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The ā€˜Weaponisationā€™ of Healthcare in Syria

The weaponisation of health in Syria; South Africaā€™s crystal meth babies; Phantom limb pain

This week is the sixth anniversary of the start of the Syrian conflict. To mark this, a new study has been published in the journal The Lancet, highlighting the impact of the war on health care in the country. It concludes that healthcare in Syria is being used as a weapon of war on an unprecedented scale. Based in Beirut, one of the reportā€™s authors Samer Jabbour explains to Claudia how hundreds of health workers have been killed or tortured and hospitals deliberately attacked - despite this being in violation of international human rights laws.

Karen Schoonbee reports from Cape Town on the growing problem of women using crystal meth ā€“ known locally as tik ā€“ during their pregnancies. We hear from a doctor about the developmental delays experienced by these ā€œtik babiesā€. One teacher has nearly a third of the children in her class affected by the drug and she fears that they will drop out of school because of a lack of support.

ā€œPhantom limb painā€ is experienced by up to 80% of people who have a limb amputated ā€“ and the pain is often resistant to medication. The discomfort occurs despite the limb no longer being present ā€“ a phenomenon which has puzzled researchers for years. Now a team from Sweden is trialling a new approach ā€“ harnessing the power of virtual reality to restore normal function in the circuits of the brain.

Photo: Getty Images

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27 minutes

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Thu 16 Mar 2017 07:32GMT

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