Morbidity patterns among hospitalised Palestine refugees from Syria in Jordan: a population-based study

Lancet. 2021 Jul:398 Suppl 1:S43. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(21)01529-4.

Abstract

Background: Palestine refugees from Syria (PRS) are among the most vulnerable refugee groups for adverse health outcomes and require assistance from humanitarian agencies. As the armed conflict in Syria has continued, most Palestinians have been displaced from that country to neighbouring countries, where they have experienced difficulties in accessing essential services. More than 17 000 PRS are in Jordan as of 2018 and have received assistance from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), including free primary care and subsidised secondary and tertiary care through contracted governmental hospitals. In this study, we investigated the morbidity patterns among PRS in Jordan receiving UNRWA-supported hospital care.

Methods: We assessed cross-sectional data extracted from the UNRWA Hospitalization Database in Jordan on Oct 18, 2018, for PRS who used UNRWA hospitalisation support between May 31, 2012, and Dec 9, 2017. The database records demographic and medical characteristics of patients and financial information for the care sought. We used descriptive statistics to reveal morbidity patterns. Analyses were done with Microsoft Excel 2016 and Stata/IC (version 15). No ethics approval was required for this study as it was conducted as a part of routine internal monitoring by UNRWA.

Findings: 889 PRS were included in analysis, among whom 637 (72%) were girls or women and 252 (28%) were boys or men. The age range was 1-78 years, with girls and women being younger than boys and men (28·1 years [SD 15·1] vs 31·0 years [SD 21·3], p=0·02). The most common reasons for seeking care were pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium (381 [60%] of 637 girls and women). Diseases of the circulatory system, digestive system, and musculoskeletal system and connective tissue were the most common diagnoses among boys and men (34 cases [14%] of 252 for each diagnosis). The mean length of stay for women (1·8 days [SD 2·0]) was slightly shorter than that for men (2·0 days [SD 2·2]) but the difference was not significant. The cost was significantly higher for boys and men (mean US$729·7 [SD 557·4] per person) than for girls and women ($326·0 [SD 1190·4], p<0·001). Of all, 886 (>99%) patients were discharged from hospital, two died, and one was transferred to another hospital.

Interpretation: More girls and women than boys and men sought care through the UNRWA support programme during the study period, mostly for pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium. However, the conditions seen in boys and men led to longer stays in hospitals and significantly higher costs. Diagnoses based on International Classification of Diseases standards should be investigated further, but this study highlights the demand for health-care services and types of care required by the PRS population. Future research should focus on identifying similarities and differences in hospital admissions for PRS compared with other Palestine refugees to inform future preventive public health efforts by UNRWA. The study examined PRS who accessed to UNRWA services only, thus the findings are not representative of PRS in general. However, this is to our knowledge the first study to present morbidity patters and differences in female and male PRS patients receiving care at UNRWA in Jordan.

Funding: None.