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Arab minority has lower life expectancy - new report

Arab-Israelis protesting in Jerusalem earlier this year against what they called discriminatory practices by the Israeli government and official institutions. Shabtai Gold/IRIN

Israel’s Arab minority has a lower life expectancy than that of Jewish citizens; the Arab community suffers from higher infant mortality rates; and in relative terms the number of elderly Arabs without teeth is very high. A new report says these are some of the signs of discrimination within the health care system.

According to official numbers, there is about a five year difference between the life expectancy of Jews and Arabs. Muslim-Arabs have an infant mortality rate of 7.3 for every 1,000 births - and among the Bedouins it was 15.5 - compared to just 3.1 for Jewish citizens.

Israel, with its socialist origins and a 1994 progressive universal Health Care Act, has a renowned medical system and generally good services for its citizens. However, the Israeli Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) said in its report - entitled The Rights to Health among Arab-Palestinians in Israel, and published in April in Hebrew only - that gaps between the two populations remained wide.

Jewish cities and towns, for example, have nearly twice as many doctors per capita. Only two Arab towns have a Magen David Adom (MDA, national ambulance service and equivalent of the Red Cross/Red Crescent Societies) station, as opposed to some 90 percent of Jewish cities, the doctors’ group found.

Read more on
 Overall issues
 Access to health services
 Displaced people
 Previous discrimination
 Waste/sewage in a blog post in Arabic by an Arab-Israeli activist
“This means the ambulances must go to the Arab villages from the Jewish cities, and in times of life or death this can mean a significant delay,” Yuval Livnat from PHR told IRIN, noting that PHR had been unsuccessful in its attempts to receive information from MDA on its policy.

In areas like mental health, Arabs also lagged behind, according to PHR.

The Arabs in Israel, about 20 percent of the population, now constitute some 1.4 million people.

Poor infrastructure

PHR said that beyond access to health care, other problems existed, directly affecting health, including poor infrastructure. Some 70 percent of Arab localities lacked proper sewage systems and many lacked good solid waste disposal systems.

Wide economic gaps between Jews and Arabs leave the latter much poorer.

New statistics published this month by the Adva Centre in Hebrew only, an Israeli social justice think-tank, showed that while national levels of unemployment had dropped in recent years, among Arabs unemployment had risen. Also, the average monthly income of this group, already lower than the national average, continued to decline, and poverty rates keep rising.

In 2008, as Israel marked its 60th birthday, most Arabs in Israel were considered poor, compared to just 15 percent of Jews.

PHR said the economic situation was a major contributor to the health gaps, something not disputed by the Israeli Ministry of Health, which, in a statement issued to IRIN, said that the infant mortality and life expectancy rates were "mostly not related to health services… [but rather the] socio-economic situation and behavioural and cultural habits".

Spokeswoman Einav Shimron-Greenbaum also said the ministry was running a number of programmes to close the gaps, including one focusing on infant mortality.

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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