Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Palestinia­ns hesitant on vaccines

Disinforma­tion, conspiracy theories leading to doubts

- By Adam Rasgon

BETHLEHEM, West Bank — Since the coronaviru­s first emerged in the occupied West Bank, Suha Gadeon has worn her mask assiduousl­y, avoided mingling with friends and declined to host family members or attend public gatherings.

But Gadeon, 41, the membership director at the Bethlehem Chamber of Commerce, has refused to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, worrying about side effects like blood clots, heart complicati­ons and hair loss. While some damaging side effects have been found, they are extremely rare and health experts say the benefits of getting vaccinated far exceed the risks.

“I’m strongly opposed to taking the vaccine now,” she said. “I would only be comfortabl­e after a three- to five-year study proves that it is safe to get.”

For months, Palestinia­n authoritie­s in the West Bank and the blockaded Gaza Strip struggled to inoculate residents for want of vaccine supplies.

Now they have received millions of doses but they are facing a new challenge: persuading a majority of the public to get the shots.

“We’ve got vaccines, but we urgently need people to get vaccinated,” said Shadi al-Liham, the top Health Ministry official in the Bethlehem district. “They are critical to helping us get through the pandemic.”

The number of new cases of the virus in the West Bank and Gaza jumped significan­tly over the past week, reaching 868 in the West Bank on Thursday and 1,021 in Gaza on Friday, the highest single-day figures in months.

The number of hospitaliz­ations in both territorie­s has roughly tripled in the past two weeks.

But only 37% of eligible West Bank residents have received at least one dose of vaccine, and about 18% in Gaza, according to health officials in the two territorie­s.

Disinforma­tion and conspiracy theories, along with more well-founded concerns about waning vaccine efficacy, have contribute­d to widespread hesitancy about getting inoculated, according to Abdulsalam al-Khayyat, director of the public health department at An Najah University’s medical school in Nablus, in the West Bank.

“Many people simply are not receiving reliable informatio­n about the vaccines,” he said.

Bethlehem, where the first confirmed case of COVID-19 in a West Bank Palestinia­n city was found, may have been harmed the most.

In addition to causing at least 258 deaths in the region, the virus has ravaged the tourism industry in the city where Christians believe Jesus Christ was born. Hotels and restaurant­s have closed and tour guides have been put out of work.

But at the bustling openair market in the Old City, many fruit and vegetable vendors spoke almost as loudly about their vaccine skepticism as they did in hawking their produce.

“I read online that people will die two years after they take the vaccine,” said Issa Abu Huleil, 53, citing an unfounded rumor as he sold a watermelon to a customer. “So I decided I’m not taking the vaccine. Why would I risk it? My health is excellent.”

This past week, the Palestinia­n Authority and Hamas, the Islamist militant group that rules Gaza, ordered government employees to get vaccinated in an effort to increase compliance.

Refusing to be vaccinated “is not a matter of personal freedom,” Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh of the Palestinia­n Authority said in announcing the decision. “Your freedom ends when it causes harm to others’ health.”

The authority said that public sector employees who do not get vaccinated would be placed on unpaid leave until the end of the pandemic. The government is the West Bank’s largest employer, and Palestinia­n officials said that the number of vaccinatio­ns increased substantia­lly in recent days, after the government order took effect.

In Gaza, all government employees must be vaccinated or face legal measures, said Ashraf al-Qidra, a spokespers­on for the Health Ministry. And anyone in the private sector whose work brings them into direct contact with the public must be vaccinated, too, if they want to stay in their jobs, al-Qidra said.

Human rights advocates expressed reservatio­ns about the measures’ strictness, arguing that officials could have introduced incentives instead, such as extra vacation for getting vaccinated, or allowed employees who refused the vaccine to continue working on the condition of being tested regularly.

“There needs to be a balance between public health and personal freedoms,” said Ammar Dwaik, the director of the Independen­t Commission for Human Rights, a Palestinia­n government-establishe­d body. “But I think the authoritie­s could have given more considerat­ion to alternativ­es here.”

Vaccine hesitancy is just the latest snag in the Palestinia­ns’ tortuous fight against the pandemic. For much of this year, Palestinia­ns had very few vaccines, leading to harsh criticism that Israel was not protecting Palestinia­ns under its occupation while it carried out a world-leading vaccinatio­n program for Israeli citizens.

But many of the doses that the Palestinia­n Authority did have were siphoned off to the senior ranks of the governing party, allies in the media and even to family members of top dignitarie­s. Last spring, Israel gave vaccines to more than 100,000 Palestinia­ns who work in Israel but not to the millions of other Palestinia­ns in the West Bank and Gaza.

And when Israel finally offered the authority more than 1 million doses in a vaccine-exchange deal in June, the authority turned them down.

Since the Palestinia­ns began receiving internatio­nal shipments in February, they have received more than 2.8 million doses, according to the World Health Organizati­on, enough to fully vaccinate most of the eligible population. Authoritie­s in the West Bank and Gaza are in the process of receiving or negotiatin­g deals for about an additional 4.6 million doses, the organizati­on said.

Palestinia­n health officials said that more than 1.2 million doses had already been administer­ed. An American donation of 500,000 doses arrived this week, and an order of 4 million Pfizer doses was arriving in batches.

Richard Peeperkorn, the WHO representa­tive in the West Bank and Gaza, said that the authoritie­s still needed many more vaccines to inoculate an overwhelmi­ng majority of the population.

“There’s still a long way to go,” he said.

 ?? SAMAR HAZBOUN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A person receives a COVID-19 vaccine Aug. 26 in the West Bank city of Bethlehem. After months of Palestinia­n officials struggling to get doses, disinforma­tion and conspiracy theories have led to widespread hesitancy.
SAMAR HAZBOUN/THE NEW YORK TIMES A person receives a COVID-19 vaccine Aug. 26 in the West Bank city of Bethlehem. After months of Palestinia­n officials struggling to get doses, disinforma­tion and conspiracy theories have led to widespread hesitancy.

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