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Not a MyNAP member yet? Register for a free account to start saving and receiving special member only perks. The city of Trieste sits in the extreme northeast corner of Italy, near the border of Slovenia, one of the five republics of the former Yugoslavia.
In , after a plebiscite, its territory was divided between Yugoslavia and Italy, the latter assuming sovereignty over the city proper. This history of a division that was overcome seemed a fitting backdrop to the workshop described here, which took place in Trieste from March 27 to 30, Thirty-four doctors who could speak for child health gathered at a hotel perched on a steep hill above the edge of the sea in response to a war not far away that was moving into what everyone hoped was its penultimate phase.
The eight Americans and three Europeans who formed the organizing committee served as mediators, facilitators, and data gatherers for the meeting. They included leaders in academic pediatrics, officers of national and international pediatric associations, and veterans of humanitarian efforts. The regional participants were chosen as doctors who could make a difference for children, including 19 doctors from the five countries that constituted the former Yugoslavia five doctors from Bosnia-Herzegovina, two from Croatia, two from Macedonia, three from Slovenia, five from Serbia—including one from Kosovo and one from Novi Sad—and two from Knin and Banja Luka in Serbian-held areas of Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, respectively.
The participants included doctors from trauma units and emergency wards who themselves had been targeted in the war; child psychiatrists who had witnessed sieges in which children have been made suicidal, some deliberately exposing themselves to sniper fire; the caretakers of refugees; doctors from maternity hospitals where infants routinely die from a lack of basic medicines, supplies, and equipment; doctors from frontline situations they had not left until they attended the workshop more than 1 or 2 years; and academicians and health leaders of their own countries and officials of pediatric societies and children 's hospitals.