COVID-19 and Non-Communicable Diseases in the Eastern
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Commentary COVID-19 and non- communicable BMJ Glob Health: first published as 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006189 on 8 June 2021. Downloaded from diseases in the Eastern Mediterranean Region: the need for a syndemics approach to data reporting and healthcare delivery Ghiwa Nassereddine,1 Samia Habli,1 Slim Slama,2 Kasturi Sen,3 Anthony Rizk,4 Abla M Sibai1 To cite: Nassereddine G, Habli S, As of 30 April 2021, the Eastern Mediter- Summary box Slama S, et al. COVID-19 and ranean Region (EMR), home to nearly non- communicable diseases in the Eastern Mediterranean 700 million people across 22 diverse coun- ► As elsewhere, health services designed for the Region: the need for a tries, has reported 9 109 162 confirmed management and treatment of non-communicable syndemics approach to data cases of COVID-19 and 182 654 cumulative diseases (NCDs) have been repurposed to respond reporting and healthcare deaths since the beginning of the pandemic.1 to COVID-19 in many countries of the Eastern delivery. BMJ Global Health Pandemic response in the EMR is compli- Mediterranean Region (EMR). 2021;6:e006189. doi:10.1136/ ► Many countries of the EMR are distinctly challenged bmjgh-2021-006189 cated by compromised healthcare systems, prolonged conflicts and humanitarian crisis, by compromised healthcare systems, prolonged po- and suboptimal reporting and transparency litical unrest, conflict and humanitarian crisis, poor vital registration systems, suboptimal reporting and GN and SH contributed equally. in many countries of the region.2 Conse- dearth in publicly available data. quently, COVID-19 incidence rates have Received 3 May 2021 ► COVID-19 and NCDs are a syndemic—their syner- Accepted 18 May 2021 been uneven, fluctuating from less than 1000 gistic relationship leaves people living with NCDs at confirmed cases per million population in a higher risk of developing severe COVID-19 compli- Sudan, Syria, Somalia and Yemen to more cations, and patients who recover from COVID-19 are than 40 000 confirmed cases per million popu- more likely to develop long- term chronic conditions. lation in Lebanon, Qatar and Bahrain. Up to ► In the EMR, it is now more imperative than ever to recognise the interconnectedness of communicable this point in the pandemic, the five countries http://gh.bmj.com/ hardest hit with cumulative COVID-19 deaths diseases and NCDs, build stronger public health per capita have been Lebanon, Iran, Tunisia, systems to achieve universal health coverage and establish reliable surveillance systems. Palestine and Jordan and with the highest ► Working long- term and recognising how COVID-19 © Author(s) (or their overall cumulative deaths have been Iran, and NCDs are syndemically interlocked conditions employer(s)) 2021. Re- use 3 Iraq, Pakistan, Egypt and Morocco. may be the first step towards developing the nu- permitted under CC BY- NC. No In tandem, as the COVID-19 pandemic on June 9, 2021 by guest. Protected copyright. commercial re- use. See rights anced approaches that are needed to more compre- and permissions. Published by disrupts the delivery of health services, the hensively protect society’s vulnerable populations. BMJ. EMR has been reported to have the highest 1Faculty of Health Sciences, average disruption with 75% of essential American University of Beirut, health services (EHS) being compromised in and response plans.5 The United Nations Beirut, Lebanon 13 countries.4 Existing healthcare infrastruc- 2WHO Regional Office for the Development Programme’s NCD COVID-19 tures in the EMR have been repurposed to Eastern Mediterranean, Cairo, Vulnerability Index—designed to assess Egypt respond to the pandemic, with many of the 3 countries’ COVID-19 vulnerability due to the Wolfson College (CR), University disruptions affecting services designed for of Oxford, Oxford, UK underlying prevalence of NCDs and NCD risk the management, treatment and care of non- 4 Department of Anthropology communicable diseases (NCDs). More than factors—reports that 15 of 22 countries in and Sociology, Graduate the EMR rank above the global average. Even Institute of International and 40% of countries reported partial or full disrup- Development Studies, Geneva, tion to hypertension and diabetes manage- as vaccines for COVID-19 roll out globally, Switzerland ment, cancer treatment, asthma services, inoculating the vast majority of the world’s rehabilitation services and palliative care. This population will be a global health impera- Correspondence to tive for some time to come, and a short-term Anthony Rizk; is despite official reporting that continuity of anthony. rizk@ graduateinstitute. NCD services is included as essential services end to the pandemic remains out of reach. ch in national COVID-19 strategic