Middle-East

War and health crisis in Gaza a ‘recipe for epidemics’, WHO warns

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Up to 1,500 children in Gaza remain missing – many likely under rubble – he said, as the health system faces “extreme pressure”.

The thousands of injuries sustained by civilians across Gaza combined with a burgeoning public health crisis is a ‘recipe for epidemics’, the World Health Organization’s emergency response director said on Monday.

WHO’s Dr. Mike Ryan warned that “so many children” remain in danger, as fighting between Palestinian militants and Israeli forces continues, from hostages to those living under bombardment with no safe place to shelter.

Up to 1,500 children in Gaza remain missing – many likely under rubble – he said, as the health system faces “extreme pressure”.

He said following the evacuation of many patients at the largest hospital, Al Shifa over the weekend, health staff remaining at Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza may also need to be evacuated in the next few days amid continued fighting there.

The WHO regional office tweeted a statement saying the agency was appalled at reports of at least a dozen people being killed during attacks on the Indonesian Hospital, which included patients and companions residing there.

The ultimatum from Israeli forces to keep moving is creating a concentration of people in UNRWA centres and schools, that “fuels epidemic risks” he added, and combined with the cold rain recently, will lead to a spike in child pneumonia, Dr. Ryan warned.

"Before long the public health risks will be as grave as those faced with injuries that are going untreated with water, food and fuel so scarce. All of this adds up to a ‘recipe for epidemics’ while the calorific intake is now below the “critical level” needed for the immune system to stay healthy," he said.

Some Al Shifa patients remain ‘in life-threatening condition’

Rob Holden a WHO Senior Emergency Officer, briefing from Rafah in southern Gaza, gave further details on the dramatic evacuation of 31 premature babies to relative safety from the war-torn Al Shifa hospital in Gaza City.

He said the two-pronged weekend operation had been a success with babies and remaining family members evacuated from the area, working with the Palestinian Red Crescent.

He revealed that 28 of them had been sent across the border into the care of the Egyptian Red Crescent and on for treatment Monday, relaying the news that three of the babies had been reunited with their immediate families in southern Gaza.

For 220 patients who remain at Al Shifa, he said a number were “in a life-threatening condition”, needed dialysis, and with one man remaining in intensive care.

He added that 25 patients had severe spinal injuries and that WHO would work with the Palestinian Red Crescent to move them south.

On Sunday, UNRWA and UN Children’s Fund UNICEF distributed around 19,500 litres of fuel to water and sanitation facilities south of the central zone of Gaza enabling them to operate generators and resume their operation but only for around 24 hours.

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