Fellowships to honour the memory of Aiia

January 10, 2023 by J-Wire News Service
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The memory of Aiia Maasarwe, a young Palestinian Israeli woman tragically murdered in Melbourne in January 2019, will be honoured with the awarding of two fellowships for Palestinian physicians to train in Israeli hospitals.

Aiia Maasarwe

The death of the visiting La Trobe University student made headlines around the world.

The Aiia Maasarwe Memorial Medical Fellowship Program (AMMMFP) is an initiative of Project Rozana, an international NGO headquartered in Melbourne. Its purpose is to build relationships between Israelis and Palestinians through health. The AMMMFP was launched in October 2019 but suspended due to the impact of the pandemic.*

The two fellowships to be awarded on the fourth anniversary of her death, will address identified gaps in the Palestinian health system in the key areas of paediatric intensive care and ophthalmology

Dr Ruba Rizik of the Al Makassed Hospital in East Jerusalem will train in paediatric intensive care at Sheba Hospital in Tel Aviv, and Dr Ahmad Shaheen of the Al Ahli Hospital in Hebron will train in paediatric ophthalmology at Ichilov Hospital, also in Tel Aviv.

Over 40% of the Palestinian population of almost 5 million people in the West Bank and Gaza is aged under 15 years. That cohort is currently served by only 10 paediatric intensive care beds spread across the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The Deputy Chair of Project Rozana Australia, Dr Jamal Rifi, said: “There is a lack of intensive care specialists in Palestine, preventative health measures are poor, the overall living environment is unsafe, particularly in Gaza, and there is an absence of paramedic care.

Dr Jamal Rifi and Ron Finkel

The result is a high incidence of trauma and poor prognosis in Palestinian children which negatively impacts the family and the wider Palestinian society.”

Dr Rifi said that Project Rozana has a strategic plan that begins with the training of specialists to help support the development of a world’s best practice paediatric intensive care unit for Palestinian children at the Al Makassed Hospital.

In the area of eye health, the West Bank and Gaza are served by only one hospital, St John Eye Hospital in East Jerusalem, for all ophthalmology services.

St John has four small outreach clinics in the West Bank and Gaza and there are also limited services provided by private clinics. The PA Ministry of Health is seeking to establish a specialist eye hospital near Ramallah and the NGO-run, Al Ahli Hospital in Hebron, is setting up a specialist department but requires qualified staff to operate it.

There is a shortage of ophthalmologists in the Palestinian health system, only one institution that provides training in general ophthalmology, and no hospital in the Palestinian medical ecosystem provides sub-specialty ophthalmology training, including pediatric ophthalmology.

Currently, Palestinians in need of specialist care require a permit to enter Israel to obtain treatment there.

The two AMMMFP awards in 2023 will help to bridge gaps in Palestinian healthcare and significantly contribute to fostering an independent and sustainable system.

Project Rozana founder and chair, Ron Finkel, said the endgame is to create a system that can keep pace with rapid population growth, respond to the increasing demand for qualified practitioners in different fields, and reduce patient referrals to Israel and abroad.

The proximity of training to a doctor’s home in Palestine is vital if the Palestinian health system is to avoid a “brain drain” to other countries in the Middle East and to the US and Europe.”

Project Rozana has the support of the Palestinian Authority, the European Union and the United Nations in its efforts to support Palestinian hospitals train their doctors locally.  The retention rate is considerably higher.

The AMMMFP initiative also provides an opportunity for shared experiences in the training hospitals, as well as shared knowledge between the two healthcare systems. It creates a network of Palestinian and Israeli specialists in long-term professional and personal relationships and a commitment to future development in the targeted specialties.

The medical profession is highly regarded in both Palestine and Israel, and the field of health is grounded in equality and mutual respect, making it a fertile terrain for cultivating seeds of understanding and inspiring hope for coexistence and peace between Palestinians and Israelis.

Ron Finkel said: “The Mission of Project Rozana is to build better understanding between Israelis and Palestinians through health while at the same time building Palestinian health capacity. The development of these respectful relationships underpins peacebuilding efforts in the region.

We are deeply grateful to our generous donors, including the Gandel Foundation, for their support for this work. It wouldn’t be possible without them.”

Dr Rifi said that building Palestinian health capacity is key to building a healthy and empowered society.

“With regard to the fellowship program, we work closely with the Palestinian health system to understand its needs and then respond with a strategic plan to meet these. Some specialities will require up to six years training, so ours is a long-term vision,” he said.

Following Aiia Maasarwe’s tragic death, her family expressed their strong support for establishing a Fellowship in her name, saying that they want her memory and legacy to spread love and hope.

Aiia’s father, Saeed, who visited Australia after his daughter’s death, said: “I believe that one of the best ways to honour Aiia is to make her legacy a positive impact in the world.  Aiia would have been inspired by Project Rozana and its commitment to ensuring that Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza receive the same level of healthcare that we do in Israel. Project Rozana shows that Israelis and Palestinians can live and work together in harmony, and that is also something that was important for Aiia.”

The 2023 grants will be announced on January 16, 2023.

 

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