WHO wants flow of Gaza patients for treatment into Egypt - GulfToday

WHO wants flow of Gaza patients for treatment into Egypt

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Wounded Palestinian children wait in an ambulance ahead of crossing into Egypt from the Gaza Strip on Friday. AFP

The World Health Organisation (WHO) called on Friday for a regular flow of patients to be allowed out of Gaza for treatment in Egypt, to relieve the pressure on overwhelmed hospitals.

The WHO said a system needed to be set up to get priority cases out of the besieged Palestinian territory. Twenty-five out of 36 hospitals in the Gaza Strip are not functioning and the remainder are struggling to provide services.

"This is clearly not enough to support the endless needs arising due to the hostilities," said Richard Peeperkorn, the WHO representative in the occupied Palestinian territories.

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Addressing a press briefing in Geneva, he called for daily sustained, orderly, unimpeded and safe medical evacuations of critically injured and sick patients into neighbouring Egypt.

Speaking via video-link from Jerusalem, Peeperkorn said 50 to 60 patients a day ought to be transferred into Egypt, "where they will get — and they deserve — the right treatment and care."

Moving priority patients to Egypt "will also relieve part of the overwhelmed current health sector so that we can address the other needs in a better way," he said.

Israeli troops carried out building-by-building searches at Gaza's main hospital, Al Shifa, on Friday, after a communications blackout in the Palestinian enclave compounded fears for civilians trapped inside the facility.

"We are, as WHO, extremely worried for the safety of patients, health and workers, not just at Al Shifa but other hospitals as well," said Peeperkorn. "Health facilities, health workers, ambulances and patients must be safeguarded."

Gazachildren-amputee Wounded Palestinian children wait in an ambulance ahead of crossing into Egypt from the Gaza Strip. AFP


Peeperkorn said that prior to the conflict, there were around 3,500 hospital beds across Gaza, and now there are an estimated 1,400. "Based on our plans, the needs at the moment would be 5,000 beds," he said.

He said the communications blackout had made the WHO's contact with its staff on the ground in Gaza "very problematic."

Peeperkorn also said he was extremely concerned about the spread of diseases in the Palestinian territory, including acute respiratory infections, chicken pox, skin rashes and hepatitis A.

 

Agence France-Presse

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