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Written by Wolrd Health Organization Wolrd Health Organization
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Category: News News
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Published: 08 January 2009 08 January 2009
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Last Updated: 08 January 2009 08 January 2009
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Created: 08 January 2009 08 January 2009
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- Life-saving medical supplies cannot reach those in need.
Life-saving supplies that are urgently needed to treat the injured and
to sustain health services continue to pile up at the borders to Gaza.
Not enough trucks can get in and distribution inside Gaza is
constrained by lack of security and infrastructure.
- Access to care is compromised.
The intensity of the aerial bombardment and ground hostilities (with
the cordoning off of Gaza into distinct sectors with restricted
movement) is seriously constraining movement of patients, emergency
medical services, referrals for care and the health personnel who are
critical to effective and efficient functioning and delivery of these
services. Medical evacuation of some of the critically injured outside
of Gaza is being prevented, not only by lack of security but also by
border closure and restrictions on movements.
- Hospitals are overwhelmed.
They do not have enough beds in emergency admissions or intensive care
nor operating theatres to cope with the volume of casualties. Current
make-shift arrangements to convert other hospital beds into
trauma/intensive care beds are also nearing exhaustion of capacity.
There have been reports of injured people lying on the ground in health
facilities.
- Health workers are exhausted. Emergency
medical services and trauma care teams have been on the job, round the
clock, since the aerial bombardment started on 27 December. They are
physically exhausted and replacements are urgently needed to sustain
the provision of life-saving services to the critically injured.
- Power failures are a constant risk.
All hospitals are relying on generators, some of them round the clock,
because mains supplies have been cut. Fuel supplies are running out. A
power failure would have catastrophic effects on infection control,
blood transfusion, instrument sterilization and basic sanitation and
hygiene in hospitals, operating theatres and intensive care units. An
increase in life-threatening hospital-borne infections (such as
gangrene, septicemia, tetanus, etc.) and complications (such as shock)
can also be expected.
WHO has established an emergency operations base in
Ramallah, jointly with the Ministry of Health to assist in coordination
of the health sector response; advocacy for unfettered access to Rafah;
tracking medical donations and relief supplies; and planning for
re-entry to Gaza should a ceasefire be reached.
In addition
to providing surgical kits enough to care for 5000 persons and
emergency health kits for 90 000 people for three months, WHO is
coordinating the entry of medical supplies in to Gaza. The Organization
is also working with the UN agencies and Red Crescent societies to
boost operational capacities on the Rafah border to ensure medical
evacuations of critical patients and track medical relief items and
donations.
From the operational bases in Gaza, Ramallah
and Jerusalem, WHO is strengthening outbreak investigation and control
due to food and water-borne diseases. It is advocating that
environmental health concerns, including sanitation and hygiene, among
displaced populations are addressed. WHO teams are assisting medical
personnel in responding to trauma and injuries, and establishing a
coordination mechanism to ensure joint assessment of the health needs
in Gaza.
According to UNWRA, over 13 000 people have been
displaced. Support services for health care, safe water, food, basic
sanitation and hygiene for the displaced either do not exist or are
very limited. If hostilities do not cease, the numbers of the displaced
people can be expected to rise.
For both the displaced
population and the general population, there is now a serious risk of
outbreaks of communicable disease, such as acute respiratory
infections, measles and acute watery diarrhoea, all of which have
potential for high mortality among children. Mortality among expectant
mothers and newborns can be expected to rise and there will
increasingly be cases of unmanaged chronic diseases and psychosocial
conditions.