Continuity: WHO Press Conference: Gaza Health Update - 21 December 2023
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Press Conferences , Edited News | WHO

WHO Press Conference: Update on health situation in Gaza - 21 December 2023

STORY: Gaza healthcare update – WHO

TRT: 3:09” 
SOURCE: UNTV CH
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
ASPECT RATIO: 16:9
DATELINE: 21 December 2023 - GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

SHOTLIST

  1. Exterior wide shot: UN building with UN flag, UN Geneva.
  2. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) – Sean Casey, WHO Emergency Medical Teams coordinator: “It's pretty unbearable to see people who are already victims of conflicts who are in what should be a safe place where they should be able to access care, where they're sitting, waiting to die unless something dramatically changes that will allow them to survive. And that required safe movement, it requires a huge uplift of fuel, it requires medicine, medical supplies, human resources. They're starving. They're dying of thirst.”
  3. Cutaway: Medium shot, UN building with UN flag
  4. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) – Sean Casey, WHO Emergency Medical Teams coordinator: “Patients were crying out in pain, but they were also crying out for us to give them water. It's pretty unbearable to see somebody with casts on multiple limbs, external fixator on multiple limbs, without drinking water and almost no IV fluids available.”
  5. Cutaway: Medium shot UN entrance at Place des Nations  
  6. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) – Dr. Richard Peeperkorn, WHO Representative in the Occupied Palestinian Territory: “Over 20,000 people now have been killed in the hostilities in Gaza. This is actually almost one per cent of the entire population. WHO calls again for a humanitarian ceasefire. This is needed now to reinforce and restock remaining health facilities, deliver medical services needed by thousands of injured people and those needing essential care, and above all, stop the bloodshed and death.”
  7. Cutaway: Wide shot, Ariana Park at UN Geneva
  8. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) - Sean Casey, WHO Emergency Medical Teams coordinator: “We went through the courtyard where we stepped over a hole from shelling that had happened just a couple of days before, passed a row of bodies that had been wrapped in white, in plastic sheeting,”
  9. Cutaway: Wide shot, UN flag with ICRC building in background
  10. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) – Sean Casey, WHO Emergency Medical Teams coordinator: “What would be considered unnecessary amputations in the rest of the world where there is capability to save limbs, where there's orthopedic capability, where there is vascular capability, that's not there. There's no surgery happening right now in northern Gaza. And so actually, many of the patients that I saw yesterday will need amputation if and when they're able to access surgical care.”
  11. Cutaway: Wide shot, UN building
  12. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) – Sean Casey, WHO Emergency Medical Teams coordinator: “It's too late. We’re behind. There is not enough food. Every single person I speak to, everywhere I go in Gaza, is hungry. The time is now. We are dealing with starving people now, adults, children. It's unbearable. Everywhere we go, people are asking even in the hospital, I walk around in the emergency department, somebody with an open bleeding wound, with an open fracture, they ask for food.”
  13. Cutaway: Wide shot, UN flag alley

Injured patients ‘waiting to die’ in northern Gaza as last hospital shuts down: WHO

There are no functioning hospitals in the north of Gaza and injured patients who need surgery and cannot be moved are “waiting to die”, the UN health agency said on Thursday, in a plea for a ceasefire to allow more aid into the shattered enclave.

The latest grave assessment from the World Health Organization (WHO) came after UN teams reached Al Ahli Arab hospital and Al Shifa hospital on Wednesday, amid reports of intensifying ground operations by Israeli Defense Forces and continuing airstrikes in the Gaza Strip, in response to Hamas’s 7 October terror attacks on southern Israel.

“Patients were crying out in pain, but they were also crying out for us to give them water,” said WHO Emergency Medical Teams coordinator Sean Casey, describing the scene at Al Ahli Arab hospital, where medical staff were struggling to cope with “no food, no fuel, no water”.

“It looks more like a hospice now than a hospital. But a hospice implies a level of care that the doctors and nurses are unable to provide…. It's pretty unbearable to see somebody with casts on multiple limbs, external fixator on multiple limbs, without drinking water and almost no IV fluids available.

“At the moment, it's a place where people are waiting to die unless we are able to move them to a safer location where they can receive care.”

Guterres aid call

Highlighting the need to relieve the deteriorating humanitarian crisis in Gaza, UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Thursday said that “intense fighting, lack of electricity, limited fuel and disrupted telecommunications” had severely restricted the UN’s efforts to provide life-saving aid to people in the enclave.

