Underlying Conditions
18 APRIL 2020
At nearly
18 percent officially,
and probably
higher, the prevalence of
diabetes among Palestinian refugees in the West Bank is one of the highest in
the world. The official rate in Gaza is 16 percent. Among adult citizens of
Israel, it’s 7.2 per
cent. The disease
suppresses the immune system, among other complications, and can spiral
dangerously out of control when combined with an infection, such as the
coronavirus that causes Covid-19. Diabetic patients with Covid-19 in China had
a 1 in 14
chance of dying, more than
triple that of the general population.
Decades of living in overcrowded refugee
camps and a rapid transition to cheap and readily available high-calorie foods,
in part a result of the neoliberal economic changes that came with the Oslo
Accords, have led to an
explosive increase in obesity and diabetes among Palestinians. As in other
parts of the world, the prevalence of the disease is linked to land
dispossession, structural violence, colonial domination, and oppression. In the
United States, diabetes is nearly twice
as common in the Indigenous
and African American populations as it is among non-Hispanic whites. Other examples from around the world confirm the connection
between historical oppression and chronic diseases.
Israel’s military
occupation, and a neocolonial aid regime with ever-tightening donor
restrictions, have
contributed to a fragmented and underfunded health system that makes
Palestinians more susceptible to a pandemic. With some of the highest
population densities in the world, social distancing in refugee camps is nearly
impossible. There are fewer
than 120 ventilators in
public hospitals for the 3.2 million people in the West Bank, and only 65 ICU beds
for the two million in Gaza, of which 26 are available for Covid-19 patients. The toll of an outbreak
would be catastrophic if it reached the scale currently seen in Europe and the US.
Despite the urgency of the situation,
the response from accountable bodies has been anemic at best and at worst
openly hostile. Israel, as the occupying power, has a responsibility to ensure the adequate provision of medical
supplies and the proper functioning of hospitals and health services in the
occupied territory. The Israeli government and Palestinian security services announced that they would co-operate for the pandemic, but
the actions on the ground tell a different story. Israeli occupying forces have confiscated
building materials for a
Palestinian field clinic, shut
down a Covid-19 the testing facility in East Jerusalem, and intensified the military securitization of the West Bank,
including the complete blockading of Bethlehem following a Covid-19 outbreak in
early March.
The international
community has responded largely with silence. Israeli and Egyptian closures and
restrictions make it almost impossible for UNRWA,
the UN agency responsible for the
wellbeing of Palestinian refugees, to provide proper medical services during
the Covid-19 crisis. Earlier this month it was forced to suspend food aid to Gaza and cannot service refugee
camps in Bethlehem properly because of the lockdown. Qatar announced the provision of $150 million in humanitarian
aid to Gaza at the end of March, but the Strip has run out of testing kits and Western states have failed
either to provide meaningful support or to challenge Israeli restrictions.
Palestinians in camps have therefore
resorted to community-based responses to protect themselves. Popular Committees
and local organizations have taken the lead, and in some cases, employees have donated their salaries to cover the costs of camp-wide
Covid-19 prevention measures. In Aida and Azza refugee camps in Bethlehem,
young refugees trained as community health workers (CHWs) to fight the diabetes epidemic have now
organized themselves in response to Covid-19.
This type of frontline health action –
community members with no formal clinical qualifications who are rapidly hired,
trained, and equipped to tackle the threat – has proven effective in other epidemics. With lessons learned from the Ebola outbreak, CHWs are active around the world, especially in countries with
doctor and nurse shortages. They promote social distancing, the early detection
of cases and contact tracing, and help with patient testing and care when
symptoms develop.
Working under the
occupation, the CHWs in Aida and Azza have produced a video and pamphlets detailing ways to minimize the
risk of contracting Covid-19. They call their patients daily and arrange for
the safe delivery of life-saving diabetes medication.
These young refugees are demonstrating
the ingenuity and steadfastness that has kept Palestinian dreams of a better
future alive for decades, despite constant setbacks and a crushing military
occupation. They require urgent support to maintain stocks of personal protective
equipment and perform effective crisis management, but we mustn’t lose sight of
the underlying conditions that have placed Palestinians at such risk from a
pandemic. Covid-19 makes clear that the health of Palestinians is intrinsically
linked to their liberation. Any successful intervention will have to focus on
supporting and strengthening existing community-led initiatives while working
to end the root causes of poor health: military occupation, land dispossession,
discrimination, and denial of reparations.
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