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16
Further disease outbreaks are likely if the refugees’ living conditions don’t improve.

Diphtheria, a disease long forgotten in most parts of the world thanks to increasing rates of vaccination, is re-emerging in Bangladesh, where more than 655,000 Rohingya have sought refuge since 25 August, following increased violence in Myanmar. As of 21 December, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has seen more than 2,000 suspected cases in its health facilities and the number is rising daily. The majority of patients are between five and 14 years old.

“I was very surprised when I got that first call from the doctor at the clinic telling me that he had a suspected case of diphtheria,” says Crystal Crystal VanLeeuwen, MSF emergency medical coordinator for Bangladesh.

“‘Diphtheria?’ I asked, ‘Are you sure?’ When working in a refugee setting you always have your eyes open for infectious, vaccine-preventable diseases such as tetanus, measles and polio, but diphtheria was not something that was on my radar.”

Diphtheria is a contagious bacterial infection that often causes the buildup of sticky grey-white membrane in the throat or nose. The infection is known to cause airway obstruction and damage to the heart and nervous system. The fatality rate increases without the diphtheria antitoxin (DAT). With global shortages of DAT and the limited quantity that arrived in Bangladesh just over a week ago, the likelihood of a public health emergency looms, threatening a population that has fled the threat of violence and is now faced with another: the outbreak of disease.

If patients don’t receive DAT early on in the progression of their illness, the toxin continues to circulate in the body. This can cause damage to the nervous, cardiac and renal systems weeks after the initial recovery period.

“The first suspected case we identified was a woman around 30 years old,” explains VanLeeuwen. “She came to our health facility in early November and we treated her with antibiotics. She left the clinic, only to return to us over five weeks later. Then she had numbness in her arms, could barely stand or walk and had difficulty swallowing. It is too late to give her DAT at this stage.”

As of today, there are only less than 5,000 vials of DAT globally. “There is not enough of the medication to treat all of the people in front of you who need it and we are forced to make extremely difficult decisions,” says VanLeeuwen. “It becomes an ethical and equity question.”

The emergence and the spread of diphtheria show how vulnerable Rohingya refugees are. The majority of them are not vaccinated against any diseases, as they had very limited access to routine healthcare, including vaccinations, back in Myanmar. Diphtheria is transmitted by droplets and spreads easily in the refugee settlements where people live in overcrowded conditions, with shelters squeezed up against each other and sometimes families with up to 10 people living in one very small space.

MSF has responded to the rapid spread of diphtheria by converting one of its mother and child inpatient facilities in Balukhali makeshift settlement, and the inpatient facility near Moynarghona – which was only days away from opening – into a diphtheria treatment centre.

Alongside this, MSF has set up a treatment centre in Rubber Garden, which was previously a transit centre for new arrivals. The total bed capacity will grow to 415 beds by 25 December. To prevent the further spread of the disease, our teams are also doing tracing and treatment of people who might have come in contact with the disease in the community. As soon as a case is identified, a team visits the family, gives them antibiotics and searches the area for additional cases for referral and treatment.

To contain the spread of the diseases, the most important measure is to ensure vaccination coverage in the shortest possible time. The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, with the support of other entities, has just started a mass vaccination campaign, which MSF has been supporting by setting up fixed points in our health posts.

But the challenges remain.

An unvaccinated person gains immunity after a minimum of two vaccines, administered four weeks apart. This is a population that knows little or nothing about the benefit of vaccines. Less than a month ago, the Rohingya already participated in a mass measles vaccination campaign. Many do not understand why they need another vaccine. Communication with the population is key to ensuring good vaccination coverage. MSF is also trying to ensure all newly arrived refugees are vaccinated before they are relocated into the camps. But given the time required to complete the course of vaccination, and in the absence of a place where they can be temporally sheltered, it’s a big challenge. As a medical humanitarian organisation, we also face a dilemma.

“Even before the diphtheria, there was a severe lack of inpatient bed capacity. Now we have had to convert those scarcely available beds into dedicated treatment and isolation areas for diphtheria patients only,” says Crystal VanLeeuwen.

“The women and children who previously had access to the facility no longer have this as an option. This is also creating a strain on the space and staffing available in non-diphtheria inpatient facilities that have taken on these patients. The teams have been adapting to the rapidly changing situation but we all face new challenges each day.”

“These diphtheria cases come on top of an ongoing outbreak of measles and the huge load of general and emergency health needs of this many people,” says Pavlos Kolovos, MSF head of mission for Bangladesh.

