أخبار العالم

Gaza faces a second threat as real as Israeli airstrikes | Health News News


The wounded are so many that doctors are unable to treat preventable diseases (Picture: AP)

In Khan Younis, Gaza, Dr Magdi Jamal’s hospital is at three times its normal capacity after more than 50,000 refugees from the north fled south.

There are no beds in the Nasser Medical Complex. Patients injured in airstrikes are treated on the emergency room floor as they come in. Any ICU surgical cases the hospital had before the war broke out have either died or been evacuated.

And with Israel’s bombardment showing no sign of abating, fears of disease such as diphtheria, mumps and Covid are growing across the besieged enclave.

Dr Magdi tells Metro.co.uk via WhatsApp: ‘The situation is terrible. There are many cases of diseases like acute gastroenteritis, upper respiratory infections, and scabies that come daily – especially kids and older age cases.

‘Most of them that come with severe disease will die due to the lack of medication and delay of medical intervention.’

Patients with normally manageable disease like diabetes, hypertension and scabies who fled from the decimated north are arriving in Khan Younis in terrible condition – there is nowhere left to provide even basic medical care.

SENSITIVE MATERIAL. THIS IMAGE MAY OFFEND OR DISTURB Palestinian man Islam Harb reacts next to the bodies of his twin girls Joid and Maria and his son Omar, who were killed in an Israeli strike amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas at Abu Yossef Al-Najar hospital, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip December 12, 2023. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem

Children, the elderly and immunocompromised are dying of preventable diseases in Gaza (Picture: Reuters)

A cat observes as Palestinians from the Ashour family mourn the death of loved ones who were killed in Israeli bombardment, on December 14, 2023, at Najar hospital in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, amid ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. (Photo by MAHMUD HAMS / AFP) (Photo by MAHMUD HAMS/AFP via Getty Images)

Even if Palestinians stuck in Gaza survive airstrikes, disease may strike next (Picture: AFP)

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ismael Mohamad/UPI/Shutterstock (14254597q) Palestinians react near ambulances following Israeli bombardment at Al-Shaboura refugee camp in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday, December 12, 2023. At least 22 people have been reportedly killed, including seven children, in the bombing by Israel in Rafah on Tuesday. Global calls for a ceasefire have been ignored by Israel and the United States, as humanitarian aid operations have collapsed warning of starvation and disease amongst the Gaza population. Children and Other Civilians Killed in Israeli Bombing Attack on of Rafah in Southern Gaza - 12 Dec 2023

Hospitals in Gaza are understaffed and overrun (Picture: Shutterstock)



Follow Metro on WhatsApp to be the first to get all the latest news

Want to be the first to hear the world’s top stories? Metro.co.uk is now on WhatsApp sending vital updates and top trending stories straight to your phone.

Apps With More Than One Million Users

Follow us to receive the latest news updates from Metro (Picture: Getty Images)

Join the Metro WhatsApp community now for breaking news, juicy showbiz stories and must-watch videos from across our website.

Simply click on this link and select ‘Join Chat’. Don’t forget to turn on notifications so you’ll always be the first to hear the latest!

Dr Magdi adds: ‘Patients that come to us from other hospitals in the north had not enough care – the wounds of some of these people are so contaminated that worms are showing.’

Dr Manal Mohammed, senior lecturer in genomics and infectious diseases at University of Westminster, confirms that cases of contagious diseases are increasing rapidly in Gaza.

It comes weeks after the head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency in Palestine (UNRWA) issued a similar warning of an ‘imminent’ outbreak.

Dr Mohammed tells Metro.co.uk: ‘Wars are disease amplifiers. They can also cause outbreaks or even pandemics, because a refugee could carry it elsewhere.’

Inside the Strip, the situation is dire. There is already a shortage of oral medications and vaccinations – jabs for children ran out after the war broke out on October 7.

