key: cord-0962910-piaevrdm authors: Khan, Md.Nuruzzaman; Islam, M.Mofizul; Rahman, Md.Mashiur title: Risks of COVID19 outbreaks in Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh date: 2020-06-02 journal: Public health in practice DOI: 10.1016/j.puhip.2020.100018 sha: 7aa132d94c5647640a2d5693e2a3a13c3b7ddd2b doc_id: 962910 cord_uid: piaevrdm Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have started spreading in Bangladesh since March 2020. Since then the new infections grew exponentially and now the rate is highest in Asia along with wider community-level transmission. In Bangladesh, the preventive measures have been found challenging to implement due to a lack of general awareness of COVID-19 and the absence of a social safety net. In this situation, there is a concern about the heightened risk of infection and its aftermath in Rohingya refugee camps in the southwest part of Bangladesh, where the world’s largest refugee population resides. If COVID-19 starts spreading in the camps, there will have a devastating consequence given that almost one million people live in precarious and unhygienic conditions in an area of only five square kilometres. In this paper, the risk for the Rohingya refugee population of getting COVID-19 disease and the preparedness to diagnose new cases and their management by the facilities of government and international organizations are discussed. Several suggestions are also offered to protect the Rohingya refugee population from deadly COVID-19 disease. The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have started spreading in Bangladesh since March 2020. Since then the new infections grew exponentially and now the rate is highest in Asia along with wider community-level transmission. In Bangladesh, the preventive measures have been found challenging to implement due to a lack of general awareness of COVID-19 and the absence of a social safety net. In this situation, there is a concern about the heightened risk of infection and its aftermath in Rohingya refugee camps in the southwest part of Bangladesh, where the world's largest refugee population resides. If COVID-19 starts spreading in the camps, there will have a devastating consequence given that almost one million people live in precarious and unhygienic conditions in an area of only five square kilometres. In this paper, the risk for the Rohingya refugee population of getting COVID-19 disease and the preparedness to diagnose new cases and their management by the facilities of government and international organizations are discussed. Several suggestions are also offered to protect the Rohingya refugee population from deadly COVID-19 disease. Amongst the world's most heavily persecuted minority communities are the Rohingya people built through bamboo and tarpaulins. They have limited access to clean water and sanitation (4, 5) . Most of them sleep on plastic paper spread over the muddy floor in their tents. In these circumstances, maintaining even minimum hygiene is challenging, and any infectious disease outbreak has the potential to kill thousands of people. Since early 2020, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak has substantially affected almost all parts of the world, including Bangladesh, where a total of 12,425 confirmed cases was documented as of May 7, 2020 (6) . As the COVID-19 situation is evolving rapidly, the country is facing growing challenges to ensure preventive measures. Although no confirmed cases have been reported so far among the Rohingya refugees, recently the local transmission of COVID-19 in Bangladesh has changed rapidly with an exponential increase of this disease outbreak countrywide, similar to what we have witnessed in China, Italy, and some other countries (7, 8) . There was a steep rise in infection in April. In the week ending 11 April 2020, the new cases in Bangladesh grew 1,155 percent, the highest in Asia. People across the world are being advised to stay home, to practice "social distancing", and to make hygiene a priority. Such actions are next to impossible to practise in a refugee camp. Importantly, the With neither treatment nor a vaccine in near future, the effect might be devastating because of the multiple health challenges the Rohingya people already face including lack of healthcare facilities and services, existing higher prevalence of infectious diseases, and poor knowledge of health hygiene (9) . There are important lessons to learn from the 2014-16 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, where the outbreak in malaria-endemic countries with poor health infrastructure led to a public health crisis and killed more than 11,000 of the total 28,000 infected people (10) . Therefore, the government of Bangladesh along with its development partners working in the Rohingya camps immediately needs to take a comprehensive strategy to save this refugee community from a potential outbreak of COVID-19. Although there are reports of some degree of preparedness by the humanitarian agencies and government of Bangladesh (11) , this is far from what is necessary. Currently, the international organizations (e.g., UN, UNHCR, IOM) are emphasising on equipping the local hospitals with at least some resources to tackle the potential outbreaks of COVID-19. Until now only a five-bed isolation ward in Cox's Bazar district Hospital and two fifty-bed isolation words in Ramu and Chakaria Upazila (sub-districts) health complexes have been set-up for the entire Rohingya and local Bangladeshi people (12) . There is no program in the camps for Rohingya refugees to test the suspected cases. There are 29 labs across Bangladesh to detect COVID-19 which Rohingya refugees do not have access to given their stateless status and movement restrictions. Moreover, they test suspected patients if the possibility of getting infected with COVID-19 has been reported through hotline numbers or by the healthcare providers. The community-level awareness of COVID-19 prevention such as maintaining basic health hygiene, social distancing, and the common symptoms of infection is extremely limited (12) . Healthcare personnel working in the camps have inadequate access to telecommunication, and there are no telecommunication services for the Rohingya refugees. Thus, this preparedness may not produce the desired benefits. An arrangement of necessary testing kits and designated quarantine facilities inside the camps are two important elements need to be ensured without any delay. The Rohingya people are worried about the risk, as the vulnerable conditions they live in could be a breeding ground for COVID-19. The humanitarian organisations in collaboration with the Government of Bangladesh should immediately scale up their efforts to avoid a potential catastrophe. Protecting Rohingya: lives, minds, and the future The Rohingya people: past, present, and future World Vision. Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh: Facts, FAQs, and how to help Sexually transmitted infections among Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh Situation Report: Rohingya Refugee Crisis COVID-19 Coronavirus Outbreak First-wave COVID-19 transmissibility and severity in China outside Hubei after control measures, and second-wave scenario planning: a modelling impact assessment. The Lancet COVID-19 and Italy: what next? The Lancet Health risks of Rohingya refugee population in Bangladesh: a call for global attention Ebola virus disease epidemic in West Africa: lessons learned and issues arising from West African countries Coronavirus fear grips Rohingya camps in Bangladesh: Displaced community's vulnerable conditions breeding ground for infections Virus can cause havoc in Rohingya camps