人道主义危机对伊拉克和叙利亚-中东和北非地区糖尿病护理的影响

S. Odhaib, A. Mansour, suhad J. Khalifa, N. Shegem, Wael Thannon, M. Saad, Hazim Abdulrazaq, J. Belkhadir, Mohamad A. Sandid, S. Masood
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇简短的综述试图讨论2003年后伊拉克和2011年后叙利亚政治和军事冲突后人道主义危机期间影响糖尿病护理的因素。冲突对次优医疗保健系统和基础设施造成破坏性影响的模式非常相似。这两个国家长期和持续的地缘政治不稳定和安全问题是实施任何备灾计划的障碍。在这些拥有类似公私混合医疗体系的国家,他们明显已经耗尽了糖尿病护理。大量患有慢性病,特别是糖尿病的难民涌入邻国,给卫生保健系统带来了压力。它敦促在一定程度上得到援助组织的必要帮助下改变国家政策。本国庞大国民的国内流离失所问题使本已疲惫不堪的保健设施不堪重负,对有效平等地提供与糖尿病有关的药物和管理工具造成了更大的负担。然而,两国在危机期间没有将糖尿病护理作为缓解计划的重要组成部分,主要关注的是传染性疾病而非非传染性疾病。在危机期间,两国的1型糖尿病患者得到的治疗较少,胰岛素短缺是他们的主要问题。在营地和非营地环境中,糖尿病药物的可获得性和可负担性都不理想,令人不满意。需要更积极的规划来建立一个准备充分的医疗保健系统,将糖尿病护理作为一个组成部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of humanitarian crises on diabetes care in Iraq and Syria—IDF-MENA region
This short review tried to discuss the factors that affect diabetes care during humanitarian crises after the political and military conflicts in post-2003 Iraq and post-2011 Syria. The pattern of the devastating effect of the conflicts on the suboptimal healthcare system and infrastructure is quite similar. Both countries’ long-term and continuous geopolitical instability and security concerns were barriers to applying any disaster preparedness plans. They had markedly exhausted diabetes care in these countries with similar mixed public and private healthcare systems. The influx of huge numbers of refugees with chronic diseases, especially diabetes, in the neighboring host countries created pressure on the healthcare systems. It urged some changes in the national policies with the needed help from the aid organizations to an extent. The internal displacement problem for huge nationals in their country exhausted the already exhausted healthcare facilities, with more burdens on the effective equal provision of diabetes-related medication and management tools. Still, diabetes care is not included as a vital part of the mitigation plans during crises in both countries, with the main concern the communicable rather than non-communicable diseases. Type 1 diabetes mellitus received less care during the crisis in both countries, with the insulin shortage being their major concern. The availability and affordability of diabetes medications in camp and non-camp settings were suboptimal and unsatisfactory. More active planning is needed to build a well-prepared healthcare system with diabetes care as an integral part.
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