Abstract

BackgroundThe aim of this population-based study was to assess the long-lasting effects of ethnic conflict on health and well-being (with a focus on injury and persistent pain) at family and community level. We have also investigated possible risk factors for victimisation during the conflict and factors contributing to healing.MethodsWe conducted a district-level cross-sectional cluster survey of 1,115 households with a population of 6,845. Interviews were carried out in Mitrovicë district in Northern Kosovo from September to October 2008, using standardised questionnaire to collect lifetime violence exposure, lifestyle factors and health information on individual and household.ResultsEthnic Albanians made up 95% of the sample population. Crude mortality and under-five mortality rate was not high in 2008. Over 90% of families had been exposed to at least two categories of violence and human rights violations, and 493 individuals from 341 families reported torture experiences. During the two weeks before the survey, 20% of individuals had suffered physical or mental pain. There were differences in pain complaints according to gender and age, and whether people had been injured within 12 months, had lifetime exposure to violence-related injury, or had been tortured. Patterns of social and political participation in a family could affect the proportion of family members complaining of pain. The proportion of family members with pain complaints was related to a decline in the household income (coef = 9.31, 95% CI = 6.16-12.46, P < 0.001) and the fact of borrowing money (coef = 6.11, 95% CI = 2.91-9.30, P < 0.001) because of an injured person in the household. Families that were affiliated with the Kosovo Liberation Army, or had participated in a protest before or during the war, were likely to be targeted by Serbian paramilitary and law enforcement agencies.ConclusionsMitrovicë district is currently characterised by a low level of violence, but the effects of ethnic conflict on health and well-being have not gone. The level of lifetime exposure to violence, the proportion of family members reporting pain and lifetime violence-related injury, and family's financial burden were found to be inter-correlated. The sample confined to one ethnic group in one district limits the generalizability of the findings.

Highlights

  • The aim of this population-based study was to assess the long-lasting effects of ethnic conflict on health and well-being at family and community level

  • The Kosovo war ended in June 1999 and during the last decade Kosovo was administered by the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK)

  • Security is provided by the NATO-led Kosovo Force (KFOR)

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Summary

Introduction

The aim of this population-based study was to assess the long-lasting effects of ethnic conflict on health and well-being (with a focus on injury and persistent pain) at family and community level. The end of a war does not end the tension and division between ethnic groups, nor does it eliminate its psychological and physical effects. Ethnic-based aggression and defensive hostility continue to exist for decades within the social fabric of societies coming out of a conflict, and. A majority of the Serb population fled during the war to the north of Kosovo or to Serbia. All ethnic groups have continued to be exposed to ethnically-generated violence in the north of Kosovo and Serbian enclaves in the eastern part of Kosovo since 1999. In February 2008, violence escalated in Mitrovicë district following the declaration of independence by the rate of injury and persistence of pain, as well as the finan-

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