AMMAN, Jordan (AP) - Sara al-Matoura watched through a window as her one-year-old daughter’s chest heaved up and down under a tangle of medical wires.
The 22-year-old mother from the Syrian city of Homs hadn’t eaten for a day and stayed up all night at a hospital in the Jordanian capital, Amman, holding her daughter, imagining the scalpel cutting her baby’s chest open soon.
Al-Matoura fled the Syrian war for Jordan in 2012, where she met Alaa Zatima, 34, another refugee from Daraa. They married and had a son, Omar, now 4 years old and waiting at home.
Al-Matoura was only four months pregnant with her second child when she found out the baby had a congenital heart defect known as tricuspid atresia, which has a mortality rate of 90 percent before age 10.
Jordanian doctors encouraged her to abort the fetus. Al-Matoura refused. “She is my gift from God,” she said. She named her daughter Eman - “faith” in Arabic.
Last week, Eman received life-saving open heart surgery, one of eight cardiac operations that Italian pediatric surgeons from the Vatican’s Bambino Gesu Hospital came to perform for free in Jordan.
She’s a lucky exception among Syrian refugees with severe medical conditions.
Dozens of others with cancer, heart defects and other complex conditions go untreated each month because of funding constraints, according to U.N. officials. The more expensive the treatment, the more likely their funding requests will be turned down.
Even primary care and basic services such as child delivery are increasingly unaffordable for refugees in regional host countries such as Jordan and Lebanon.
Some 5.5 million Syrians have fled their homeland since 2011, most settling in the region. Jordan currently hosts more than 650,000 Syrians registered by the U.N. refugee agency, though the government estimates the number of Syrians in the country is twice as high.
Seven years into the Syria conflict, with European and American doors increasingly shut to refugees and no signs of peace in Syria, neighboring countries like Jordan are cutting resources for Syrians, saying they cannot even afford to take care of their own people, let alone millions of refugees.
While Eman was in the operating room, another Syrian mother in Amman tried to keep her 12-year-old son Tamer from moving too much, afraid that his lips and hands would turn blue.
The 31-year-old fled the Damascus suburb of eastern Ghouta on the first day of the chemical attacks in 2013.
“They started at 3 a.m. and I left at 8 in the morning,” she said of the attacks, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of repercussions for her family members in Syria. She brought her three boys, including a two-week-old baby, to Jordan.
Tamer, her second son, also has a congenital heart defect. His heart faces the wrong way, affecting his blood and air flow. When he moves too much, he loses his breath and turns blue.
Children with his condition should receive an operation at age five or six, according to Dr. Iyad al-Ammouri, pediatric cardiologist at the University of Jordan Hospital.
But Tamer’s final surgery costs 15,000-20,000 Jordanian dinars ($21,000-$28,000), far more than his mother can afford. She supports her sons alone, with her husband still trapped in Syria.
One way Jordan used to help Syrians was by subsidizing their fees at government health facilities, so they paid the same as uninsured Jordanians. But the subsidies were cancelled in February, meaning refugees must pay two to five times more for life-saving interventions.
Meanwhile, severe conditions like cancer and heart disease are subject to a special doctors’ committee that sifts through hundreds of cases each month, deciding which few to assist based on criteria including vulnerability, prognosis and cost.
Late-stage cancer treatment, for example, is usually denied. Expensive surgeries like Eman’s, which would have cost 15,000 dinars ($21,000) without the Italian doctors’ pro bono work, are also delayed or denied.
“Of course people come back month after month and apply again, because they are desperate,” said Dr. Adam Musa, a U.N. public health officer who sits on the committee. “It’s painful.”
In January, 60 out of 143 refugee applications for emergency help were approved. The United Nations gave them approximately $2,000 each. There wasn’t enough funding for the rest, Musa said.
Younis al-Hariri, an eight-year-old from Daraa, is one of those unfunded cases.
His 32-year-old mother said he was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis and several other liver conditions four years ago, while they were living in Jordan’s Zaatari refugee camp. He now needs a liver transplant that would cost 400,000 dinars ($565,000), Ridaa al-Hariri said, adding that she owes 13,000 dinars ($18,000) to Jordanian hospitals for dialysis, blood transfusions and hospital stays.
Al-Hariri’s uncle, Hassan al-Turkmani, also needs surgery for his two hands, paralyzed in clenched fists from months of electric shock torture in Syrian prisons. Jagged scars run down his thin arms. The 32-year-old father of four hasn’t been able to open his hands for seven years. The operation would cost 2,200 dinars ($3,100) per finger.
“There is no mercy here,” al-Turkmani said.
A senior Jordanian government official said health subsidies were cut because Jordan is in an economic crisis. Syrian refugees are now paying health fees comparable to those charged to Jordanians, he said. Jordan remains on “high moral ground” for hosting the refugees at all, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with briefing regulations.
Across the region, donor fatigue and decreased host country support have left millions of refugees on the edge of survival, even pushing some to return to Syria.
Lebanon has the most privatized and costly health care system among refugee-hosting countries in the region, according to the U.N. refugee agency.
There, 70 percent of Syrian refugees live in poverty. The U.N. refugee agency spent $51 million on 84,000 life-saving cases for Syrian refugees in Lebanon last year, yet could not cover most cancer cases with poor prognoses, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or dialysis.
“There are very few NGOs that are able to provide support for some of these cases and we know that people have taken difficult decisions to return to Syria to access dialysis or cancer care,” said Dr. Michael Woodman, senior public health officer in the UNHCR’s Beirut office.
Bambino Gesu got involved at the request of Pope Frances, said Dr. Fiore S. Iorio, the hospital’s director of the department of pediatric cardiology and cardiac surgery, who operated on Eman.
Iorio said he and his colleagues were also compelled by a “moral obligation to help these unfortunate children,” either through surgery or by training Jordanian colleagues who will continue the work in the future.
After Eman’s surgery, her parents watched her breathe, her chest covered with bandages and wires, rising and failing in rhythm with the beeping monitor.
Doctors told them she would likely need another, more complicated surgery in two to five years.
“I don’t know where we will get the money then,” al-Matoura said. “But thank God for healing her today.”
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