scholarly journals Remotely identifying potential vector habitat in areas of refugee and displaced person populations due to the Syrian civil war

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel N. Chambers ◽  
Joseph A. Tabor

Historically leishmaniasis is most prevalent in established urban centres but this research shows that refugees and, most significantly, internally displaced persons are now commonly in areas characterized by the presence of fly habitats potentially leading to higher prominence of Leishmania infection. Areas engulfed by the Syrian civil war has thus caused the dispersal of humans into previously unpopulated areas amid habitats of the sand fly Phlebotomus papatasi that hosts the parasite Leishmania. The addition of new places of exposure to this disease add to difficulties with respect to diagnosis as well as provision of care and treatment. We used geospatial methodology adapting it to remotely identifying and analyzing sand fly habitats with the aim of measuring how common it is. Our methodology helps avoid the issue of resolution in satellite imagery by measuring likelihood rather than strictly known locations. We followed up this information with spatial analysis identifying which civilian populations are most prone to sand fly exposure, and therefore leishmaniasis, due to their geographical situation. Our results suggest that those most likely to be exposed to Leishmania are internally displaced persons, those camps less likely to receive medical relief and typically having temporary residents migrating elsewhere.

2016 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 439-440

Forced migration has come to be the defining feature of the contemporary Middle East, a region that is both the source of and host to some of the largest forcibly displaced populations in the world. In 2015, 65 percent of the world's 19.4 million refugees—including the 5.5 million Palestinian refugees—as well as 30 percent of the world's thirty-eight million internally displaced persons were in the Middle East, while one out of every four refugees worldwide was from Syria. Seeking security and stability, millions of people from the region are on the move within and across social spaces that are at once strange and familiar, and in which they themselves are familiar and strange to others. In 2015, Turkey became host to the world's largest refugee population of over two million, while Zaʿatari camp in Jordan has grown rapidly to become one of the world's largest camps since the Syrian civil war began. With 7.6 million people—or 35 percent of the population—internally displaced, Syria now has the highest number of internally displaced persons in the world. Iraq has produced multiple overlapping displacements, resulting in one of the largest refugee resettlement programs of the past decade. Thousands of Syrians, Libyans, and Iraqis have undertaken perilous journeys across the Mediterranean Sea to seek asylum in Europe and elsewhere. Palestinian refugees are now in a fourth generation of exile, making their plight the longest running unresolved refugee situation in the world.


2006 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 43
Author(s):  
Shannon Doocy, PhD ◽  
Anita Shankar, PhD ◽  
Bahie Rassekh ◽  
Courtland Robinson, PhD ◽  
Gilbert Burnham, MD, PhD

A survey of 478 Indonesian households displaced by the tsunami was conducted in two districts in Aceh Province in late March and early April 2005. Essential services (shelter, water, food, health services) were provided to approximately half of internally displaced persons (IDPs) within seven days of the tsunami, and this figure rose to around 70 percent within two weeks of the tsunami. Essential services reached significantly greater proportions of the tsunami- displaced population in Aceh Besar than Banda Aceh at both two and four weeks post-tsunami. The majority of IDPs reported satisfaction with essential services other than shelter in the first two weeks posttsunami, and satisfaction with essential services other than food increased by four weeks after the tsunami. Of IDP households surveyed, the vast majority reported that there were services they would have liked to receive but did not, both in the month following the tsunami and at the time of the survey.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zelde Espinel ◽  
James Shultz ◽  
Anna Ordonez ◽  
Yuval Neria

2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (3) ◽  
pp. 40-44
Author(s):  
N. O. Maruta ◽  
◽  
I. O. Yavdak ◽  
S. P. Koliadko ◽  
V. Yu. Fedchenko ◽  
...  

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