Information about Force Feeding

Force-feeding is the practice of feeding a person or an animal against his, her or its will.

Force-feeding of humans

Force-feeding should not be confused with other forms of enteral feeding, where a patient is intubated through the nose or mouth and fed because he or she is incapable of swallowing due to some medical condition, rather than because he or she refuses to eat.

In mental hospitals

Enlarge picture
In 1914 the writer Djuna Barnes underwent force-feeding for a story in The World Magazine about the experiences of suffragettes.
Mental patients may be force-fed if they refuse to eat due to delusions, a loss of appetite, or a wish to die.

In prisons

On many occasions in the past prisoners have been force-fed by feeding tube when they went on hunger strike. It has been prohibited since 1975 by the Tokyo Declaration of the World Medical Association, provided that the prisoner is "capable of forming an unimpaired and rational judgment."[1]

In the United Kingdom, force-feeding was used against suffragettes under the Cat and Mouse Act before World War I.

Under United States jurisdiction, force-feeding is frequently[2][3] used in the sui generis U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, prompting in March 2006 an open letter by 250 doctors from seven Western countries in the medical journal The Lancet, warning that, in their opinion, the participation of any doctor is contrary to the rules of the World Medical Association.[4] Retired Major General Paul E. Vallely visited Guantanamo and reported on the process of force-feeding[5]:
They have to restrain the prisoners when they feed them because they attack the nurses. They spit in their faces. They're simply restrained for 20 minutes so they can be fed Ensure. They get their choice of four flavors of Ensure. It's put in a very unobtrusive feeding tube smaller than a normal straw and it's put in there for 20 minutes, so they get breakfast, lunch, and dinner.


In December 6, 2006, the UN War Crimes Tribunal at The Hague approved the use of force-feeding of Serbian warlord Vojislav Šešelj. They decided it was not "torture, inhuman or degrading treatment if there is a medical necessity to do so...and if the manner in which the detainee is force-fed is not inhuman or degrading".[6]

Coercive and torturous use

Force-feeding by naso-gastric tube may be carried out in a manner that can be categorised as torture, as it may be extremely painful and result in severe bleeding and spreading of various diseases via the exchanged blood and mucus, especially when conducted with dirty equipment on a prison population.[7] Large feeding pipes are traditionally used on hunger striking prisoners[8] whereas thin pipes are preferred in hospitals. Administering nutrients by intravenous drip is relatively painless.

Force-feeding of humans was a common practice in the USSR. A brief, first-person account of a force-feeding session given by Vladimir Bukovsky describes the procedure in detail: "The feeding pipe was thick, thicker than my nostril, and would not go in. Blood came gushing out of my nose and tears down my cheeks, but they kept pushing until the cartilages cracked. I guess I would have screamed if I could, but I could not with the pipe in my throat. I could breathe neither in nor out at first; I wheezed like a drowning man — my lungs felt ready to burst. The doctor also seemed ready to burst into tears, but she kept shoving the pipe farther and farther down. Only when it reached my stomach could I resume breathing, carefully. Then she poured some slop through a funnel into the pipe that would choke me if it came back up. They held me down for another half-hour so that the liquid was absorbed by my stomach and could not be vomited back, and then began to pull the pipe out bit by bit."[9]

Force-feeding of pernicious substances may be used as a form of torture and/or physical punishment. Some practitioners of Falun Gong in the People's Republic of China allege being force-fed with harmful substances such as boiling water, concentrated salt solutions, hard alcohol and human excrement. While in prison in northern Bosnia in 1996, some Serbian prisoners have described being forced to eat paper and soap.

Sometimes it has been alleged that prisoners are forced to eat foods forbidden by their religion. The Washington Post has reported that Muslim prisoners in Abu Ghraib prison under the U.S.-led coalition described in sworn statements having been forced to eat pork and drink alcohol, both of which are strictly forbidden in Islam. [1] Other prisoners described being forced to eat from toilets.

There are also cases in which force-feeding of harmful substances has been used by parents as a form of child abuse.

Sexual fetish

In BDSM, force-feeding is sometimes practiced as a sexual fetish, where the participants are in fact only pretending that it happens against the will of the one being fed.

Gavage for girls before marriage

In the past, force-feeding has also been a practice in some Middle Eastern and North African countries where fatness was considered a marriage asset in women; culturally, voluptuous figures were perceived as indicators of wealth. In this tradition, some girls are forced by their mothers or grandmothers to overeat, often accompanied by physical punishment (e.g. pressing a finger between two pieces of wood). The intended result is a rapid onset of obesity, and the practice may start at a young age and continue for years. This is still the paradoxal tradition in the rather undernourished Sahel country Mauritania, where it induces major health risks in the female population; some younger men claim no longer to insist on voluptuous brides, but the time-honored beauty norm remains part of the culture[10].

Force-feeding of animals

Force-feeding is also known as gavage, from a French word meaning "to gorge". This term specifically refers to force-feeding of ducks or geese in order to fatten their livers in the production of foie gras. Gavage can also refer to the practice of administering liquids (such as medicines) to laboratory animals via a tube or syringe.