“Conditions to allow for large-scale humanitarian operations need to be re-established immediately,” the UN chief insisted in a tweet.

Growing hunger

The high-risk mission to northern Gaza involving the WHO, the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) and the UN Department of Safety and Security (UNDSS) ensured the delivery of seven pallets of urgently needed medicines, intravenous fluids and supplies for surgery and to treat the wounded, along with equipment to support women giving birth.

Important though the delivery of medical supplies to the north is to provide some relief to patients, much more worrying is the growing and already widespread shortage of food and water.

“We are behind. There is not enough food, every single person I speak to everywhere I go in Gaza is hungry,” Mr. Casey said, speaking to journalists in Geneva. “The time is now. We are dealing with starving people now, adults, children, it's unbearable. Everywhere we go, people are asking us for food even in the hospital, I walked around in the emergency department, somebody with an open bleeding wound, an open fracture; they asked for food. If that's not an indicator of the desperation, I don't know what is.”

Crippling shortages

According to the UN health agency, only nine out of 36 health facilities in Gaza are partially functional; all of them are located in the south.

“There are no operating theatres (in the north) anymore due to the lack of fuel, power, medical supplies and health workers, including surgeons and other specialists,” said Dr Richard Peeperkorn, WHO Representative and now acting UN humanitarian coordinator in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, speaking from Jerusalem.

At Al Ahli Arab hospital approximately 10 staff – “all junior doctors and nurses” – have continued to provide basic first aid to some 80 patients now sheltering in a church within the hospital grounds, Dr. Peeperkorn explained. “Some of them are severely injured and have been waiting for surgery for two weeks or have been operated on but are now at risk of post-operation infection due to lack of antibiotics and other drugs. All these patients cannot move and need to be transferred urgently, to have a chance to survive.”

Heavy bombing and clashes

According to the UN aid office OCHA’s latest update on the crisis, “heavy Israeli bombardments from air, land and sea”, continued across Gaza on Wednesday.

The most intense shelling was reported in Beit Lahiya and multiple areas in Gaza city (north), eastern Khan Younis in the south and the eastern and western areas of Rafah city, also in the south.

OCHA also reported “intense ground operations” and continuing clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinian armed groups in northern Gaza, Gaza City, the Middle Area, and Khan Younis, along with the firing of rockets by Palestinian armed groups into Israel.

Latest casualty figures from Gaza’s health authorities from Tuesday shared by OCHA indicated that 19,667 Palestinians have killed in Gaza since 7 October, about 70 per cent are believed to be women and children. More than 52,586 people have been injured, according to the same source, which reported that many more were missing, likely buried under the rubble.

The UN update also noted that two Israeli soldiers were reported killed in Gaza between 19 and 20 December. “Since the start of the ground operations, 134 soldiers have been killed in Gaza, and 740 soldiers have been injured, according to the Israeli military,” OCHA said.

New evacuation order

The update also flagged a 20 December immediate evacuation order from the Israeli military covering about 20 per cent of central and south of Khan Younis city. The area was marked in an online map published on social media. Before the 7 October escalation, the area was home to nearly 111,542 people, according to OCHA, which noted that it also included 32 shelters housing about 141,451 internally displaced persons - the vast majority having been previously displaced from the north.

 

