A young Palestinian girl who was injured in an Israeli airstrike, is brought for a treatment at the Baptist Hospital in Gaza City, on Thursday. AP
A young Palestinian girl who was injured in an Israeli airstrike, is brought for a treatment at the Baptist Hospital in Gaza City, on Thursday. AP
A month-long siege imposed by Israeli authorities in Gaza, means some critical medications are now short in supply and are running out, leaving Palestinians at risk of losing vital healthcare, warned Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).
MSF called on Israeli authorities to facilitate humanitarian aid at scale.
For over a month, no aid or commercial trucks have entered Gaza. The siege has forced MSF teams to start rationing medications such as painkillers, providing less effective treatment or turning patients away. T
eams are also running out of surgical supplies such as anaesthetics, paediatric antibiotics and medicines for chronic conditions like epilepsy, hypertension and diabetes.
WAM