Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Director Forces Vardenis Psychaitric Patients to Graze His Livestock

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Director Forces Vardenis Psychaitric Patients to Graze His Livestock

    Director Forces Vardenis Psychaitric Patients to Graze His Private Livestock

    http://hetq.am/eng/articles/18631/director-forces-vardenis-psychaitric-patients-to-graze-his-private-livestock.html
    16:24, September 18, 2012

    It appears that the director of the Vardenis Psychiatric Hospital is
    forcing patients to work as animal herders.

    Director Nver Hovhannisyan took a group of patients up to the Nerkin
    Shorzha village and told them to start grazing the sheep and cows. The
    patients must also milk the animals, some of which belong to the
    hospital, but others belong to Hovhannisyan and his friends.

    We apologize to the relatives of the patients for publishing their
    names and the disorders they suffer from.

    When we reached the village by car, we got out and started to climb to
    the nearby mountain on foot where we spotted the grazing animals.

    The first person we met was Hounan, who was tending a flock of sheep.
    We had a tough time conversing with the man. He could only get out one
    intelligible sentence. After that, it was a mish-mash of unrelated
    sentences.

    Hounan Navoyan told us he was 45, from the Gegharkounik village of
    Astghadzor, and suffered from schizophrenic.

    Further down, Moushegh Bazoyan was grazing cows. He's an epileptic.

    We know most of the patients by name since we've been dealing with the
    issues of the Vardenis Hospital starting in 1997. Moushegh is one of
    our old acquaintances. After a welcoming hug, Moushegh told us how he
    wound up at the hospital.

    The man pleaded with us to talk with hospital management to get him
    transferred back to the institution rather than working high up in the
    mountains. He told us that employees even beat the patients.

    "Those guys hit me and broke all my teeth," said 49 year-old Moushegh
    from the town of Hoktemberyan. He told us his relatives have no idea
    that he's now grazing animals in Nerkin Shorzha.

    The patients told us that they are given nothing to eat for lunch.

    Stepan, the third patient we met, was working in the barn. He's
    schizophrenic as well.

    We were told that a fourth patient, Tereza Minasyan, was recently
    transferred back to the hospital. She had been milking cows in the
    village but fell sick. Tereza now must undergo an operation for an
    inflamed large intestine. The hospital says it will foot the bill but
    the woman is still waiting.

    It's cold up in the mountains and the work is hard. The patients live
    in squalid conditions.

    While it's true that work therapy is an accepted form of
    rehabilitation, practiced by the Vardenis Hospital in the past, it was
    only for an hour or two a day and under a physician's supervision.

    The Vardenis institution is the final stop for all those deemed to be
    untreatable. Other hospitals send problem patients to Vardenis. The
    patients here are heavily medicated and looked after.

    Those working in Nerkin Shorzha aren't provided any medical
    supervision. The director's friends are the only outsiders monitoring
    the patients. You can bet these people are more interested in the
    work, and not the health, of the patients.

    Recently, the RA Control Chamber had sent a team to inspect the
    Vardenis Hospital. Before the team called for a roll-call of the
    patients, management had brought those working in the village back to
    the ward. When the inspectors left, the patients were sent back to the
    village.

    The Vardenis Hospital is run by the Ministry of Labor and Social
    Affairs, The ministry also carries out periodic inspections. During
    such inspections, hospital staff often fill in for those patients
    working in the village.



    We contacted the ministry, wanting to find out if its inspectors had
    uncovered any violations. Hasmik Khachatryan, who runs the Public
    Relations Unit, told us that the ministry was still compiling data
    from the last inspection and that their findings weren't ready for
    publication. The minister was away from his desk and would be back by
    the week's end.

    Director Nver Hovhannisyan denied that any patients were working in
    Nerkin Shorzha grazing livestock. He told us that even though he was
    new to the job, everything was above board and normal.

    We told him tat we had visited the village and saw several patients
    there. We asked if it was a form of therapy. He answered that it was,
    but that they are only sent to get a change of scenery and walk in the
    fresh air.

    - You send them to Shorzha for walks?

    - We send them all over. Not just to Shorzha. It's medical therapy.

    - We also saw the patients grazing your animals.

    - Give me a break, already.

    - Does the hospital have animals in Nerkin Shorzha?

    - No.

    - Do you own animals there?

    - No.

    - So what were your patients doing there?

    - They weren't our patients. Who gave you that info?

    - Moushegh Bazoyan, Hounan Navoyan, Stepan and Tereza aren't your patients?

    - They're all at the hospital now. They never were there on their own.

    - But they are your patients?

    - I can't say at this moment. I don't remember the names.

    - What's Tereza's medical condition?

    - Very good. It's always been good.

    Many in the neighboring villages know that patients from the
    psychiatric hospital are tending animals in Nerkin Shorzha. Even kids
    from the nearby village of Ayrk will tell you.

    No one, however, seems overly concerned that some patients are forced
    to work for their room and board, or that hospital management are
    conveniently stretching the concept of "work therapy" for personal
    gain.

    Kristine Aghalaryan
    Edik Baghdasaryan
    Marine Madatyan
    Saro Baghdasaryan

Working...
X