Teleprompter
so Good morning, everyone. Uh,
thank you very much for, uh, for joining us on a very short notice.
And also thanks, uh,
to our colleagues in the UN information Service for facilitating this, uh, uh,
press briefing.
Uh, some of you have seen, uh, the post from our director general,
Dr Tedros, last evening,
Uh, on different platforms
about the visit that,
uh
uh, WHO made to two hospitals in north of Gaza.
Uh, and, uh, and what they have seen. So what?
What we wanted really, is to share with you exclusively. Uh, this morning,
Uh what? Uh, what, uh, our teams have, uh, have seen.
And what's the current situation? So, as you have seen in the
in the media advisory, we have, uh, uh, doctor
por
that, you know, uh, very well, by by now, uh, who is, uh, joining.
And he's also joined, uh, by by, uh, Sean Casey,
who was in the in the in the WHO team visiting hospitals.
Uh, yesterday he is leading emergency medical teams, Uh, for for Gaza.
So let's start immediately with Doctor por,
uh, and, uh, And then we will hear also from Shan
Doctor por,
um, Thank you very much. Uh, good morning. Can you hear me?
Yes, we can hear you.
OK,
so let me start with this. So yesterday on 20 December,
um, in another high risk joint mission,
a team from the World Health Organisation All the UN partners, the UN, uh,
United Nations office for the Coordinations of Unitarian Affairs or
and the United Mine Action Service. Um Ma
and the United Nations Department of Safety and Security, UN DS
S
reached Al
Ahli
Arab Hospital and Al Shea
hospitals in north of Gaza.
So the initial plan
was to deliver fuel to both facilities,
but we had to shift to supplies due to the
lack of safety guarantees in place and clearance issues.
Uh,
our teams delivered seven pallets of
medical supplies for surgery wound treatments,
supplies to support women during birth, delivery, IV fluids and medicines.
And they witnessed the impact of the recent attacks
on both health facilities and the level of destruction.
So our staff are running.
You will hear later from them, are running out of words to describe
the beyond catastrophic situation facing remaining patients and health workers.
So
WHO and and actually, I just come back from Gaza.
I spent more than two weeks and I was part of that mission. We visited the
Ari Hospital over a week ago,
and then I think I reported on that. It
already looked like it was utter chaos. It was completely
congested, Uh,
and we described it as a disaster zone,
but it was still
operational,
partly operational, but it had been working Operation Theatre
and and and some medical,
two medical specialists and constantly busy with trauma and trauma surgery.
Now al
Ali is a shell of hospital. Until two days ago,
it was the only hospital where injured people could surgery in northern Gaza,
and it was overwhelmed with patients needing emergency care.
There are no operating theatres anymore.
Due to the lack of fuel, power, medical supplies and health workers,
including surgeons and other specialists. It completely stopped functioning
and
and is only operating as a hospice currently
with no
or very little care.
Only nine out of 36 health facilities are partly functional in the whole of Gaza.
All of these in the south
there are actually no functional hospitals left in the north. Al
Ali was the last one, but is now minimum functional
and
still treating patients but not admitting new ones along with
Shea
al
Ada and Al Sahaba
Hospital.
So these hospitals are still sheltering. Also, thousands of displaced people
at Al
Ali about currently about 10 staff,
all junior doctors and nurses continue to provide basic first aid
pain management
as much as possible. Wound care and trauma stabilisation services.
80 injured patients. So that's what, uh, a week.
More than a week ago there were still two and 50 patients there.
80 injured patients, including elderly women and small Children,
are sheltering in a church
and
and and
as well and on the wards within the hospital grounds.
And it's orthopaedic section.
Many of these patients have lost family members and
don't have anyone to bring them water or food.
Some of them are severely injured and have been waiting for surgery for two weeks
or have been operated on but are now at risk of post operation infection.
Due to a lack of antibiotics and other drugs. All these patients cannot move
and need to be transferred urgently to have a chance to survive.
Bodies from recent attacks are lined up in a courtyard,
and they can't be given safe and dignified burials.
More than 20
Al
Ari hospitals were arrested on 18 December 6
were released and port to go south from the other 40.
There is no information currently regarding their detention,
and WHO reiterates his call for all parties to the conflict.
To respect international Unitarian law and for the protection of health workers,
patients, health facilities and ambulances at all times.
WO will keep striving
to supply health facilities in the northern Gaza,
but without fuel
staff.
In order to essential these medicines,
it won't make