Force-feeding of birds is practiced mostly on geese or male Mulard ducks, a Muscovy/Pekin hybrid. Preparation for gavage usually begins 4–5 months before slaughter. For geese, after an initial free-range period and treatment to assist in esophagus dilation (eating grass, for example), the force-feeding commences. Gavage is performed 2–4 times a day for 2–5 weeks, depending on the size of the fowl, using a funnel attached to a slim metal or plastic feeding tube inserted into the bird's throat to deposit the food into the bird's crop (the storage area in the esophagus). A grain mash, usually maize mixed with fats and vitamin supplements, is the feed of choice. Waterfowl are suited to the tube method due to a non-existent gag-reflex and extremely flexible esophagi, unlike other fowl such as chickens. These migratory waterfowl are also said to be ideal for gavage because of their natural ability to gain large amounts of weight in short periods of time before cold seasons. For this reason, gavage is usually a "finishing" stage before the bird is set for slaughter, for if left to its own devices after finishing, the bird will quickly return to its normal weight. The result of this practice is a severely enlarged, especially fatty liver, when if especially exaggerated is the liver disease hepatic lipidosis. The liver may swell up to 12 times its normal size (up to three pounds). While the livers are the coveted portions of these birds, the unctuous flesh of fattened geese and ducks as well as their feathers find a market.

Further information: Foie gras controversy

Sources

References

1. ^ [2]
2. ^ "46 Guantanamo detainees join hunger strike", Boston Globe, December 30, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-09-17. 
3. ^ "Gitmo Hunger Strikers' Numbers Grow", The New Standard, December 30, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-09-17. 
4. ^ "Doctors attack U.S. over Guantanamo", BBC News, March 10, 2006. Retrieved on 2006-03-15. 
5. ^ A View from Inside Gitmo. FrontPage Magazine (May 5, 2006). Retrieved on 2007-09-16.
6. ^ "War crimes tribunal orders force-feeding of Serbian warlord", The Guardian, December 7, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-09-16.2006"> 
7. ^ BBC News: "UN concern at Guantanamo feeding."
8. ^ Boston Globe: "46 Guantanamo detainees join hunger strike."
9. ^ Daily Kos: "The WaPo prints a torture story."
10. ^ [3]] "Women rethink a big size that is beautiful but brutal" Clare Soares 11 July 2006. Christian Science Monitor

External links

A feeding tube is a medical device used to provide nutrition to patients who cannot or refuse to (q.v. hunger strike) obtain nutrition by swallowing. The state of being fed by a feeding tube is called enteral feeding or tube feeding.
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Delusion
Classification & external resources

ICD-10 F22
ICD-9 297

A delusion is commonly defined as a fixed false belief and is used in everyday language to describe a belief that is either false, fanciful or derived from deception.
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Suicide (Latin sui caedere, to kill oneself) or Self-murder, is the act of intentionally terminating one's own life. Suicide occurs for a number of reasons such as depression, substance abuse, shame, avoiding pain, financial difficulties or other undesirable fates.
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prison, penitentiary, or correctional facility is a place in which individuals are physically confined or interned and usually deprived of a range of personal freedoms.
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A feeding tube is a medical device used to provide nutrition to patients who cannot or refuse to (q.v. hunger strike) obtain nutrition by swallowing. The state of being fed by a feeding tube is called enteral feeding or tube feeding.
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A hunger strike is a method of non-violent resistance in which participants fast as an act of political protest, or to provoke feelings of guilt or to achieve a goal such as a policy change. Most will take liquids but not solid food.
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The World Medical Association (WMA), an international organization of physicians, was formally established on September 17, 1947, pursuant to the resolutions of the First General Assembly of WMA held in Paris, France.
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suffragette (also occasionally spelled suffraget) was given to members of the women's suffrage movement, originally in the United Kingdom. The word was originally coined to describe a more radical faction of the suffrage movement in the UK, mainly members of the Women's
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Guantanamo Bay detention camp is a joint military prison and interrogation camp under the leadership of Joint Task Force Guantanamo since 2002.[1] The prison, established at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, holds people accused by the executive branch of the U.S.
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The World Medical Association (WMA), an international organization of physicians, was formally established on September 17, 1947, pursuant to the resolutions of the First General Assembly of WMA held in Paris, France.
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Paul E. Vallely is retired from the United States Army and he is currently the senior military analyst for FOX News.

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He is married to Marian Vallely and their son Private First Class Scott Paul Vallely died on April 20, 2004 while in his fourth week of Special
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Ensure can mean:
  • A food and beverage brand owned by Abbott Laboratories. The most well known of these products is the Ensure Shake , intended to be served as a snack or meal replacement.
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Mucus is a slippery secretion of the lining of the mucous membranes in the body.
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Vladimir Konstantinovich Bukovsky (Russian: Влади́мир Константи́нович
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Torture, according to international law, is "any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third
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