Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore , MD , USA.
Department of Community Medicine, Al Mustansiriya University , Baghdad , Iraq.
Glob Public Health. 2019 Oct;14(10):1414-1427. doi: 10.1080/17441692.2019.1609061. Epub 2019 Apr 29.
During ISIS occupation of the Northern Iraqi city of Mosul between June 2014 to June 2017, healthcare workers remaining in Mosul continued to provide medical services. Little is currently known about Iraqi healthcare workers' personal and professional lives in the ISIS healthcare system, and how these individuals adapted. This study sought to explore their experiences during occupation through thematic analysis of qualitative data from twenty interviews conducted immediately after ISIS withdraw from Mosul in August 2017. Participants were sampled from healthcare facilities still in operation after liberation and included healthcare workers of varying disciplines, age and gender. Participants described major changes to their personal and professional lives under ISIS and an extremely limited perceived ability to negotiate the challenges of providing healthcare in the ISIS system. They described terrifying working environments, the strict separation between the sexes, restricted movement, and continuous monitoring by the Al-Hesba morality police. Infractions of ISIS law and subsequent punishment, deaths and kidnappings, changes in personal relationships, poverty and the disrupted schooling of children were also discussed. The importance of protection by supervisors, access to additional money and transportation were highlighted. Understanding these hardships may help support the recovery of health workers experiencing similar situations. HCW: Healthcare Worker; PHCCs: Primary Health Care Clinics; ISIS: Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.
在 2014 年 6 月至 2017 年 6 月期间,伊斯兰国占领伊拉克北部城市摩苏尔期间,留在摩苏尔的医疗工作者继续提供医疗服务。目前,人们对伊拉克医疗工作者在伊斯兰国医疗系统中的个人和专业生活以及这些人如何适应这些生活知之甚少。本研究通过对 2017 年 8 月伊斯兰国从摩苏尔撤出后立即进行的 20 次访谈的定性数据分析,试图通过主题分析来探讨他们在占领期间的经历。参与者是从解放后仍在运营的医疗设施中抽取的,包括不同学科、年龄和性别的医疗工作者。参与者描述了他们在伊斯兰国统治下个人和职业生活的重大变化,以及在伊斯兰国系统中提供医疗服务的能力极其有限。他们描述了可怕的工作环境、男女严格隔离、行动受限以及不断受到 Al-Hesba 道德警察的监控。还讨论了违反伊斯兰国法律和随后的惩罚、死亡和绑架、人际关系的变化、贫困和儿童学业中断。强调了主管部门的保护、获得额外资金和交通的重要性。了解这些困难可能有助于支持经历类似情况的卫生工作者的恢复。 HCW:医护人员;PHCCs:初级保健诊所;ISIS:伊拉克和大叙利亚伊斯兰国。