“They are already vulnerable, coming with almost no vaccination coverage. Now they are living in an extremely densely populated camp, with poor water and hygiene conditions. Until those problems are addressed and improved, we will continue to face further disease outbreaks and not just of diphtheria.”

Source: https://reliefweb.int/report/bangladesh/bangladesh-emergence-diphtheria-worsens-situation-rohingya-refugees

17
Despite progress in primary health care (PHC) since the Alma Ata Declaration in 1978, challenges to the provision
of primary health care in Bangladesh still remain. Although the Government takes lead responsibility for national policy, planning and decision making for all health care and is – through the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) – the major health service provider, a PHC structure is still non-existent in urban areas. The health system is pluralistic and weak in terms of cross-sectoral operation. Government PHC services are administered in rural areas through the ‘Upazila health complex’, which consists of three tiers: at sub-district level (the Upazila level), the union level, and the ward or community level. These three lower tiers of the health system are intended to reach Bangladesh’s estimated 105 million people living in rural areas, and provide an upward referral system towards more specialised treatment.

Every Upazila complex is required to provide the same suite of services, with their budget allocation based on patient bed numbers in their health facilities, rather than local needs at the community level, including usage and geographical particularities. In reality, there
are uncertainties about how functional community clinics actually are in offering these services, particularly in light of limited staffing and expertise, drug availability, and significant evidence of low usage.

Source: http://www.aidsdatahub.org/sites/default/files/publication/PRIMASYS-Bangladesh-2016.pdf

18
HIV/AIDS / HIV and AIDS in Bangladesh
« on: August 24, 2018, 08:19:47 PM »
The first case of HIV/AIDS in Bangladesh was detected in 1989.
Since then 1495 cases of HIV/AIDS have been reported (as of
December 2008). However UNAIDS estimates that the number of
people living with HIV in the country may be as high as 12,000, which
is within the range of the low estimate by UNICEF's State of the
World's Children Report 2009. The overall prevalence of HIV in Bangladesh is less than
1%, however, high levels of HIV infection have been found among injecting drug users (7%
in one part of the capital city, Dhaka). Due to the limited access to voluntary counseling and
testing services, very few Bangladeshi's are aware of their HIV status.

Although still considered to be a low prevalence country, Bangladesh remains extremely
vulnerable to an HIV epidemic, given its dire poverty, overpopulation, gender inequality and
high levels of transactional sex. The emergence of a generalized HIV epidemic would be a
disaster that poverty-stricken Bangladesh could ill-afford. It is estimated that without any
intervention the prevalence in the general adult population could be as high as 2% in 2012
and 8% by 2025

.
Bangladesh is in the unique position to succeed where several other developing countries
have not: to keep the AIDS epidemic from expanding beyond this current level by initiating
comprehensive and strategically viable preventative measures, avoiding a gradual spread of
HIV infection from high-risk groups to the general population.

Source: https://www.unicef.org/bangladesh/HIV_AIDS(1).pdf

19
The  American  Heart  Association  has  concluded  that depression can accelerate atherosclerosis as well as promote the onset and severity of the coronary risk factors of diabetes, hypertension, and high levels of low-density lipoprotein.The most important reason depression increases the risk for, or worsens outcomes in, cardiovascular disease, is its effects on lifestyle and compliance with recommended treatments. Depression has been shown to increase the risk of an unhealthy lifestyle,  including
smoking; diet higher in calories, salt, and saturated fat; and decrease in exercise and medication compliance. Each of these increases the risk of cardiovascular disease and worsens the outcome. The value of a healthy lifestyle and compliance with treatments can't be underestimated. The risk of myocardial infarction and strokes increases 10-fold in patients who do not follow their physicians recommendations, compared with those who do.

In fact, The prevalence of depression in patients with cardiovascular disease is threefold higher than that in the general population.

Source: https://www.amjmed.com/article/S0002-9343(16)30551-4/pdf

20
Mental health in health service delivery :

In the health system of Bangladesh, unfortunately, there is no specific authority or commission  to operate or supervise the mental health service nationwide and no day treatment facilities for mental health care either. To talk about specialized hospitals, there is only one mental hospital available in the country for a total of 0.4 beds per 100,000 population. So, most of the patients seeking mental health care are managed in the usual health care service delivery system. Depression, schizophrenia and mood disorders are the most prevalent mental disorders there.