Yeah, medicines won't make a difference and all patients will
die slowly and painfully.
Over 20,000 people now have been killed in the hostilities in Gaza.
This is actually one
almost 1% of the entire population.
The
calls again for a humanitarian cease fire.
This is needed now to reinforce and restock remaining health facilities,
the liver medical services needed by thousands of injured people
and those needing or essential care and above all,
to
stop the bloodshed and death.
I would like to hand over now to my colleague Sean
Casey,
who
was the team lead
of the mission yesterday to Al Al
Ahli and Al Shean
hospitals.
Thank you, Doctor Pepper.
And just, uh, before we hear from Sean, uh uh,
We will share, uh, remarks of Dr
Peppercorn
I. I also put in a chat. The
for those who have not seen the the comments, uh,
by Director General last night on this visit.
Uh, Sean, please. The floor is yours.
Thanks very much. Good morning. Colleagues from
from Gaza. I'm currently in Rafa.
Um, in the past few days, we've undertaken,
uh, two missions to the north, uh, one on Saturday,
uh,
to
als shea, uh, medical complex,
which is the the largest referral hospital in in the Gaza Strip.
Um, and so
really un
unbelievable condition in the emergency department in a hospital full of internal
person.
And,
uh, what we were told then was that the hospital was running out of fuel.
It had almost no staff.
Um, hundreds of patients and they were sending their
their surgical cases
to Al
Ahli. Uh, Arab hospital, um, which,
uh, instigated our, uh, mission there yesterday.
so we we we planned this mission,
uh, initially to take fuel to several hospitals.
Um, the security situation did not allow for that, uh, and instead, we,
uh,
dispatched, uh, trauma kits, trauma supplies, surgical supplies, IV fluids,
um, other medicines, clean delivery kits from UN FP A as well
to
Al
Ahli. And,
um, we had hoped to go to as the Haba maternity Hospital,
but there was active conflict in that area.
And so we we redirected the mission,
uh, to, uh, return to,
uh
oh.
Shea
Hospital, Uh,
still in Gaza City.
So we travelled north, um, for about two hours to reach
a
loly hospital.
Uh, when we arrived, it was very different from what, uh,
doctor Rick
porn had seen just a few days before.
Um, it was mostly empty when we pulled up in front of the hospital. The
the largest building in the the building at the front,
um, had been blown out. Um,
I believe that was from,
uh, activity, military activity. Um,
that happened in October.
Um, and there was a lot of debris,
uh, blocking, blocking the entrance.
A number of people came out and helped us to unload the truck and and do
a chain, uh uh
of passing boxes to
bring these medical supplies into the hospital grounds.
Um, we met with a couple of the doctors and nurses outside who told us
that they only had five doctors and five nurses remaining
on site and that they had 80 patients who were sheltering
uh or, uh,
admitted, if you can use that term in the in the church, uh, on on site,
Uh, and the ne orthopaedic building.
There was a lot of damage to the hospital itself.
but the church, uh, was still intact,
and the orthopaedic building was still intact.
So we went, uh, through the courtyard where we, uh, stepped over,
uh, a hole from shelling that had happened, Uh, just a couple of days before,
uh, past a row of bodies, Um, in,
uh, that have been wrapped in wipes. Uh, plastic sheeting.
that the doctors told us had been there for four days because it was so unsafe to move.
Um, and actually, I should say, as we were pulling up to the hospital,
there was gunfire.
uh, automatic gunfire and small arms fire
in the area with a crowd dispersing maybe a few 100
metres from from where we pulled up to the hospital.
Uh, we walked through the courtyard and into the church. Um,
where we found
a really unbearable scene. Um,
uh,
and you can see the pain in the eyes of the
doctors and nurses who are trying to care for these patients,
but it hurts with,
uh, 30 or so, uh, patients. Um, almost none of the ambulatory so
bedridden patients, some of them with, um,
serious trauma wounds.
Uh,
some of them had
had been lucky to have surgery,
uh, before the operating theatre went down.
Uh, we're struggling with post-operative infections.
Some of them had been injured days or weeks ago.
Uh, with no surgery,
uh, to, uh, stable limbs and, uh, and suffering enormously.
Uh, we saw,
um, a young girl who had been educated, who lost her own family,
and she lost her Her leg, uh, above her knee, um, or sorry below her knee.
Uh, we saw,
um, many patients who had said they hadn't,
uh, bathed or changed their clothes in weeks.
Uh,
the hospital staff,
uh, told us that many of their colleagues had
and taken to,
uh, taken away,
uh, two days before
and, uh, that they were struggling to maintain
and keep
the
baby patients
with no
no food, no fuel, no water.
Um, patients
were crying out in pain, but they were also
crying out for us to to give them water.
Um, it's it's pretty unbearable to see somebody with,
uh,
you know, cast on multiple limbs,