preparedness In the interim, priorities and practices left Nassereddine G, et al. BMJ Global Health 2021;6:e006189. doi:10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006189 1 BMJ Global Health unchanged, NCD care will continue to suffer in the response, funding and human resources have further BMJ Glob Health: first published as 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006189 on 8 June 2021. Downloaded from region and beyond.6 shifted to cater specifically for the emergency, prioritising In recent commentaries,7 8 COVID-19 and NCDs have care for patients with COVID-19 over many other diseases, increasingly been referred to as a syndemic—defined including NCDs.12 Hospital and clinic staff, including by Singer et al as socially determined and co-occurring physicians from specialties that are not related to infec- diseases that interact to produce disease clusters.9 The tious diseases, as well as epidemiologists and nurses, have synergism between COVID-19 and NCDs is double- been redeployed to serve in emergency departments sided.10 On the one hand, existing NCDs, such as cardio- and intensive care to care for patients with COVID-19.12 vascular disease, diabetes mellitus, cancer and chronic Furthermore, lockdown measures in most countries have obstructive pulmonary disease, have been shown to cause disrupted continuity of care for patients with NCDs and higher risk of complications, higher likelihood of need of postponement of routing medical appointments and intensive care unit admissions, and poorer prognosis and tests affecting healthcare service access and availability increased mortality among patients with COVID-19.11 On to people with NCDs.5 Restrictions to mobility due to the other hand, patients who survive COVID-19 are likely lockdown measures have limited access to preventive to develop or have further entrenched long-term chronic and control services.12 This has resulted in diminishing conditions.12 returns of earlier investments towards achieving Sustain- More fundamentally, a syndemics approach empha- able Development Goals (SDGs) in reducing premature sises how disease clusters are socially, economically and mortality from NCDs by one- third by 2030.17 Such a ‘covi- politically determined. As Maani et al note, health and disation’ of care will likely lead to unintended long- term wellness compromised by social inequalities in prepan- consequences, even as the COVID-19 pandemic subsides. demic times became and will continue to be reflected in The pandemic has increased our awareness of the poor health outcomes associated with NCDs throughout several endemic concerns to the EMR. It has also empha- the course of the pandemic going forward.13 Social sised key areas for reform, the resolution of which is long determinants of NCDs, such as loss of livelihood, poor overdue. nutrition and psychological distress, will only continue First, it is now more imperative than ever before to build to increase with growing global inequalities and poverty, stronger public health systems to achieve universal health which are further exacerbated by the economic impact of coverage (UHC) and ensure all people are able to receive COVID-19 pandemic control measures.13 Mendenhall14 the spectrum of health services they need—promotion, emphasises that context matters in syndemics. In some prevention, treatment, rehabilitation and palliation.18 places, the pandemic has exposed the fragility of NCD The COVID-19 pandemic is a striking reminder of the care and weaknesses in the way health systems are funded interconnectedness of UHC and health emergencies, of and organised.14 This is particularly important for forcibly the need to invest more towards achieving a target 3·8 of displaced persons and refugees and for resource- scarce the United Nations SDGs where ‘no one is left behind’. communities and reflects, in turn, the extreme impact of Second, the lack of reliable surveillance system for moni- poverty, on the one hand, and privilege, on the other, in toring and control and the dearth in publicly available http://gh.bmj.com/ determining exposure and shielding from transmission. data have made building data infrastructures by regional The EMR is such a context. To take one example among governments vital going forward.19 Many health informa- many, mortality among Palestinian refugees in Lebanon tion systems are currently weak and do not capture NCD has been reported to be three times higher than the service utilisation and outcomes.20 It is impossible to Lebanese population, a finding attributed to pre- existing appropriately plan disease outbreak response strategies conditions such as pulmonary and cardiac diseases, all without reliable, disaggregated, transparent and openly on June 9, 2021 by guest. Protected copyright. against a background of poverty and overcrowding.15 accessible data, and an extensive