A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, May 1, 2016
Palestinian doctors train in Canada to help sick kids back home
Palestinian
Healthy Child Fellowship seeks to provide Palestinian doctors with
specialised paediatric training, raise level of care in West Bank, Gaza
Strip, East Jerusalem
Amir Atawna has been training for almost two years to care for premature babies (MEE/Jillian D'Amours)
Jillian D'Amours-Saturday 30 April 2016
Toronto, Canada – When
Amir Atawna returns to Hebron in July, he will be one of only four
Palestinian physicians specially trained to care for premature babies.
Atawna has spent almost two years as a fellow at the Hospital for Sick
Children in Toronto, training with the best in neonatal health care.
It’s an area of paediatrics that the doctor says is lacking in Palestine
– and one he hopes to improve upon his return.
“The main mortality rates among children [are] in the newborn period,
due to prematurity itself,” he told Middle East Eye at the cafeteria at
Sick Kids, as the hospital is commonly known. “We need this specialty to
improve.”
Atawna, 33, came to Canada in July 2014 to participate in the
Palestinian Healthy Child Fellowship, which seeks to provide Palestinian
doctors with specialised paediatric training, and in turn, raise the
level of care in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem.
Atawna, who did his residency in paediatrics at Al Makassed hospital in
East Jerusalem, said that while about five in 1,000 babies die when born
prematurely in Israel, that number is four times higher in Palestine,
at 20 deaths per 1,000 births.
He said he was drawn to neonatal care after meeting a mother at a
hospital in Bethlehem in 2008 who had given birth to twins only 28 weeks
(seven months) into her pregnancy. The newborns weighed around one
kilogramme each.
“I liked the way [the doctors] managed to care for those babies. They
got bigger and older and they became very healthy. It was something that
pushed me towards [this specialty],” Atawna said.
“A lot of those premature babies who are born [at] less than one kilo
die early on because of a lack of specialists, because of a lack of
technical support [like] ventilators and incubators. When I go back, I
hope that I can help.”
Making a ‘fundamental’ change
Dr. Rand Askalan, a Palestinian doctor who came to Canada in 1995,
launched the fellowship program for Palestinian paediatric doctors six
years ago after noticing a gap in services in the West Bank.
Both Askalan’s parents fled Nablus, in the West Bank, during the war of 1967.
She returned to the West Bank in 2002, during the height of the Second
Intifada, with a group of volunteer doctors. At the time, she had just
finished medical school at the University of Toronto and was in her
first year of paediatric neurology at Sick Kids Hospital.
Askalan navigated Israeli checkpoints and closures to provide primary health care to Palestinians in the West Bank, many of whom were living under strict, Israeli army-imposed curfews and had no access to medical care.
“We went to villages where they hadn’t seen doctors for months … It was terrible,” she said.
“All the villages were under curfew. We had every day to negotiate our
way with the Israeli army to enter the villages, despite the fact that
our cars were very well-designated as [being from] a Canadian medical
mission.”
That experience stayed with her, and when she returned to Canada, she
began fundraising to bring Palestinian children to Toronto for
treatment. When she finished her studies, she returned to Palestine more
often to hold clinics and teach students.
“I realised how bad the situation was when it comes to sub-specialties
in paediatrics. We have general paediatricians, but then when children
need a specialised [treatment] … then things fall apart,” she said.
She told MEE that when children need specialised treatment, they either
succumb to their disease because Palestinian paediatricians don’t have
the needed expertise, or are forced to travel to neighbouring countries
at a high cost to their family.
If Palestinian children secure permits to enter Israel for treatment,
then they worry about having their treatment interrupted as a result of
checkpoint closures or permit problems.
“I started thinking, ‘OK, we have to address this in a more fundamental
way, which is basically invest in people,’ and train the Palestinian
paediatricians so that they won’t depend on help from the outside,” she
said.
‘A domino effect’
The first Palestinian doctor to come to Toronto on a Palestinian Healthy
Child Fellowship arrived in March 2011. “He was from Nablus,” Askalan
said, laughing, “honestly by chance.”
The first two doctors to be trained were from the West Bank, but Palestinian physicians from Gaza have also taken part.
Generally, two doctors begin the two-year fellowship each year and it
costs about $350,000 to support four fellows annually. That money is
collected through donations from individuals, Askalan said.
Three new fellows will arrive this July. “They really work hard. They
are very dedicated. They know this is a chance of a lifetime and they
really take it seriously,” she said.
“You’re not just affecting the life of one individual. The impact is like a domino effect.”
Askalan said a past fellow from Hebron who returned to the West Bank has
since expanded the intensive-care unit at the local Red Crescent
Hospital. He also introduced a cooling system to aid infants that are
born without oxygen to their brains.
“This was never done in Palestine,” she said about the cooling system.
“When we see this, we say, ‘Yes!’ That is exactly what the program is
aiming to do. You have invested in people and … they are making an
impact when they go back.”
Askalan stressed, though, that the fellowship’s goal is to improve the lives of children in Palestine.
“If [the doctors] don’t go back, what’s the point? It’s great that
you’re training Palestinians, that’s fabulous, but [if] then they go and
work elsewhere, the Palestinian child living in Palestine didn’t
benefit from this,” she said.
“The program is for the Palestinian child living in Palestine. These
kids need their doctors to be there, to be with them in the community,
and have access to them when needed.”
Bringing innovation home
Mahmoud Shbair is from Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. The
37-year-old father of two is finishing his Palestinian Healthy Child
Fellowship at Sick Kids Hospital in paediatric haematology and oncology,
the study of blood-based diseases and cancers.
Mahmoud Shbair is from Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip (MEE/Jillian D'Amours)
He told MEE that the sector is severely under-developed in Gaza. As a
result, Palestinian children diagnosed with these types of cancers are
often forced to seek treatment in Egypt, Jordan or Israel, if they can
leave the territory at all.
“Kids may need to wait for three or four weeks with leukemia, for example, without receiving any treatment,” he said.
Shbair said he wants to establish the first specialised unit for cancer
treatments in the Gaza Strip when he returns home. But securing the
necessary equipment to treat these diseases, including machines that
diagnose blood cancer types and conduct genetic analyses, is crucial.
Despite the challenge, he said he’s hopeful about being able to provide
better care for Palestinian children, and helping build a
self-sufficient health-care system in Gaza.
“Here [in Canada], a child diagnosed with leukemia will start treatment
the next day … It’s difficult for any [Palestinian] family to look at
their kids having leukemia for three weeks, waiting for security
approval to go wherever he can be treated,” Shbair said.
“It’s a great [amount of] suffering on the families and on the kids and everybody.”