external fixators on multiple limbs who are just asking for a drink of water.
almost no IV fluids available.
Uh,
it it's a place. Um,
that, like Rick said, it looks more like a hospice now than a hospital.
Um, but it's it's a
hospice implies a level of care
that the the
five doctors and five nurses are simply unable to provide,
given the circumstances and what they have at their disposal.
Um, so at the moment, it's the place where people are waiting to die unless we
are able to move them to a safer location where they can receive care.
We visited the orthopaedic ward, which is where other patients are being held.
Um uh,
There the building is intact. One man was in a stretcher under the stairs.
Um, inside the ward, there were beds, uh, one next to the other. Um,
with people crying out, actually desperate for us to,
uh, hear their stories. They really wanted to tell us what had happened to them,
How they struggled to receive care.
Um, many of them were women and Children.
Um, a woman told us that, uh,
her whole family had been killed and and sh she couldn't get out of bed.
She had nobody to bring her food.
An elderly man started weeping when I spoke to him. Uh,
he had been shot in the in the chest in the right chest,
uh, several weeks ago and has still not received surgery.
Uh, so he he's he was shot and still only bandaged.
Um, a really horrifying scene.
Uh, and the health workers
are mostly young. Uh, those that I saw
in their twenties or early thirties, Uh, some of them junior doctors.
They said that there is no specialist left.
They they can't perform surgery, and they have no place,
uh, to
send these people at this at this moment in time. So we we delivered supplies there,
but it it was an unbearable the, uh, a
huge amount of suffering.
And we're now looking into how we can help
try to evacuate these patients to another facility.
But there's no place to evacuate them to in Gaza City. So the only option is,
to to bring them south. And even here in the south, the hospitals are are
very, very full
and of both patients and ID,
PS and the the The method of doing that is very challenging.
Uh, we we've tried to do that in the past. We've done it in the past
and had, um,
a paramedics, ambulance drivers detained and and and face challenges doing that.
So,
um, a number of barriers and hurdles to become.
We then proceeded to,
uh, Al
Shifa
Hospital
after delivering the supplies to
Ali,
uh, where we saw
a situation not unlike what we had seen a few days before on Saturday,
Uh, a
very, very full hospital with hundreds of patients,
uh, screaming in every day, many of them
with severe trauma being brought in in ambulances.
There are a few ambulances operating in Gaza City,
but mostly self presenting.
If they can walk, they come on foot.
If they can't walk, they're brought by donkey cart.
some of them are brought in on trolleys
and wheelchairs carried in by family members on be
fees.
Um or sometimes carried in on people's back.
Uh, the emergency department, Um, as I as I said on Saturday, uh, and
and Doctor
Pedro
tweeted It's really a blood bath.
it's,
uh,
got so few staff, almost the same number as
a Oxley hospital
caring for hundreds of patients.
And
I
thought
the the hospital grounds are sheltering
thousands of internally displaced person. So the surgical building,
uh, most of the the wards are occupied by ID PS
While we were at
Shifa this time, uh, we delivered medicines and supplies,
including clean delivery kits that we had hoped to take to
Alba Maternity Hospital,
Um, which we weren't able to access. The good news is that,
uh, the
Shifa medical staff said that they would be able to transfer
those clean delivery kits to the maternity hospital. Uh, when it's safe to do so,
Uh, so we hope that they'll reach there.
Uh, but there are also deliveries happening at,
uh, al
FIFA, so they will be used there.
Um, the the we talked about the deployment of emergency medical teams, which, uh,
will we hope will help to support health service delivery and resumption of,
uh, surgery in
the hospital
and also help to, um,
relieve the pressure on the emergency department.
Uh,
we have some teams that are willing to go,
but the hospital leadership did indicate that
bringing medicine bringing
doctors and nurses,
uh,
will not be enormously helpful if they don't have fuel to run the generators.
And if they don't have water and food for their patients
Um, so we need the full package. We need an interagency,
uh uh, and larger scale effort to to get
Shifa functioning again to resuscitate
FA.
As one of the doctors from
Shifa said on Saturday, it's a hospital in need of resuscitation.
Um, so it needs additional human resources, which we're working to mobilise.
We're providing medicine, fluid, surgical supplies.
Um, but we really need to get fuel in there. It uses 10,000 litres of fuel per day.
Uh, so it requires a huge uplift of fuel.
Um, and there are thousands of people there who are in need of food and water.
Um, what we also saw in Shifa
on this trip was
