Published Date: 2013-08-31 20:59:40
Subject: PRO/AH/EDR> Leishmaniasis - Syria (07): Turkey ex Syria, refugee camps
Archive Number: 20130831.1915697
LEISHMANIASIS - SYRIA (07): TURKEY ex SYRIA, REFUGEE CAMPS
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A ProMED-mail post
http://www.promedmail.org
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
http://www.isid.org
Date: Sat 31 Aug 2013
Source: IRIN [edited]
http://www.irinnews.org/report/98670/leishmaniasis-could-fuel-refugee-resentment-in-turkey-s-border-towns
Leishmaniasis could fuel refugee resentment in Turkey's border towns
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Squirming
in the doctor's chair as he braced for a shot in the forearm, the
wide-eyed boy was no different from scores of other refugee children who
have shuffled into Dr Tayfur Savas's clinic in southern Turkey over the
past 2 years, seeking treatment for a skin disease called
leishmaniasis.
But his mother's words have stayed with Savas ever
since. "These scars are a shame," Savas recalls her telling him.
"People think he's infectious. Our neighbours don't want to breathe the
same air. "She said people were refusing to sit by her son on the bus,"
he said, recalling the 4 black, crater-like lesions which ran along the
boy's forearm.
Savas said it was the 1st time he had heard of
Syrian refugees being stigmatized in Turkey for the illnesses they
carry, and a cautionary tale about the urgency of tackling communicable
diseases on both sides of the border. "Health issues can become social
issues," Savas told IRIN. "We don't want to risk worsening relations
between Turks and refugees; it is a tense situation already."
One
of the most widespread communicable diseases among Syrian refugees has
been cutaneous (skin-related) leishmaniasis, a vector-borne parasite
that is spread from human to human by sandflies, especially in
unsanitary or crowded conditions. It features large,
permanently-disfiguring sores.
This summer [2013], as the World
Health Organization (WHO) warned of the near collapse of the Syrian
health system, it acknowledged that hepatitis, typhoid, cholera, and
leishmaniasis have increasingly spread largely unchecked inside Syria
and among refugee populations.
Unlike visceral leishmaniasis,
cutaneous leishmaniasis typically is not life threatening, and has not
raised the same alarm bells as many other diseases. But "it is extremely
stigmatizing, and is especially catastrophic for young girls, who may
become unmarriageable because of the disfiguring scars it can leave on
the face and body," said Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of
Tropical Medicine at the Texas-based Baylor College of Medicine. "It
also looks extremely infectious, and people who don't know about the
disease are likely to fear infected people when they see the lesions."
Known
as "the Aleppo Evil", the disease's medieval nickname belies the fact
that -- while it has been endemic in Syria and the Middle East for
centuries -- it has largely been constrained to regions surrounding the
northern city, Syria's 2nd largest. "But this is also a disease that is
linked closely to human migration," says Hotez. "Refugees are sleeping
outdoors where they have no protection from sandflies, populations are
moving through Aleppo that have no previous exposure to the disease, and
access to health care is nonexistent. It creates a perfect storm that
allows 'the Aleppo Evil' to take hold."
An August [2013] report
by the Turkish Medical Association warned that border regions were
caught unprepared for leishmaniasis this summer, suggesting the country
"lacked an early warning system" and needed to implement more systematic
insecticide spraying and other precautionary measures in the future.
While
Turkey's health response to leishmaniasis has involved the treatment of
10s of thousands of patients in state-run camps and hospitals this year
[2013], much of the burden for treating the disease inside Turkey has
fallen on poorly supplied clinics, staffed by Syrian doctors and nurses,
in border towns. "Access to free health care is a guarantee for the 200
000 people inside the camps," said a spokesperson for Ankara's Disaster
and Emergency Management Directorate (AFAD).
But outside the
camps, Syrians "have been struggling to get treatment," said Saban
Alagoz, general secretary of the Gaziantep and Kilis Medical
Association. "The government and doctors' associations have just begun
to respond to this problem," he said, detailing the opening of a special
leishmaniasis clinic that was established in Gaziantep this year for
non-camp refugees. He estimated that Turkish doctors in the southern
towns of Gaziantep and Kilis have treated just under 10 000 cases of the
disease this summer. "Leishmaniasis has not crossed over in large
numbers to the Turkish population, but the problem is many Syrians still
don't have access to treatment," he said.
Many Syrians cannot
afford to pay for the injections which treat leishmaniasis, and seek out
clinics run by a patchwork of Syrian aid groups and activists that
treat refugees for free. Turkish hospitals as a rule do not charge for
emergency care for registered refugees, but often charge for medicines
and non-life threatening operations.
Speaking inside the hot,
crowded halls of an apartment-turned clinic in the dusty border town of
Kilis, Hasan al-Mallouhi of the Syrian Expatriate Medical Association
(SEMA) said the number of leishmaniasis patients at his clinic ranges
from "4-10 patients a day, though the number is sometimes as high as 30.
