Introduction: The Kosovo War is widely remembered as one of the
most brutal conflicts in the modern era. With over 13,000 deaths and
90% of the population displaced as refugees, the impact of the war has
led to everlasting levels of trauma that impacts the lives of thousands
of Kosovar-Albanians today. Objectives: To characterize the
psychosocial impact of the Kosovo war by comprehensively assessing the
literature to date. We also provide recommendations to improve outcomes
for Kosovar-Albanian patients in the post-war era. Methods: A
systematic review was conducted using post-war clinical psychological
articles on the Kosovo War. Our search involved utilizing full-text
English articles from PubMed, OVID Medline, and EMBASE journals.
Keywords used were “Kosovo War”, “Psychosocial”, and “Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder”. Results: Our post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) analysis yielded a total of 10,134 responses from
participants ranging from refugees to the general public. Our results
showed 2,997 subjects (30%) who reported or met the criteria for
post-traumatic stress disorder. When analyzing refugee participants,
there was 1,133 with 60% of them meeting the PTSD criteria. In a
filtered cohort of 5,117 subjects measured for adverse events, 3,180
subjects (64%) of subjects had experienced combat, while 3,664 (74%)
were exiled from their homes. Conclusion: The psychosocial
impact of the Kosovo war is likely under-reported by patients due to
cultural stigmas, language barriers, and trust barriers with clinicians.
Factors such as age, employment, displacement status, number of
traumatic events, socioeconomic vulnerability, and health literacy are
associated with poor psychiatric morbidity.
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