There have been times I have seen the same patients over and over again for weeks. I would arrive at the surgery and see the same faces queuing up to seek help. They would complain of headaches, general body pain and sleeping problems. I’d prescribe them treatment but nothing would work. Instead, they’d come back the following week with a similar complaint. It wasn’t until a psychologist told me one of my patients had been tortured that I realised I had completely missed the point. My patients had been calling out for help with the only words they could find but even with all I had already read about torture, I was not able to see the consequences lying on the examination table in front of me. I was ashamed of myself and felt incapable of meeting my patients’ needs.

In 2017, torture is still used in countries all over the world, but the global medical community is still largely unprepared to spot victims of torture among patients, and torture remains virtually completely absent from the academic curricula of medical schools. Likewise, society at large knows only what is shown in movies and television, where torture is often portrayed as a legitimate tool to extort information, despite the fact that studies show that it is an ineffective tool for obtaining reliable information.

Today what is true is that torture is widely used all over the world. Torture aims at destroying the individual, physically and psychologically, obliterating the person’s trust in humanity and disrupting all links to society: electrodes applied to the fingers, toes and genitals; extreme extension of the body in uncomfortable positions to tear the joints; beatings; repeated sexual violence; deprivation of light; exposure to continuous high-volume noise; beatings; burns; mock executions; and water boarding. This list or any other is not exhaustive, as new methods are created constantly. Inhumanity is crafty.

Often, torture leaves no physical scars, yet the body becomes the container of a broken person, whose soul is marked with countless bruises. From the outside you might see a fit body, but inside it hides a set of broken glasses. If torture victims survive, they often find themselves totally alienated from everything and everyone they used to know. For these men, women and children, describing the inhumane is not only difficult but can also be uselessly painful if the person they are talking to is not receptive, not prepared to trust or not willing to share the burden of suffering. Nothing is more painful than trusting someone, telling your story and discovering indifference on the other side.