A man inspects the damage in a room following Israeli bombardment at Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on December 17, 2023, amid ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. (Photo by STRINGER / AFP) (Photo by STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images)

As Gazans fled south, hospitals in cities like Khan Younis have become overwhelmed (Picture: AFP)

GAZA CITY, GAZA - NOVEMBER 25: Some Palestinians injured are seen at the Al-Shifa Hospital which houses thousands of injured and displaced people after the 4-day humanitarian pause begins for prisoner exchange between the Israeli army and Palestinian group Hamas in Gaza City, Gaza on November 25, 2023. (Photo by Fadi Alwhidi/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Hospitals in the region have no room to properly treat the massive influx of patients (Picture: Getty)

The bodies of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes and fire are buried in a mass grave, after they were transported from Al Shifa hospital in Gaza City for burial, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip November 22, 2023. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem

Mass graves of Palestinian victims could also further spread disease through vectors (Picture: Reuters)

Dr Mohammed adds: ‘We expect to see outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases like measles and COVID, mumps, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, rubella, and tuberculosis’.

‘And we can’t ignore the antibiotic resistance because of the nature of the wounds in Gaza combined with the tainted environment.’

Wounds of those injured by bombs, debris and shrapnel become easily infected with antibiotic-resistant bacteria in warzones, Dr Mohammed explains.

And even if antibiotics were readily available, they wouldn’t be effective against antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Dr Mohammed says she has already seen patients with contaminated wounds, and predicts things will only get worse.

Mass graves in Gaza pose further risk of deadly disease, as animal-borne illnesses such as malaria could be spread through mosquitoes, fleas, and rodents near infected bodies.

Bodies of Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes lie on the ground at the yard of Al Shifa hospital as health officials say they are unable to bury them due to the Israeli ground operation around the hospital, in Gaza City November 12, 2023. Ahmed El Mokhallalati/via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY.

Bodies are often kept in unsanitary conditions due to relentless airstrikes (Picture: Reuters)

An Egyptian medic provides care to a premature Palestinian baby, recently evacuated from the Gaza Strip, at a hospital in al-Aris in the North Sinai Governorate of Egypt on November 22, 2023. Twenty-nine premature babies arrived in Egypt on November 20, after they were evacuated from Gaza's Al-Shifa hospital which has become a focal point of Israel's war with Hamas. (Photo by Khaled DESOUKI / AFP) (Photo by KHALED DESOUKI/AFP via Getty Images)

Immunocompromised still in the Strip are at highest risk, doctors warn (Picture: AFP)

Dr Mohammed says people are so desperate, they are digging graves without sanitary or hygenic controls.

She says: ‘They are putting hundreds of people in the same place, and you can see loads of discharge coming from these patients.

‘This is a very good environment again for vector-borne diseases which feed on these discharges. This is something that worries me a lot.’

In November alone, more than 30,000 cases of diarrhea were reported in Gaza – predominantly in children below the age of five.

On average before war broke out, just 2,000 cases were reported per month in that age group – an increase which Dr Mohammed says is not coincidental.



Gaza’s death toll – as it stands

More than 18,800 people – an estimated 10,000 infants and children included – have been killed in the Gaza Strip.

More than 55,000 have been wounded in the enclave.

1.9million people in Gaza have been displaced – nearly 85% of the population.

The average number of Internally Displaced People in UNRWA shelters located in the middle and southern areas of Gaza is about 12,400, more than four times their capacity. 

(Source: United Nations)

She explains: ‘It can be because of bacteria, viruses, parasites, it could be e coli, salmonella, Shigella, viruses like norovirus, rotavirus, parasite, like giardia…’

UNRWA commissioner general Philippe Lazzarini says the situation in Gaza is ‘desperate’ as people are ‘lacking everything’.

In November, the water system shutdown left most of the population drinking contaminated water.

Dehydration and malnutrition are also on the rise, according to the UN’s World Food Programme.

Dr Mohammed says: ‘If people are not killed by rocket attacks, they might die after drinking contaminated water.’

But medics like Dr Magdi continue their work in Khan Younis, even with dwindling supplies of medication and a devastated staff that have been working for two months straight.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.



مقالات ذات صلة

اترك تعليقاً

لن يتم نشر عنوان بريدك الإلكتروني. الحقول الإلزامية مشار إليها بـ *

زر الذهاب إلى الأعلى