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r UNWRA because patients managed to accommodate the increase by changing their hospital preference The study is limited in that it cannot argue causality between the policy and the results found because there is no control group. Nevertheless, robustness testing, including assessing the year 2017, supports our results. This study contributes to the literature on the impacts of co-payments in health care in a very specific context of poverty and conflict that has rarely been subject to scrutiny and provides feedback to UNRWA on a health-care system measure, relevant for future policy designs.
None.
None.
As of Feb 14, 2014, UNRWA had registered almost 53 000 Palestinian refugees from Syria (PRS) who had fled to Lebanon as the result of the conflict in Syria. Half of the PRS had gone to one of the 12 Palestinian camps, which are overcrowded and of poor infrastructure. Consequently, there is concern for the wellbeing of PRS; in particular, their health status and access to medical care. Little attention has been given to non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in the acute phases of emergencies. Therefore, an assessment of the prevalence of NCDs among PRS, as well as the patterns of use of available health care services by PRS, is warranted.
A cross-sectional study was conducted in April, 2018, with 1100 PRS residing inside and outside refugee camps across all governorates of Lebanon. A listing of all PRS families was the sampling frame. A random sample of families was selected and contacted, and then one adult randomly selected from each family was approached for data collection. Pregnant women and participants wics for physical and biochemical measurements.
UNRWA.
UNRWA.
In Palestine, the ongoing Israeli occupation shapes and endangers all spaces that are used by children in their everyday lives. In this study, Palestinian children were considered active agents in their lives, both affecting and being affected by the world around them. Our research aimed to explore the role of resources, competencies, and attitudes of spatial agency in the lives of children in the occupied Palestinian territory. Specifically, we investigated how children use domestic and social spaces to actively maintain positive function and wellbeing despite an environmental backdrop of military violence.
A convenience sample of 29 children aged 7-13 years (mean 9·66, SD 1·63) attending the primary school in Dheisheh refugee camp, West Bank, was selected. 17% (5 of 29) were boys and 83% (24) were girls. All children were asked to draw and describe a map of safe and unsafe places in the camp. Ten children were asked to continue the conversation outdoors using a "walk-along" technique, showing familiar pisks and lack of safety in their lives. Children's narratives made plain the ways in which their ability to mobilise functioning resources (such as playing and socialising) were constrained by military and community violence, and environmental degradation. Overall, social and external places as spaces to restore a sense of normality and happiness were valorised more by boys than by girls, and girls were more active in internal spaces than in external spaces.
Spatial agency is a key factor that potentiates wellbeing in children. Psychosocial interventions should aim to promote children's participation in transforming and reshaping spaces and places for their own protection and to improve the psychological wellbeing of the community.
None.
None.
Gaza has been under land, sea, and aerial blockade for more than 13 years, during which time Israel has continued its permit regime to control access for Palestinian patients from Gaza to health facilities in the West Bank (including East Jerusalem), Israel, and Jordan. Specific groups, such as patients with cancer, have a high need for permits owing to a lack of services in Gaza. The approval rate for patient permits to exit Gaza dropped from 94% in 2012 to 54% in 2017. Tazemetostat in vivo We aimed to assess the effect of access restrictions due to permit denials or delays on all-cause mortality for patients with cancer from Gaza who were referred for chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or both.
This study matched 17 072 permit applications for 3816 patients referred for chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or both, from Jan 1, 2008, to Dec 31, 2017, with referral data for the same period and mortality data from Jan 1, 2008, to Jun 30, 2018. We stratified survival analysis by period of first application (2008-14, 2015-17), in light of varyi1, p=0·071).
Barriers to patient access to health care through denied or delayed permit applications had a significant impact on mortality for patients with cancer who applied for chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or both, in the period 2015-17. Relative ease of access through Rafah from 2008 to 2014 may have mitigated the health effects of access restrictions.
WHO received funding from the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation.
WHO received funding from the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation.
In 2017, the Ministry of Health in Gaza introduced Early Essential Newborn Care (EENC) as its primary maternal and neonatal care strategy. EENC comprises a package of simple evidence-based interventions that are delivered during labour and delivery, and in the early post-partum period, to prevent or treat the most important causes of morbidity and mortality in newborn babies. Four public maternity hospitals in Gaza, responsible for approximately 75% of all deliveries, began implementation of EENC in June, 2017. Clinical coaching was delivered by national facilitators over 2 days, and targeted all clinical staff in maternity and neonatal units. Subsequently, EENC quality improvement teams were formed to address contextual factors that influence practice. This study aimed to determine whether introduction of EENC resulted in changes in clinical practices for vaginal births.
A pre-intervention and post-intervention design was used to review key clinical practices before and after EENC introduction in the fouernal or newborn initiatives were introduced during the study period, and no additional staff training was available, therefore the EENC approach was the primary influence on health worker practices.
Support for this work was provided by WHO, occupied Palestinian territory.
Support for this work was provided by WHO, occupied Palestinian territory.