Most regrettable is the simplistic recommendation for “enforcement of, and adherence to, public health and social measures” by the governments in the Eastern Mediterranean region as the effective approach to address the resurge in SARS-CoV-2 infections, without any discussion of how such enforcement can be applied within these coercive contexts where violence is a key contextual determinant in public health. No consideration is shown of how the livelihoods of Syrian, Lebanese, and Sudanese people, among others, are dependent on daily wages in the informal labour markets, or that many social gatherings in these countries are, in fact, queues for food and medication. Such omissions highlight the real dangers inherent to organisations adopting a narrowly epidemiological approach in a region in which the trajectory of the pandemic is so strikingly shaped by the social and political determinants of health.
I declare no competing interests.
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Article InfoPublication HistoryIdentificationDOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(21)01237-X
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ScienceDirectAccess this article on ScienceDirect Linked ArticlesNew COVID-19 resurgence in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean regionAfter 7 weeks of falling numbers of COVID-19 cases , a global upsurge was reported during the week of Feb 22, 2021. This case resurgence was observed earlier in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region, where, between Jan 30 and Feb 26, 2021, the number of weekly cases increased from 158 004 to 207 424 (31%; appendix).
Full-Text PDF Addressing the real trajectory of COVID-19 in the Eastern Mediterranean region – Authors' replyOur Correspondence1 was based on the analysis of available data on the COVID-19 pandemic in the Eastern Mediterranean region. The objectives were to highlight the upsurge in COVID-19 cases since February, 2021, and to alert about the risk of further degradation of the epidemiological situation due to the evolution of key determinants, such as the decreased adherence to public health and social measures, emergence of more transmissible variants, and insufficient vaccination coverage.
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