Vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to COVID-19: quantitative insights

Abstract Lebanon, a middle-income country with ongoing political turmoil, unstable economic situation, and a fragmented and under-resourced health system, hosts about one million Syrian refugees since 2011. While the country is currently experiencing substantial COVID-19 epidemic spread, no outbreak...

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Main Authors: Fouad M. Fouad, Stephen J. McCall, Houssein Ayoub, Laith J. Abu-Raddad, Ghina R. Mumtaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-03-01
Series:Conflict and Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-021-00349-6
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spelling doaj-5117f6cbc43a4e2f8275fe047d5bcbf32021-03-11T12:55:12ZengBMCConflict and Health1752-15052021-03-011511610.1186/s13031-021-00349-6Vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to COVID-19: quantitative insightsFouad M. Fouad0Stephen J. McCall1Houssein Ayoub2Laith J. Abu-Raddad3Ghina R. Mumtaz4Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, American University of BeirutCenter for Research on Population and Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, American University of BeirutDepartment of Mathematics, Statistics, and Physics, Qatar UniversityInfectious Disease Epidemiology Group, Weill Cornell Medical College – Qatar, Cornell University, Qatar Foundation - Education CityDepartment of Epidemiology and Population Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, American University of BeirutAbstract Lebanon, a middle-income country with ongoing political turmoil, unstable economic situation, and a fragmented and under-resourced health system, hosts about one million Syrian refugees since 2011. While the country is currently experiencing substantial COVID-19 epidemic spread, no outbreaks have been reported yet among Syrian refugees. However, testing of this population remains limited and exposure levels are high given dire living conditions and close interaction with the host community. Here, we use quantitative insights of transmission dynamics to outline risk and contextual factors that may modulate vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to potentially large COVID-19 epidemics. Syrian refugees live in close contact with the host community, and their living conditions are favorable for epidemic spread. We found that the high levels of crowding within Syrian refugee households and among those in informal tented settlements, the inadequate water supply and sanitation, limited use of masks, inadequate access to health care, and inadequate community awareness levels are vulnerability factors that directly impact important parameters of transmission dynamics, leading to larger epidemic scale. Poverty, stigma, and fear of legal consequences are contextual factors that further exacerbate this vulnerability. The relatively high prevalence of non-communicable diseases in this population could also affect the severity of the disease among those infected. Mathematical modeling simulations we conducted illustrated that even modest increases in transmission among Syrian refugees could result in a large increase in the incidence and cumulative total number of infections in the absence of interventions. In conclusion, while the young age structure of the Syrian refugee population might play a protective role against the scale and disease-burden severity of a potential COVID-19 epidemic, the epidemic potential due to several vulnerability factors warrants an immediate response in this population group. Local and international actors are required to mobilize and coordinate efforts to prevent the transmission of COVID-19, and to mitigate its impact amongst the vulnerable refugee populations globally.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-021-00349-6RefugeeSyriaCOVID-19EpidemicVulnerability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fouad M. Fouad
Stephen J. McCall
Houssein Ayoub
Laith J. Abu-Raddad
Ghina R. Mumtaz
spellingShingle Fouad M. Fouad
Stephen J. McCall
Houssein Ayoub
Laith J. Abu-Raddad
Ghina R. Mumtaz
Vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to COVID-19: quantitative insights
Conflict and Health
Refugee
Syria
COVID-19
Epidemic
Vulnerability
author_facet Fouad M. Fouad
Stephen J. McCall
Houssein Ayoub
Laith J. Abu-Raddad
Ghina R. Mumtaz
author_sort Fouad M. Fouad
title Vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to COVID-19: quantitative insights
title_short Vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to COVID-19: quantitative insights
title_full Vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to COVID-19: quantitative insights
title_fullStr Vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to COVID-19: quantitative insights
title_full_unstemmed Vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to COVID-19: quantitative insights
title_sort vulnerability of syrian refugees in lebanon to covid-19: quantitative insights
publisher BMC
series Conflict and Health
issn 1752-1505
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Lebanon, a middle-income country with ongoing political turmoil, unstable economic situation, and a fragmented and under-resourced health system, hosts about one million Syrian refugees since 2011. While the country is currently experiencing substantial COVID-19 epidemic spread, no outbreaks have been reported yet among Syrian refugees. However, testing of this population remains limited and exposure levels are high given dire living conditions and close interaction with the host community. Here, we use quantitative insights of transmission dynamics to outline risk and contextual factors that may modulate vulnerability of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to potentially large COVID-19 epidemics. Syrian refugees live in close contact with the host community, and their living conditions are favorable for epidemic spread. We found that the high levels of crowding within Syrian refugee households and among those in informal tented settlements, the inadequate water supply and sanitation, limited use of masks, inadequate access to health care, and inadequate community awareness levels are vulnerability factors that directly impact important parameters of transmission dynamics, leading to larger epidemic scale. Poverty, stigma, and fear of legal consequences are contextual factors that further exacerbate this vulnerability. The relatively high prevalence of non-communicable diseases in this population could also affect the severity of the disease among those infected. Mathematical modeling simulations we conducted illustrated that even modest increases in transmission among Syrian refugees could result in a large increase in the incidence and cumulative total number of infections in the absence of interventions. In conclusion, while the young age structure of the Syrian refugee population might play a protective role against the scale and disease-burden severity of a potential COVID-19 epidemic, the epidemic potential due to several vulnerability factors warrants an immediate response in this population group. Local and international actors are required to mobilize and coordinate efforts to prevent the transmission of COVID-19, and to mitigate its impact amongst the vulnerable refugee populations globally.
topic Refugee
Syria
COVID-19
Epidemic
Vulnerability
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-021-00349-6
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