Swedish Social and Health Authority, in its Guidelines on Uppgivenhets Syndrome published in 2013, writes that a patient is not completely healthy until the family has received a permanent residence permit.<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asylum_seekers_with_apathetic_refugee_children</ref> | ||
− | |||
− | |||
{{SMWDocs}} | {{SMWDocs}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} |
Latest revision as of 14:24, 6 March 2023
The case of the apathetic refugee children. | |
Date | 2006 |
---|---|
Location | Sweden |
Perpetrators | Sweden |
Description | Political controversy in Sweden |
Asylum seekers with apathetic refugee children was a medical and political debate in Sweden in 2006 concerning asylum seekers who came to Sweden with apathetic children. psychiatrist Thomas Jackson, the state investigation expert believed that the children were being abused and should be separated from their parents. The debate ended with a more generous refugee policy that formulated a new condition for the apathetic children titled "resignation syndrome".[1]
Background
The debate involved several doctors, reporters, and activists who all engaged with the goal of understanding whether the children were simulating or if they were victims of severe abuse. According to an article published in Svenska Dagbladet by chief physician Hans Bendz, simulation is a known phenomena and it is not impossible in the case of the apathetic children. A study conducted in 2016 stated that the children were either catatonic as a result of psychogenic stress due to waiting for asylum or that they were a victims of malingering by proxy, rendering them unable to eat, drink or talk.
The hypothesis was that the children had become severely catatonic once they had found out that they were being deported as families lacked asylum. The Swedish Social and Health Authority, in its Guidelines on Uppgivenhets Syndrome published in 2013, writes that a patient is not completely healthy until the family has received a permanent residence permit.[2]