The Jerusalem Post

A post-pandemic prescripti­on

The doctors’ orders to the next Knesset on how to help Israel keep healing from COVID-19

- HEALTH AFFAIRS • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN the jerusalem post

prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed during his election campaign that the coronaviru­s pandemic would be over for israel “within a few weeks.” and while the country remains ill with election deadlock, israel seems to have broken through the coVid-19 crisis and to be surfacing healthier on the other side.

it is unclear whether anyone will be able to form a stable government. While the public waits for president reuven rivlin’s decision about who will be charged with putting together a coalition, health officials are putting together their list of priorities for the next administra­tion.

The Jerusalem Post spoke with four top doctors and scientists: prof. Gabriel Barbash, former director-general of the health ministry and director of the Weizmann institute of science’s Bench-to-Bedside project; prof. cyrille cohen, a member of the advisory committee for clinical trials on sars-coV-2 vaccines at the ministry and head of the laboratory of tumor immunology and immunother­apy at Bar-ilan university; dr. talya miron-shatz, founding director of the center for medical decision making at ono academic college; and prof. Zeev rotstein, director-general of hadassah medical center.

they offered the next Knesset and government their three most important recommenda­tions for ensuring that israel continues surfacing from the pandemic and becomes healthy again.

KEEP AN EYE ON THE AIRPORT

Ben-Gurion airport is the weakest link in the coronaviru­s chain, according to the health experts, because it is through this portal that vaccine-resistant mutations could enter israel and even potentiall­y unravel its mass vaccinatio­n success story.

“i am concerned that at some point, we will see some variants that are more resistant to the vaccines,” cohen said. “it does not mean that the vaccine will become ineffectiv­e, but it could become less effective, and then the good numbers we are achieving won’t last.”

in the first wave, people entering israel from the us led to 70% of the country’s coronaviru­s cases. ahead of the third wave, travelers brought in the British mutation, which spreads at least 30% faster than the original Wuhan virus strain and therefore slowed the effectiven­ess of israel’s vaccinatio­n campaign.

in addition, travelers have brought in the Brazilian mutation, a New york mutation, and the south african mutation – the latter two of which render pfizer vaccines less effective.

cohen recommende­d that people returning or traveling to israel continue to be screened for the virus within 72 hours of boarding their flight. on arrival, travelers should be screened again with a pcr swab test. any positive tests should undergo genetic sequencing to tell health officials more about the specific strain of the virus that the person had been infected with.

“it is not enough just to know if someone has the virus,” Barbash said. “We need to know what strain of the virus to be able to catch potentiall­y dangerous variants before they spread.”

moreover, if people do test positive, the state must improve its ability to effectivel­y enforce quarantine. the ministry had reported in the past that as many as two-thirds or more of arrivals did not go to hotels and failed to properly quarantine at home.

a japanese study published earlier this month in the Journal of Travel Medicine showed that the country had seen a sharp increase in the number of coronaviru­s disease cases detected among travelers and returnees at airport quarantine stations, despite the pandemic subsiding in parts of many countries.

“a nasopharyn­geal specimen was collected from travelers and returnees arriving in japan, and quantitati­ve reverse transcript­ion polymerase chain reaction testing for severe acute respirator­y syndrome coronaviru­s 2 was performed in four airport quarantine stations,” the study explained, noting that 782 cases of infected people out of 168,061 tested were discovered at these stations between march and september 2020.

the samples were geneticall­y sequenced and revealed that people, as expected, carried a variety of strains. as such, the study’s authors recommende­d formulatin­g “an efficient strategy of testing and realtime genome sequencing” to support a quarantine protocol while infection chains and variants are being investigat­ed.

israelis will want to travel and already some countries have announced they will welcome

vaccinated citizens who carry with them an official vaccinatio­n certificat­e. earlier this week, Greece announced that it is removing its tourist cap – formerly 10,000 travelers could visit the country per week – and cyprus said it will welcome israeli travelers without quarantine beginning april 1.

israel will also soon want to allow vaccinated visitors from abroad, but first the country must have a system in place to validate travelers’ vaccinatio­n certificat­es.

cohen said that alongside testing and sequencing, israel must reinvest in its contract tracing capabiliti­es.

in august, the israel defense Forces was formally charged with cutting the chains of infection for the country, and establishe­d a contact tracing unit, recruiting conscripte­d soldiers and reservists to operate it.

the unit quickly became overwhelme­d,

as the country saw more than 8,000 new cases per day – an unmanageab­le number for even the best epidemiolo­gical trackers.

But cohen said that contact tracing is the key to controllin­g variants, and therefore maintainin­g a strong “test-traceisola­te” system – especially for those arriving from abroad – must be a priority for the next government.

Finally, any new government should prioritize vaccinatin­g palestinia­ns because they also travel in and out of israel, just through a series of land crossings, Barbash said.

“if they are not vaccinated, then there will be mutations that come in just like from the airport,” he stressed.

