WHO / GAZA UNRWA MALNUTRITION
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STORY: WHO / GAZA UNRWA MALNUTRITION
TRT: 3:23
SOURCE: WHO
RESTRICTIONS: PLEASE CREDIT WHO ON SCREEN
LANGUAGE: ARABIC / ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 01 DECEMBER 2023, GAZA
01 DECEMBER 2023 - A MARKET NEAR THE UNWRA SHELTER, WEST OF KHAN YOUNIS, GAZA
1.Various shots, empty market shelves and minimal available products
01 DECEMBER 2023, AL-NASSER HOSPITAL MEDICAL COMPLEX
2.SOUDBITE (Arabic) Dr. Mohammad Qandil, Head of Emergency Department - Al-Naser Medical Complex:
“When it comes to food security in the southern governorates is disastrous. Markets are missing basic food products, even having money will not help anymore as it's hard to find edible food to buy Especially solid food (Baby Food). Drinking water is scarce and that accumulated patient cases such as; stomach flu, chest infections, infectious disease chest infections, infectious disease, respiratory diseases, to both children and elderly people.”
01 DECEMBER 2023, UNWRA SHELTER, WEST OF KHAN YOUNIS, GAZA
3. Various shots of food being prepared
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr Richard Peeperkorn, WHO Representative, occupied Palestinian territory:
“UNWRA shelters are completely overflowing and as many makeshift shelters, we’ve seen a rise in infectious diseases, well over 12,000 acute respiratory infections. We’ve seen diarrhoea cases which are 40, 50 times as high as normally. We’ve seen jaundice case of jaundice syndrome which need to be quickly investigated. We’ve seen scabies, lice etc.
01 DECEMBER 2023, UNWRA SHELTER, WEST OF KHAN YOUNIS, GAZA
5.Various shots, children on the camp playing, eating and cooking
6.SOUNDBITE (Arabic) IDP at UNWRA Shelter, West of Khan Younis, Gaza:
“Actually as far as I can remember I got sick a month ago and am still sick, coughing, chest infections it’s all caused by firewood. Water is another story, it made us all sick.”
7. Various shots, food being prepared on the streets
WHO appeals for protection of the health system from further attacks and degradation of its capacity.
Once again, nowhere is safe in Gaza. WHO is gravely concerned about the resumption of hostilities, including heavy bombardment in Gaza, and reiterates its appeal to Israel to take every possible measure to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure, including hospitals, as per the laws of war.
We have seen what happened in northern Gaza. This cannot be the blueprint for the south. Gaza cannot afford to lose another hospital as health needs continue to soar.
As more civilians in southern Gaza receive immediate evacuation orders and are forced to move, more people are being concentrated into smaller areas, while the remaining hospitals in those areas run without sufficient fuel, medicines, food, water, or protection of health workers.
WHO and other partners are less able to provide support, given dwindling access to our supplies or any assurance of safety when we move supplies or staff.
This morning WHO was contacted with advice to move as many medical supplies as possible from a warehouse in Gaza, situated in an area ordered to be evacuated. Access to storage could become challenging over the coming days due to ground operations.
Intensifying military ground operations in southern Gaza, particularly in Khan Younis, are likely to cut thousands off from health care – especially from accessing Nasser Medical Complex and European Gaza Hospital, the two main hospitals in southern Gaza – as the number of wounded and sick increases.
Lack of access would also limit WHO’s ability to deliver aid to these hospitals.
About 1.9 million people, nearly 80 percent of Gaza's population, are estimated to be internally displaced. Recent evacuation orders cover 20% of Khan Younis and localities east of Khan Younis, which prior to the hostilities were home to nearly 117 000 and 352 000 people, respectively.
In less than 60 days, the number of functioning hospitals has dropped from 36 to 18. Of these, three are only providing basic first aid, while the remaining hospitals are delivering only partial services. Those able to admit patients are delivering services well over their intended capacities, with some treating two to three times as many patients as they were designed for. The 12 hospitals that are still operational in the south are now the backbone of the health system.
On a recent visit to Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis, the WHO team described the situation inside as catastrophic, with the building and hospital grounds grossly overcrowded with patients and displaced people seeking shelter. The emergency ward is overflowing with patients. There is a shortage of health workers compared to the overwhelming needs. Those who are available have been working non-stop and are exhausted. Many patients are being treated on the floor. Bed capacity has been overwhelmed. Patients and families sheltering at the hospital are scared for their security.
Disease surveillance systems are hampered, but syndromic surveillance has noted increases in infectious diseases, including acute respiratory infections, scabies, jaundice, diarrhoea, and bloody diarrhoea. Shelters in the south are also reporting cases of acute jaundice syndrome, a worrisome signal of hepatitis.
From 7 October to 28 November, WHO recorded an unprecedented number of attacks on health care: 203 attacks on hospitals, ambulances, medical supplies, and the detention of health-care workers. This is unacceptable. There are means to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure, and they should be instituted.
The only viable solution is a sustained ceasefire.
Note to editors:
On 3 December alone, 349 people were killed and 750 injured according to reports from the Ministry of Health.
According to the Ministry of Health, the bed occupancy rate at operational hospitals stands at 171 percent, while in the intensive care units the occupancy rate is up to 221 percent.
Currently, there are 1000 patients and thousands of people sheltering at the 350-bed Nasser Medical Complex, and 1000 patients and an estimated 70 000 people sheltering at the 370-bed European Gaza Hospital. Both hospitals are three times beyond their capacity.
As of 3 December, per Ministry of Health reports, more than 15 899 people have died, over two-thirds of them women and children. An additional 42 003 people, also mostly women and children, have been injured.