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Palestine Report
Gaza healthcare in dismal state
Arafat Hamdona, 20, has been
confined to the cancer unit of
As-Shifa, Gaza’s primary
hospital, since he was diagnosed
with maxillary skin
tumours in June 2008. Red
lesions protrude from his face,
his features are distorted and
his eyes swollen shut.
In April, Arafat was
permitted to travel to Augusta
Victoria Hospital in East
Jerusalem where he received
three series of chemotherapy
and radiotherapy treatment. He
was scheduled to return for
further treatment, but has not
been granted permission by the
Israeli authorities to leave Gaza.
“He is only given pain
killers,” said Arafat’s father, Faraj Hamdona, explaining that
that is all As-Shifa has to offer.
According to a July 2009
Health Assessment Report for
Gaza Strip published by the
World Health Organisation
(WHO) in Jerusalem, Gaza
doctors and nurses do not have
the medical equipment to
respond to the health needs of
the 1.5 million people living in
the Gaza Strip.
Medical equipment is often
broken, lacking spare parts, or
outdated.
WHO attributes the dismal
state of Gaza’s healthcare
system to the Israeli blockade
of the territory, tightened in
June 2007 after Hamas, considered
a terrorist organisation by
the West, seized control. The
poor organisation of maintenance
services in Gaza
compounds the problem,
reports WHO.
Medical equipment sits idle
Some 500 tons of donations of
medical equipment which
flooded the Strip after Israel’s
military offensive ended on 18
January sits idle in warehouses.
Few donors consulted the
health ministry or aid agencies
working in Gaza to find out
what provisions were needed.
According to the health
ministry, 20% of the donated
medications had expired.
WHO said much of the equipment
sent was old and unusable
due to a lack of spare parts.
WHO also said suppliers
were unable to access medical
equipment for repairs and
maintenance and “since 2000,
maintenance staff and clinical
workers have not been able to
leave the Strip for training in
the use of medical devices”.
The Israeli Defence
Ministry says it is not obliged
to allow into Gaza anything
other than basic humanitarian
supplies necessary for
survival, and is concerned
certain medical technology
could be used for other more
sinister means. Gaza’s only
other connection to the
outside world is its border
crossing with Egypt, which is
closed most of the time.
The lack of proper medical
care in Gaza can have dire
consequences.
“The largest number of
deaths due to the siege is
among cancer patients,” Gaza
deputy health minister Hassan
Halifa said. “Radiotherapy for
cancer patients is not available
due to the lack of equipment,
and chemotherapy is
generally not available due to
the lack of drugs.”
Lack of drugs
In July, 77 out of 480 essential
drugs and 140 out of 700 essential
medical supplies in Gaza’s
health ministry were out of
stock, according to WHO.
Ismail Ahmed, a 66-year-old
from Shujayah, also lies in the
cancer unit of As-Shifa, with a catheter for urination flowing
into a wastebasket.
“We lack necessary equipment
for the patients,”
Abdullah Farajullah, a nurse at
the unit, said.
Suffering from bladder
cancer, Ismail requires blood
transfusions.
“There are not enough IV
[intravenous] bags. The nurses
put blood into plastic water
bottles to transfer into my IV
bag,” Ismail said.
Due to a lack of equipment,
he has been on a waiting list
for over a month to have a CT
scan, and requires an MRI –
although Gaza lacks a single
working MRI scanner,
according to WHO.
As-Shifa lacks equipment for
basic blood tests. Patients rely
on family members to take
their blood to certain clinics
for testing.
Limited electricity
Another problem for medics in
Gaza is the irregular electricity
supply, which affects sensitive
medical equipment such as
incubators and kidney dialysis
machines.
Hospitals in Gaza use uninterruptable
power supply
(UPS) systems as backups, but
they require batteries which
are often not available due to
border closures with Israel and
Egypt, according to WHO.
The International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC) is
funding and supplying 30% of
medications and medical
supplies in Gaza, said communications
officer Mustafa Abu-
Hassanain in Gaza.
“Most of the other 70%
comes from the health ministry
in Ramallah, paid for by the
Palestinian Authority budget,”
said Tony Laurance, head of
WHO’s West Bank and Gaza
Office in Jerusalem.
There is a dialogue between
the health ministry in Gaza
and the ministry in Ramallah
(under Fatah’s control).
Deliveries must be approved by
the Coordinator of
Government Activities in the
Territories (COGAT), a unit
of the Israeli Ministry of
Defence, before being allowed
into Gaza, explained Laurance.
This supply chain is unpredictable
and exacerbated by
the conflict between Fatah and
Hamas.
Date
of upload: 30th Sep 2009
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