Mikhael Ehab Mudher, Al-Jumaili Ali Azeez
University of Baghdad College of Pharmacy, Baghdad, Iraq.
The University of Iowa College of Pharmacy, IA, USA.
Public Health Pract (Oxf). 2020 Nov;1:100004. doi: 10.1016/j.puhip.2020.100004. Epub 2020 Dec 22.
Iraq is one of seven Arabic countries (Lebanon, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Saudi Arabia) that acquired novel coronavirus-19 disease (COVID-19) via people who have visited Iran recently. Iraqi outdated public healthcare settings are already overwhelmed with many acute injuries from ongoing unrest. Iraq faces six challenges in controlling COVID-19 [1]: A shortage in number of quarantine facilities [2], the availability of the testing which is limited to one governmental lab only in Baghdad [3], a shortage in personal protective equipment (PPE) and ambulances [4], a low level of public awareness [5], a shortage in hygiene preparations and [6] a high rate of antibiotic resistance in case of secondary bacterial infection. Thus, Iraq alone cannot control such a rapidly emerging outbreak and needs help from the international community and the World Health Organization (WHO) to prepare additional medical labs, establish high standard quarantine facilities and provide medical equipment for healthcare professionals. On its side, Iraq needs to impose more restrictions on travel from countries with a COVID-19 outbreak as other countries have done.
伊拉克是七个阿拉伯国家(黎巴嫩、巴林、科威特、阿曼、卡塔尔和沙特阿拉伯)之一,这些国家通过近期访问过伊朗的人感染了新型冠状病毒肺炎(COVID-19)。伊拉克陈旧的公共医疗环境已经因持续动荡造成的许多急性损伤而不堪重负。伊拉克在控制COVID-19方面面临六大挑战[1]:隔离设施数量短缺[2]、检测仅局限于巴格达的一个政府实验室[3]、个人防护装备(PPE)和救护车短缺[4]、公众意识水平低[5]、卫生制剂短缺[6]以及继发细菌感染时抗生素耐药率高。因此,仅靠伊拉克自身无法控制如此迅速出现的疫情,需要国际社会和世界卫生组织(WHO)提供帮助,以增设医学实验室、建立高标准隔离设施并为医护人员提供医疗设备。就伊拉克自身而言,需要像其他国家那样,对来自出现COVID-19疫情国家的旅行实施更多限制。