If we magnify the mental health facilities in the context, there are 50 outpatient mental health facilities in the whole country and only 2 of them are for children and adolescents, which facilitates only 26 care seekers per 100,000 population. Apart from those, the number of community-based psychiatric inpatient units and community residential facilities are 31 and 11 respectively, which doesn’t even serve more than one person in every 100,000 population. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)  is the only coordinating body dedicated to public education and awareness campaigns on mental health and mental disorders. Though the number of beds in the lone mental hospital in Bangladesh has increased by 25% in the last five years, it is still scarce. Most of the admitted patients there suffer from schizophrenia and rest mostly from mood disorder . Sadly, although it is the only mental hospital of the country, there is no reservation for children and adolescents, whereas studies showed that 10-20% of children and adolescents experience signs of mental disorders globally and half of all mental illnesses begin by the age of 14, and three-quarters during the mid-20s.

 Barriers to mental health care seeking in Bangladesh:

There are a variety of factors inhibiting people to seek mental health care in Bangladesh, which both are dependent on individual, as well as societal factors. Social stigma, lack of relevant knowledge, and awareness seemed to play a major role. Most of neurotic patients do not prefer to consult or get admitted into psychiatric units due to social stigma, mental ward phobia, and poor maintenance of the working environment. Scarcity of health care facilities is another vital point, which is jeopardizing the mental health condition. Because of the limited resources and health care facilities, many people get deprived; accessibility and availability are two big issues there.

Inequity is profound at a large scale in the healthcare of Bangladesh. For example: distribution of beds is a barrier, which prevents the access for rural users and users from other religious, ethnic and linguistic minorities. A study showed that the density of psychiatrists around the largest city is 5 times higher than whole country.   In Bangladesh, health care services mostly depend upon out of pocket expenses, so does mental health care; only 0.1% patients get free services.  No mental disorder is covered in social insurance schemes either.

Mental health expenditures from government health department are less than 0.5%!!!. Moreover, around 67% of all the expenditures spent on mental health are devoted to mental hospitals and rarely for further research and mental health promotion. Considering human resources, in every 100,000 population, the accompanying number of human resources involved is only 0.49.
Whatever mental health services are there in South-East Asian regions, it is rounded of 0.00s comparing to the other parts of the world according to WHO-2005 global mapping of access to mental health services.

Source: https://www.snih.org/mental-health-care-bangladesh/

21
Outbreak of Nipah virus encephalitis in Kerala state of India

According to WHO report of South-East Asia,  On 19 May 2018, a Nipah virus disease (NiV) outbreak was reported from Kozhikode district of Kerala, India. This is the first NiV outbreak in South India. There have been 17 deaths and 18 confirmed cases as of 1 June 2018. The two affected districts are Kozhikode and Mallapuram. A multi-disciplinary team led by the Indian Government’s National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) is in Kerala in response to the outbreak. WHO is providing technical support to the Government of India as needed. WHO does not recommend the application of any travel or trade restrictions or entry screening related to NiV outbreak.

Nipah virus disease is an emerging infectious disease spread by secretions of infected bats. It can spread to humans through contaminated fruit, infected animals, or through close contact with infected humans.

Source: http://www.searo.who.int/entity/emerging_diseases/links/nipah_virus/en/

22
We all are well known about Steve Jobs his reputed organizations "Apple'. The lesson  from jobs here is that if your ultimate goal is to produce outstanding work, no matter which industry you're in, you must be comfortable with the fact that most of the work you produce you'll have to throw out. Jobs says it best:

People think focus means saying yes to the thing you've got to focus on. But that's not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are. You have to pick carefully. I'm actually as proud of the things we haven't done as the things I have done. Innovation is saying "no" to 1,000 things.

Whether it's design or business strategy subtraction adds value. Nobody produces all masterpieces. You've got to edit it down and throw away the crappy stuff. Take away unnecessary hardware parts from your computer, unnecessary code and features from your app, unnecessary products from your offering, extra words from your presentation. This is not easy, it takes guts to take away a physical keyboard from a smartphone but the results can be astounding. Throw away the crappy stuff and focus on the good stuff only which targeted.
Source: https://zurb.com/blog/steve-jobs-innovation-is-saying-no-to-1-0

23
Public Health / Why Is Children's Mental Health Important?
« on: July 03, 2018, 06:22:35 PM »

Mental health — an essential part of children's overall health — has a complex interactive relationship with their physical health and their ability to succeed in school, at work and in society. Both physical and mental health affect how we think, feel and act on the inside and outside.

