How COVID-19 highlighted the need for infection prevention and control measures to become central to the global conversation: experience from the conflict settings of the Middle-East.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
34419586
Description
The COVID-19 pandemic has managed to bring to the foreground, in just few months, the conversation around what Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) experts have been pushing for decades to control the spread of infections. Implementing the basics of IPC has been a challenge for all affected countries battling with an exponential COVID-19 curve of infection, preventing nosocomial transmission of the disease in highly-resourced and stable contexts but more so in the conflict context of the Middle-East. COVID-19 has created additional challenges to a long list of existing ones hindering the implementation of optimal IPC measures, necessary to break the chain of infection of both respiratory and non-respiratory infections, in those settings. This paper outlines and gives examples of the challenges faced across the Middle East conflict setting and serves as a call for action for IPC to be prioritized, given the needed resources, and fed with contextualized evidence.
Date of Publication
2021-10
Publication Type
Article
Keyword(s)
Conflict Covid-19 Infection Prevention Control Middle-East
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Mouallem, Roula El | |
Moussally, Krystel | |
Williams, Anita | |
Repetto, Ernestina | |
Martino, Chiara | |
Sittah, Ghassan Abu |
Additional Credits
Series
International journal of infectious diseases
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
1201-9712
Access(Rights)
open.access