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Health

Health workers have come up with a savvy strategy for combating infectious Gisease in conʀict riggen countries

- BY JESS CRAIG

The Hajj Assist

since early july, muslims from around the world have been arriving in Saudi Arabia for the hajj, the annual Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca and one of the world’s largest recurring mass gatherings. Along with the pilgrims arriving from over 180 countries—an estimated 2 million by the time the annual ritual ends in late August—are 25,000 health workers to monitor their health.

In recent years, infectious disease outbreaks have spiked because of civil unrest, conflict and mass migration across the Middle East and North Africa. “Wars, and the chaos they leave behind, often provide the optimal conditions for the growth and re-emergence of communicab­le diseases,” wrote Rasha Raslan of the American Uni-

versity of Beirut in a 2017 article published in Frontiers in Public Health. In Syria, for instance, the seven-year civil war has caused the public health system to collapse. Hospitals and clinics have been destroyed, medical staffers have fled, and medication­s such as antibiotic­s, anti-inflammato­ry drugs and even intravenou­s fluids are in short supply. Childhood immunizati­on programs have come to a halt, and a breakdown of sewage systems and a lack of access to clean water have given rise to simultaneo­us outbreaks of tuberculos­is, cutaneous leishmania­sis, rabies, hepatitis, enteroviru­s, shigella, salmonella, upper respirator­y tract infections, and epidemics of influenza.

In Syria, Iraq and South Sudan, once-eradicated or near-eradicated and vaccine-preventabl­e diseases, such as polio and measles, have re-emerged. Yemen and Somalia recently witnessed the deadliest cholera outbreaks in recent history, according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

These conflict-prone environmen­ts have given rise to some uncommon diseases as well. Villages destroyed by firefights and airstrikes have become breeding grounds for insects and stray animals, which leads to increased transmissi­on of diseases such as leishmania­sis, rabies and scabies. Diseases like brucellosi­s, toxoplasmo­sis, meningitis and listeriosi­s also tend to rise because of food and water contaminat­ion.

In recent conflicts, humanitari­an aid organizati­ons have had extremely limited access to afflicted regions, which makes it difficult to fully understand the scope of the problems. “In view of the disruption of public health systems in conflicted regions and countries, mass gathering events [offer] one-stop sentinel surveillan­ce and public health interventi­ons,” according to a recent commentary in The Lancet by authors including former Saudi Deputy Health Minister Ziad Memish.

Memish is considered a pioneer of mass medicine—he founded the WHO Collaborat­ing Center for Mass Gatherings Medicine in 2012—and Saudi Arabia is credited with formalizin­g the specialty. Over the years, the Saudi government has received input and technical assistance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the WHO and other public health agencies. And, says Memish, Saudi Arabia is directing and funding the public health effort at the hajj.

The 25,000 health care workers are deploying throughout eastern Saudi Arabia to treat sick pilgrims as well as collect epidemiolo­gical data and, in some cases, biological samples. Health inspectors, nursing staff, public health experts and physicians will maintain checkpoint­s at each of Saudi Arabia’s 13 land, air or sea entry ports. The teams will check pilgrims’ immunizati­on records and administer prophylact­ic medication and polio vaccinatio­ns as needed.

During the hajj, hundreds of mobile surveillan­ce teams, consisting of trained clinicians, have traveled through temporary camps looking for individual­s displaying symptoms of an infectious disease. In addition to permanent hospitals in Mecca and Medina, about 25 temporary hospitals and clinics with over 5,000 hospital beds are opened every year.

Through these combined efforts, Memish estimates that robust epidemiolo­gical data will be collected for approximat­ely 60 percent of those attending hajj, with all data sent to a command center for real-time surveillan­ce and data analysis. Any surveillan­ce data collected will be published and shared with the WHO and broader global health community.

The research is invaluable: It will inform ongoing humanitari­an inter- ventions and internatio­nal health security efforts, as well as insight into new or emerging pathogens, which may help the global health community prevent pandemic-level outbreaks. Understand­ing what types of diseases are prevalent in a country will allow health workers to more precisely prepare medical stockpiles and treat population­s.

In the past, hajj research studies examined the presence of drugresist­ant pathogens, providing critical informatio­n about disease transmissi­on patterns. Because Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Health cannot continue monitoring pilgrims once they return to their home countries, it is not clear how diseases are transmitte­d during their trip, though public health researcher­s recognize that pilgrims, especially those who are immunocomp­romised, are at greater risk to contract an infectious disease because of the high population density and close social interactio­n.

Although Saudi Arabia’s disease surveillan­ce efforts are extensive, there are some limitation­s, noted Yara Asi, a lecturer at the University of Central Florida who has conducted research among conflict-affected population­s. Some of the world’s most vulnerable population­s—the sickest, oldest and poorest—will not be attending the hajj. That means some epidemiolo­gical patterns that emerge may not reflect what’s going on in entire population­s. Still, says Memish, “I don’t think there is any forum that can do give a better understand­ing of what’s going on in conflict-affected and hardto-reach countries than this very organized annual gathering.”

“Mass gathering events [Rɼer] onestop public health interventi­ons.”

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