Mental Health: Healing Norway
Two years on from the worst mass murder in Norwegian post war history, the ground-breaking ways this European country has been using to help survivors and the bereaved
July 22, 2011 has been described as the day Norway cried. After detonating a car bomb in Oslo, killing eight and injuring many more, Anders Breivik took a ferry to the island of Utoya. There, dressed as a policeman, he began a murderous spree, hunting down and indiscriminately shooting young people on the island who were attending a youth camp. Seventy seven people were killed in total, many of them teenagers, and hundreds injured.
This was the worst mass murder in Norwegian post-war history and the whole country was in shock. But Norway used this national tragedy to pioneer new ways of caring for their citizens. Claudia Hammond reports on the ground-breaking new ways Norway has been road testing to deliver psychological and mental health support to those who survived, and to those who lost relatives and friends.
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Dr Bjorn Guldvog, Norway鈥檚 Chief Medical Officer
Dr Bjorn Guldvog, Norway鈥檚 Chief Medical Officer
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- Fri 21 Jun 2013 14:32GMT麻豆社 World Service Online
- Sun 23 Jun 2013 22:32GMT麻豆社 World Service Online
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