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Dateline ACTOPT 01/07A call for 'dignified health care'By Chris Herlinger, ACT InternationalTurmus'ayya, West Bank, January 26, 2007—Going to the hospital for the first time is difficult enough without worrying about strikes by hospital workers. But the relatives of Yousef Abed Elatif Sedqee had to factor that in when they recently took the 7-year-old from the West Bank village of Megaer to the nearby clinic run by Augusta Victoria Hospital in the village of Turmus'ayya. Young Yousef had hurt his hand in an accident - requiring clinic personnel to remove a nail from one of his fingers. Normally such minor surgery would have been treated at a Ramallah hospital the family normally uses. But Yousef's uncle, Ahmed Azem Naessan, said that hospital was affected by the strike of public hospital employees angry about not getting paid - the result of international sanctions imposed on the Palestinian Authority since early 2006 for the victory of the militant party Hamas in Palestinian legislative elections. Luckily the option to go to Turmus'ayya proved a good one - it is closer to Megaer, and the clinic staff proved attentive as the crying Yousef valiantly endured the agony of local anesthesia, surgery and stitches. But the mental calculus of which hospital to use can get more complicated, with others living in the West Bank having to take into account the issues of checkpoints, travel time and permits needed to go to restricted areas. Stories of pregnancies ending in death for either newborn or mother due to time at Israeli-West Bank border checkpoints are common, as are the frequent, if matter-of-fact, recollections of travel restrictions that can cause what would take a 45-minute trip into a 17-hour journey. "Everybody wants to be out of this game, this game of politics," said Ahmad Abu Al Halaweh, manager of Augusta Victoria Hospital's diabetes center. Al Halaweh said the it had been a difficult year "on the ground" in the Palestinian territories: a report released by UNICEF in mid-December said that with "a massive swell in unemployment, and two-thirds of the population already living below the poverty threshold, humanitarian conditions have been pushed to the brink of collapse. The very fabric of Palestinian society is under extreme duress." It doesn't require a United Nations report to see that. Augusta Victoria—a Lutheran World Federation (LWF) institution that has long received assistance by members of the Action by Churches Together (ACT) International alliance (of which it is also a member)—runs four village clinics in the West Bank. Aside from the clinic in Turmus'ayya, another is in nearby West Bank village of Shuqba, about an hour's drive from Turmus'ayya. The clinic serves about 5,000 persons a year. Shuqba is small hamlet where, in early November last year, the olive picking season on the area's hillside terraces was in full swing. Driving there is instructive, partly because a visitor can get a good view of the controversial separation barrier that the Israeli government has constructed for what it says are justified security measures, given the threat that Israeli officials say is real. The view from inside the barrier's boundaries is often different, as those involved in humanitarian work have pointed out: Palestinian land has been annexed*, they said, while there are Palestinians who now live on the Israeli side of the barrier who no longer have access to their homes or to schools. One of those who has watched this situation unfold is Dr. George Imseih, an August Victoria pediatrician who works at the Shuqba clinic. He said emotional and psychological problems are becoming increasingly prevalent among the clinic's patients, given the area's high rates of unemployment and increasing militarization. A particularly dire problem, he said, is the increase of family violence, which along with mental health problems, are not something that people in a culture marked by modesty and decorum speak of freely or openly. Then there is the problem of medical access itself - for many patients getting to Shuqba and the attendant difficulties of making their way through a dizzying maze of checkpoints are problems enough. "We don't want to blame everything on the Israelis," said Dr. Imseih, a soft-spoken, gentle man. "But the Israeli occupation is having a major impact on the situation here." He added: "Building bridges would be better for Israeli's security than building walls." That is a theme that Dr. Tawfiq Nasser, Augusta Victoria Hospital's chief executive officer, took up with almost startling passion in an interview an hour later at the Turmus'ayya clinic, just down the hall from where young Yousef had had his finger stitched up. Nasser declared that the Israeli occupation and resulting political stalemate were creating a "disastrous health situation" that had fragmented the Palestinian health care system, creating isolated "cantons" in which the ability of first responders was hampered and made it impossible to create a "center of (medical) excellence" within the West Bank. He noted that a system of checkpoints made it impossible to establish an effective medical referral system that could, as one example, improve prenatal care. "It's an unnatural way to run a health care system," he said. Frustrated that day by what he said were a series of bureaucratic snafus involving travel permits that would hinder his return to Jerusalem and harm his staff's ability to carry out their medical work, he asked, his voice rising : "And who is punished? The patients. Hamas, they're not punished. It's my patients." Dr. Nasser was soon called away - so it was up to Turmus'ayya's mayor, Mohammad Jamil Abu Said, 68, to finish the interview. Despite all the attendant frustrations his community has experienced, the mayor said the presence of the Augusta Victoria clinic - a recent development, only in place since August - was a needed balm. He said he admired the Augusta Victoria staff's commitment to provide care amid so many problems. He then returned to an oft-heard theme that day. He said: "We need a system of dignified health care." (ends) :: Chris Herlinger, a communications officer for ACT member Church World Service and a New York-based freelance journalist, was recently in Gaza as a member of a delegation of journalists who won the 2006 Eileen Egan Award for Journalistic Excellence, a prize awarded by the humanitarian organization Catholic Relief Services, which is not affiliated with ACT or CWS. [* Note: The seperation barrier goes beyond Israel's internationally recognised borders and into Palestinian Territory.]
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