

Palestine: Health Care
الرعاية الصحيّة في فلسطين
HEALTHCARE AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES IN PALESTINE
The Israeli occupation geographically fragments Palestine, making it harder to organise and administrate a centralised or synthesised healthcare system, and for NGOs to deliver aid. This multiplicity and overlap can lead to inefficiency in healthcare provision. There have been many sociopolitical changes that form the base of the current healthcare system, from colonial restructuring in British Mandate Palestine (1918-1948), the ongoing occupation by Israel, and a shift by Fatah towards diplomatic negotiation and international financial backing that allows global NGOs to provide aid including healthcare. These services exist alongside more marginalised traditional cultural treatments for ill health. Communication between medical services in the oPt are sometimes effected by political disagreements between the two main political parties in the PA, with an increasing gap in the quality of healthcare services between the West Bank (improving) and Gaza (declining). In the Gaza Strip residents are more likely to be classified as refugees, where access to psychiatric services are provided by UNWRA, instead of longer-term systematic psychiatric care. In Gaza there is an even wider gap between the frequency and type of psychiatric conditions (rates of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder [PTSD], Anxiety, Depression) and the lack of infrastructure available.


There has been a recent decline in donations to international NGOs in Palestine (-30% in 2015, WHO 1)due to a lack of apparent political progression, which leads to ‘donor fatigue’ or ‘occupation fatigue’, combined with post-2008 global economic recession, and shift in emphasis to the refugee ‘crisis’ in Europe. UNRWA is now at a critical juncture where the majority of its funding has been withdrawn by the US government, which historically had been its main source of income. The occupation directly impacts access to healthcare in a number of ways: Palestinians need to obtain a permit to travel between Gaza and the West Bank for healthcare or to access to health services in Israel or neighbouring countries, where Israeli hospitals charge high fees for services. The application process and provision of permits are often delayed or denied without apparent reason, leading to missed healthcare, where 22.6% of travel permits are denied or delayed in the West Bank. Trade restrictions mean that medicines imported into Palestine can be up to 7 times the global market prices2, including those for mental health (SSRIs, e.g. Prozac or Fluoxetine). The PA Ministry of Health often has to borrow money from Israel to cover these, at a high interest rate leading to further debt. In Gaza there is a chronic shortage of medicines, with 30%of essential medicines at zero stock.


COVID-19
Existing healthcare inequalities have been exacerbated during the pandemic, with the destruction of a COVID-19 test clinic that was under construction in Khirbet Ibziq, the West Bank3in March 2020, to track-and-trace services catering to Israeli or Hebrew speaking citizens, not made available in Arabic for Palestinians4. A COVID-19 vaccine has currently been made and administered to Israeli citizens (January 2021), but not to Palestinians, despite the fact that the state of Israel is responsible for the health of all the populations in the oPt5. The Israeli state has used the pandemic to expand the occupation, still undertaking house demolition and settlement construction, while residents are under lockdown, and Palestinian residents are under more restricted lockdown conditions that settlers in the same areas6.
FOOTNOTES
- World Health Organisation (WHO) Report (2017)
- 'Trade Facilitation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory: Restrictions and Limitations' United Nations (2014)
- Israel Confiscates Clinic Tents During COVID (26th March, 2020 BTSelem)
- S C Molavi and Eyal Weizman (2020) The Viral Emergency in Palestine
- Gisha, Legal Centre for Freedom of Movement(2021) (Eng) (Ara) (Heb)
- The UK-Palestine Mental Health Network invited Palestinian doctors (Prof. Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Dr Abu Jamei) to discuss the impacts of COVID on life in Palestine and mental health: https://ukpalmhn.com/cafe-palestine/cafe-palestine-index/
HEALTHCARE AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES IN PALESTINE
The Israeli occupation geographically fragments Palestine, making it harder to organise and administrate a centralised or synthesised healthcare system, and for NGOs to deliver aid. This multiplicity and overlap can lead to inefficiency in healthcare provision. There have been many sociopolitical changes that form the base of the current healthcare system, from colonial restructuring in British Mandate Palestine (1918-1948), the ongoing occupation by Israel, and a shift by Fatah towards diplomatic negotiation and international financial backing that allows global NGOs to provide aid including healthcare. These services exist alongside more marginalised traditional cultural treatments for ill health. Communication between medical services in the oPt are sometimes effected by political disagreements between the two main political parties in the PA, with an increasing gap in the quality of healthcare services between the West Bank (improving) and Gaza (declining). In the Gaza Strip residents are more likely to be classified as refugees, where access to psychiatric services are provided by UNWRA, instead of longer-term systematic psychiatric care. In Gaza there is an even wider gap between the frequency and type of psychiatric conditions (rates of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder [PTSD], Anxiety, Depression) and the lack of infrastructure available.


There has been a recent decline in donations to international NGOs in Palestine (-30% in 2015, WHO 1)due to a lack of apparent political progression, which leads to ‘donor fatigue’ or ‘occupation fatigue’, combined with post-2008 global economic recession, and shift in emphasis to the refugee ‘crisis’ in Europe. UNRWA is now at a critical juncture where the majority of its funding has been withdrawn by the US government, which historically had been its main source of income. The occupation directly impacts access to healthcare in a number of ways: Palestinians need to obtain a permit to travel between Gaza and the West Bank for healthcare or to access to health services in Israel or neighbouring countries, where Israeli hospitals charge high fees for services. The application process and provision of permits are often delayed or denied without apparent reason, leading to missed healthcare, where 22.6% of travel permits are denied or delayed in the West Bank. Trade restrictions mean that medicines imported into Palestine can be up to 7 times the global market prices2, including those for mental health (SSRIs, e.g. Prozac or Fluoxetine). The PA Ministry of Health often has to borrow money from Israel to cover these, at a high interest rate leading to further debt. In Gaza there is a chronic shortage of medicines, with 30%of essential medicines at zero stock.


COVID-19
Existing healthcare inequalities have been exacerbated during the pandemic, with the destruction of a COVID-19 test clinic that was under construction in Khirbet Ibziq, the West Bank3in March 2020, to track-and-trace services catering to Israeli or Hebrew speaking citizens, not made available in Arabic for Palestinians4. A COVID-19 vaccine has currently been made and administered to Israeli citizens (January 2021), but not to Palestinians, despite the fact that the state of Israel is responsible for the health of all the populations in the oPt5. The Israeli state has used the pandemic to expand the occupation, still undertaking house demolition and settlement construction, while residents are under lockdown, and Palestinian residents are under more restricted lockdown conditions that settlers in the same areas6.
FOOTNOTES
- World Health Organisation (WHO) Report (2017)
- 'Trade Facilitation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory: Restrictions and Limitations' United Nations (2014)
- Israel Confiscates Clinic Tents During COVID (26th March, 2020 BTSelem)
- S C Molavi and Eyal Weizman (2020) The Viral Emergency in Palestine
- Gisha, Legal Centre for Freedom of Movement(2021) (Eng) (Ara) (Heb)
- The UK-Palestine Mental Health Network invited Palestinian doctors (Prof. Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Dr Abu Jamei) to discuss the impacts of COVID on life in Palestine and mental health: https://ukpalmhn.com/cafe-palestine/cafe-palestine-index/