1. Leveraging the COVID-19 response to improve emergency care systems in the Eastern Mediterranean Region
- Author
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Hala Sakr, Pryanka Relan, Osman Elmahal, Dalia Samhouri, Slim Slama, Hani Mowafi, and Hamid Ravaghi
- Subjects
Emergency Medical Services ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Epidemiology ,International Cooperation ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Disease cluster ,World Health Organization ,Health Services Accessibility ,03 medical and health sciences ,Betacoronavirus ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pandemic ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Socioeconomics ,China ,Pandemics ,Health policy ,Mediterranean Region ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Health Policy ,Outbreak ,COVID-19 ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,General Medicine ,Religious mass ,Eastern mediterranean ,Geography ,Public Health Practice ,Public Health ,Coronavirus Infections ,Emergency Service, Hospital - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic began as a cluster of reported cases of acute respiratory illness in China on 31 December 2019 and went on to spread with exponential growth across the globe. By the time it was characterized as a global pandemic on 11 March 2020, 17 of 22 countries in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR) had reports of infected persons. EMR countries are particularly susceptible to such outbreaks due to the presence of globally interconnected markets; complex emergencies in more than half of the countries; religious mass gatherings that draw tens of millions of pilgrims annually; and variation in emergency care systems capacity and health systems performance within and between countries.
- Published
- 2020