For instance, an overweight young boy who is teased about his weight may withdraw socially and become depressed and may be reluctant to play with others or exercise, which further contributes to his poorer physical health and as a result poorer mental health. These issues have long-term implications on the ability of children and youth to fulfill their potential as well as consequences for the health, education, labor and criminal justice systems of our society.

For instance, a boy named Bobby is being physically abused by his father and often acts out aggressively at school. His behavior is a natural reaction to the abuse, but his behavior may also mark the beginning of undiagnosed conduct disorder. His teachers simply see him as a troublemaker and continually punish his behavior. Later, Bobby drops out of school as a teenager because he finds it a harsh and unwelcoming environment and is anxious to leave his abusive home and fend for himself. However, holding down a job is difficult because Bobby often clashes with his coworkers and supervisors due to his aggression. Bobby has also begun to self-medicate by abusing alcohol and has been arrested a number of times for drunken disorderliness. By the time Bobby finally receives a proper diagnosis of his conduct disorder and substance abuse, he is in his thirties and his mental health problems have become deeply entrenched. They will require extensive therapy, which Bobby probably cannot afford without a job that provides adequate health insurance. Things could have been very different if Bobby was referred to a psychologist in his childhood who could have diagnosed him, offered effective treatment, and alerted the authorities about the abuse.

All children and youth have the right to happy and healthy lives and deserve access to effective care to prevent or treat any mental health problems that they may develop. However, there is a tremendous amount of unmet need, and health disparities are particularly pronounced for children and youth living in low-income communities, ethnic minority youth or those with special needs.

Source: http://www.apa.org/pi/families/children-mental-health.aspx

24
Public Health / Gap in Mental Health sevices in South Asia
« on: September 20, 2017, 11:31:57 AM »
Mental health disorders– such as depression, anxiety, addiction, schizophrenia and neurosis – have a serious impact on health: they contribute up to 13% to the global burden of disease (WHO-2008). Low- and middle-income countries  of South Asia especially  Bangladesh experience a higher burden of mental disorders, and yet mental health conditions are often not perceived as serious health.
Now lets see the Mental Health services in Global Health perspectives:

According to the GLOBAL MAPPING OF ACCESS TO SERVICES (WHO-ATLAS-2005)
Europe received highest mental health services (45.6%),where western Pacific Areas (44/4%), America (19.0%), Africa (4.3%) but South Asia (0.0%)
That is in terms receiving mental health services in South Asia including Bangladesh is so insignificant that it is rounded off 0.0%. Our mental Health facilities, services, social stigma to mental, ignorance, lack social awareness are especially responsible factors. Overall medical health services in Bangladesh is satisfactory. However, those who work in Medical Atmosphere also hardly care about the mental fitness. Until and unless we are aware of mental health and possess a sound mental health personally and nationally.  We can not expect our out utmost development. 

25
Teaching & Research Forum / Gap in Mental Health sevices in South Asia
« on: September 20, 2017, 11:10:03 AM »
Mental health disorders– such as depression, anxiety, addiction, schizophrenia and neurosis – have a serious impact on health: they contribute up to 13% to the global burden of disease (WHO-2008). Low- and middle-income countries  of South Asia especially  Bangladesh experience a higher burden of mental disorders, and yet mental health conditions are often not perceived as serious health.
Now lets see the Mental Health services in Global Health perspectives:

According to the GLOBAL MAPPING OF ACCESS TO SERVICES (WHO-ATLAS-2005)
Europe received highest mental health services (45.6%),where western Pacific Areas (44/4%), America (19.0%), Africa (4.3%) but South Asia (0.0%)
That is in terms receiving mental health services in South Asia including Bangladesh is so insignificant that it is rounded off 0.0%. Our mental Health facilities, services, social stigma to mental, ignorance, lack social awareness are especially responsible factors. Overall medical health services in Bangladesh is satisfactory. However, those who work in Medical Atmosphere also hardly care about the mental fitness. Until and unless we are aware of mental health and possess a sound mental health personally and nationally.  We can not expect our out utmost development. 

26
Research is only the way in University education by which the world can be changed into our expected level. For this,  we, the teachers, first should have a complete research mind, and have to create a congenial atmosphere with available resources and logistic supports and equipment for research as well in our respective fields. In our research work, we need to include some of our enthusiastic students with giving some works and supervising them intensively. With the passage time, students would be able to work independently in a very big project. 

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