Anger can suddenly explode in unexpected ways. It's just another reason
we need to get this under control." For 4 months, the SEMA-run clinic
was the sole medical provider to nearly 3000 refugees who camped in
makeshift tents pitched in a municipal park at the centre of the town.
"These people can't even pay for real tents. So, of course, they can't
go to the hospital for medicines," said al-Mallouhi. The group said its
stocks of Glucantime, the most common medicine used against
leishmaniasis, had been kept afloat by donations from the international
medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres [Doctors Without Borders].
Government
authorities this month [August 2013] cleared out the makeshift camp and
transferred its inhabitants to a new camp near the town. "But our
clinic is still full every day," al-Mallouhi said. "Now we're seeing
people staying elsewhere in the town unable to afford any medical
treatment, so they come to us for help."
At a clinic run by the
Union of Syrian Medical Relief Organizations (UOSSM) in the border town
of Reyhanli, treating leishmaniasis has become even more difficult, as
stocks have dried up and need has grown inside Syria. Daher Zidan, the
clinic's head pharmacist, said the group this year sent enough
Glucantime to treat several thousand leishmaniasis patients to the
group's field hospital in Bab al-Hawa, just across the border. But UOSSM
says it does not have enough medicine to treat the roughly 10 patients
arriving daily in Reyhanli. "We know the problem is more urgent inside
Syria, so we send medicine there when we have it," Zidan said.
Because
Glucantime contains toxins, it cannot be purchased over the counter in
Turkey, and Syrian doctors are not allowed to acquire the medicine by
Turkish law. At a clinic perched above a car garage elsewhere in
Reyhanli, Dr Fatma Salah says those restrictions led her to the unusual
step of sourcing Glucantime from pharmacies inside Syria.
"Now
that supply has dried up," she said, noting that some sympathetic
Turkish doctors have supplied small batches of the medicine on the side
to help make up the shortage. "Still, for 2 months we haven't had the
ability to treat the 5 or so people who come in for leishmaniasis every
day. We're now focused on just getting painkillers, sanitary supplies,
very basic things," she said.
The burden on already overwhelmed
Syrian clinics is sure to increase as more refugees flood into Turkey.
The UN estimates that as many as one million refugees may be living in
Turkey by the end of the year [2013], straining health systems, housing
prices and social tensions. AFAD currently houses just over 200 000 in
camps, and a spokesperson said it will have trouble assisting the
additional 300 000 refugees who are already in Turkey but do not live in
camps. "We're working on getting more free treatment to people outside
the camps for measles and leishmaniasis," said Alagoz, who nonetheless
acknowledged that capacity for free treatment was highly unlikely to
meet demand. "Right now, we're mostly working on understanding just how
big this problem is."
The government has not yet taken
preventative steps, such as indoor spraying or the distribution of
insecticide-treated bednets, he added.
A study by the Turkish
charity Support to Life (STL) warned in August [2013] that as savings
run dry and families are no longer able to independently pay for their
own medical expenses, the material and medical needs of urban refugees
already living in Turkey is also likely to grow exponentially.
As
demand among Syrians for free health care rises, many Turks say they
are unsure if hospitals should change their policy of charging for care.
"We've given enough to refugees here," said Selma Doganer, a high
school teacher in Antakya. Doganer suggested international aid
organizations, not Ankara, should pay future bills. "Syrians may think
our prime minister will pay for everything. But we are paying much of
the bill."
If the capacity of clinics to treat the communicable
diseases of Syrians does not grow with demand, the spread of the disease
might add another dimension to already strained tensions. Most of those
tensions have been attributed to ethnic fault lines between Sunni
refugees and large populations of Alawite and Alevi Turks who live along
the border. But even without sectarian differences, foreigners are
often the 1st to take the blame when something goes wrong.
Savas,
the doctor, points to the Reyhanli bombing, when over 50 people in the
border town died this May: "Reyhanli is a Sunni town, but suddenly they
began to blame the refugees for everything that happened. Anger can
suddenly explode in unexpected ways." He suggests that leishmaniasis,
with its visible, infectious-looking sores, will not help the problem.
"It's just another reason we need to get this under control," he said.
Hotez, the US academic, agrees: "It's one of the most stigmatizing
diseases you can have."
[Byline: Noah Blaser]
--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>
[It
has been expected that cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) would increase in
the camps hosting refugees from Syria. The problem is expected to exist
as well in Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq (see posting from 17 Jul 2013 on
Syrian refugees in Iraq). The article clearly illustrates the stain on
the health system and the inadequate resources available in the refugee
camps.
ProMED just published a review of potential emerging
diseases as a result of the conflict in Syria (Infectious disease risk
from the Syrian conflict: Petersen E, Baekeland S, Memish ZA,
Leblebicioglu H. Int J Infect Dis. 2013 17(9):e666-7). CL is high on the
list of emerging infections in the refugee camps, as are measles,
influenza, MERS-CoV and gastrointestinal infections. - Mod.EP
A HealthMap/ProMED-mail map can be accessed at: http://healthmap.org/r/1Cfs.]