INVEST IN PUBLIC HEALTH

the coronaviru­s pandemic highlighte­d israel’s decadeslon­g

Friday, march 26, 2021 deficient investment in its public health and hospital systems. Now, it is time for the government to invest in rebuilding and reforming them, the experts said.

according to prof. dan Ben-david, president of the shoresh institutio­n for socioecono­mic research and an economist at tel aviv university, israel has been neglecting its health system since the 1970s, and the situation has grown increasing­ly acute since that time.

israel entered the coronaviru­s crisis with the highest hospital occupancy rate of any organizati­on for economic cooperatio­n and developmen­t country.

in the area of healthcare staff, israel benefited greatly in the 1990s from the influx of doctors from the former soviet union. But the country did not invest in new ones, so israel’s physicians are getting old, Ben-david said. in terms of the number of physicians per capita, israel is roughly close to the oecd average, but has 10 times more physicians over the age of 75.

israel went into this epidemic with by far the highest number of people dying from infectious disease per capita in the developed world – 73% more than the No. 2 country, Greece.

even worse, israel has one of the worst nurse-to-population ratios, with five nurses per 1,000 people – a figure that is significan­tly lower than the oecd average of 8.8.

“our doctors and nurses are excellent, but we don’t have enough,” cohen said.

in december, prof. dror mevorach, who headed one of the coVid-19 wards at hadassah, penned an opinion piece for ynet in which he explained that payments from the health funds never fully cover a hospital’s operating costs.

“this impossible budgetary cycle has led to israel’s health expenditur­e gradually declining to just 7.3% of the country’s Gdp – significan­tly lower than european countries such as France and Germany,” he wrote. “it has also led to a steady deteriorat­ion of the healthcare infrastruc­ture, while simultaneo­usly fostering its dependence on what is essentiall­y government largesse.”

during the crisis, israel’s hospitals were forced to shut down units and redirect care to accommodat­e a growing number of coVid-19 patients.

more than 6,000 israelis died from the virus during the course of the coronaviru­s pandemic. But, in addition, there were many people who died of other ailments because they did not seek help. this was partly because of fears that they would contract coronaviru­s at the hospital or doctor’s office. however, according to rotstein, care was also limited in some situations, as hospitals and health funds were forced to cut back on providing routine screenings and elective surgeries.

in the first wave, the government specifical­ly asked hospitals to cease providing elective care. But in many cases, the line between urgent and nonurgent can be drawn only in retrospect, according to an article in The New England Journal of Medicine.

“a lot of procedures deemed ‘elective’ are not necessaril­y elective,” Brian Kolski, director of the structural heart disease program at st. joseph hospital in orange county, california, told the journal.

“We did fine in comparison to other countries, but we could have done better,” cohen said.

“it is unbelievab­le to have 26-hour shifts [for medical staff]; to have to wait several months to get an appointmen­t with a specialist; to not have enough capacity in our intensive care units, [so] that people have to sleep in the hospital corridors or cafeteria. this is like a third world country, and it should not be happening in israel,” he added.

cohen said that it is time for israel to reevaluate the place of the healthcare system among the country’s national priorities, charging that if the country can invest in submarines and F-35 warplanes, it should be able to improve the health system, because “at the end of the day, health is life.”

rotstein said that historical­ly Knesset members opted for top portfolios, such as defense or Finance. But he hopes that after

COVID, elected officials have learned that the Health Ministry is important, too.

“Until now, no one transferre­d support for the health system into seats in the parliament,” Rotstein said. “I think we are at a turning point, and this government should consider putting our best people” in the ministry.

REBUILD TRUST

The coronaviru­s pandemic drasticall­y decreased trust in the government and the majority of its institutio­ns.

The 2020 Israel Democracy Index revealed that the country was at the lowest point in a decade in trust in all public institutio­ns and government officials.

Some 57% of Jewish Israelis said that trust between the public and the government was harmed between March and June 2020. By October 2020, 90% felt that trust had diminished.

“Trust lies at the core of everything,” said Miron-Shatz. “The airport was closed and then it opened. It may have been a practical thing, but it also created a lot of mistrust.”

Miron-Shatz said that COVID demonstrat­ed how much people rely on the government and how “quickly government can control our lives – it was radical.”

She said that the government needs to empower profession­al authoritie­s to manage profession­al matters so as to regain some of the trust that was lost after a period in which she said impure decisions were sometimes made.

Miron-Shatz said that not all people will bounce back from a year of COVID-19 quickly after having their resilience eroded by taking care of small children, being sick, domestic disputes or occupation­al uncertaint­y.

“We are still afraid, somewhat withdrawn,” she said, calling on the next Knesset to invest in improving the country’s mental and emotional health.

Finally, Rotstein said that wounds between segments of society would also need to heal.

IDI’s index found that 88% of Jewish citizens felt trust between haredim (ultra-Orthodox) and non-haredi Jews was harmed by the pandemic. Additional­ly, 38% believed trust was harmed between Jews and Arabs.

Israeli society has seen “so much hatred” during the course of the pandemic: Jews against Muslims, ultra-Orthodox Jews against secular Jews, rich against poor, Rotstein said.

“People blamed everyone else for the pandemic,” Rotstein said. “To heal Israeli society is an important message and, for this government – if there will be one – the most important task.”

 ?? (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90) ?? A MAGEN DAVID ADOM medical worker tests people for coronaviru­s at a mobile site in Jerusalem last week.
(Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90) A MAGEN DAVID ADOM medical worker tests people for coronaviru­s at a mobile site in Jerusalem last week.

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