a surgical building that had been, uh, that had come under attack two days before
the 12 people lost their lives
on the grounds of the hospital.
Uh, two days before our visit,
uh, and,
uh, I walked through the building.
Uh,
I stepped on the rubble in the third floor
on the third level of the surgical ward myself,
um, and saw where some of those people lost their lives. Um, and and where,
uh, part of the building is now inoperable.
Uh, there were bullet holes, uh,
in the surgical building in the bridge that connects the city.
and we were also told that the person was
killed in the courtyard of the hospital yesterday morning
before our arrival by a sniper.
Um, so obviously, health facilities are coming under attack.
There's a huge level of suffering within the health facilities.
The health workers themselves are suffering.
Um, and what we're doing right now is trying to provide some level of relief,
uh, for the suffering with the provision of supplies.
By urging in additional support,
uh, we hope to do fuel delivery in the coming days,
Um, and also, uh, to support some of the other hospitals that have,
uh, ceased functioning for the most part or completely.
And see how we can help to To restart services in some of those locations.
Um, after they, uh, are no longer, um
uh, seeing military activity close by
or fighting in the area.
Uh, but what we really need is a cease fire. We need a a cessation of hostilities.
Health health facilities need to be safe places.
It's
it's pretty unbearable to see people who, uh,
are already victims of conflict who are are in what should be a safe place.
Um, where they should be able to active care,
uh, where they're sitting
waiting to die unless something dramatically changes that,
um will allow them to survive.
That and that requires,
uh, safe movement requires a huge uplift of fuel.
Requires medicines, medical supplies, human resources.
Uh, they're starving.
They're dying of thirst.
Um, one woman wanted to cry out to me and speak to me yesterday,
and she was unable to because she was so dehydrated.
I've never seen suffering, like, just
particularly avoidable suffering like this.
Um, so we need
urgent action.
Uh, we need to stop these Children and women and elderly people from, uh,
dying in a place where they should be safe
and where they should be cared for.
uh, we're we're trying our best,
uh, as WHO and as the United Nations,
uh,
community and the community of nongovernmental
organisations to provide some relief.
Uh, but it's not enough.
Uh, I'll stop there and I can come
back
to you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Sean, for sharing this, Uh,
it's even difficult just to listen to everything. What? What you are saying? Uh,
thanks. Thanks for being the witness.
Uh, we are sending, uh, you the the the the remarks of Dr
Pakorn
shortly. You will have it in your email. Um,
doctor
porn is, uh, speaking from Jerusalem. And Sean is speaking from
Rafa. We don't have a remarks. Uh, from, uh,
from, uh, from Sean. He's just, like, really telling us what he has seen.
Not something that has been prepared. So let's go for questions now,
Uh, starting with Imogen, uh, from, uh, BBC. Imogen.
Yeah. Thank you very much.
Both of you,
For for sharing that you said that you wanted to take fuel over the weekend.
And this wasn't possible for the for security reasons that basically
you were told you couldn't take fuel
or it was too dangerous to carry fuel.
I just want to Were you just told that can't be part of your convoy?
That's my question.
Yeah, I think
Sean might want to add This is Rick speaking from Jerusalem. So
just coming back from Gaza,
I think the decision was made because there was
a lot of military activities just north of that,
And this mission was also supposed to go
to
Ottawa.
Sorry, Uh, Saha
Hospital, the NC, a hospital and and Al
Sabah
hospital.
And that didn't go there because there were a lot of military activities and,
of course, then bringing few,
you know, urine, additional risks. So that was the reason, um,
fuel was not taken and and the focus was on medical supplies.
Maybe Sean wants to add on this.
Uh,
so
Yes, thanks. So we we had planned a fuel delivery following our previous
mission to Shifa.
Uh, but we
decide.
Well, the mission to deliver the fuel was aborted for several reasons.
One is that we didn't
have
assurances in pine
to be able to get
up to, uh,
from the from the from the parties to the conflict to
be able to get up to the hospital and back.
Uh, within the time that is available within daylight hours and,
clearing checkpoints and and proceeding
through very challenging road conditioning.
So
I must say, when when I travelled up to Fi
on Saturday, it took 4.5 hours
to go about 40 kilometres.
Um
and that was with, uh, a flatbed truck with not a huge amount of supplies on it.
we were going to take 20,000 metres of fuel, so we needed it to be,
um, a co-ordinated movement with the parties to the conflict and also,
ensure that we had a safe routes to path with 20,000 metres of fuel, which is all,
obviously a a volatile commodity.
And, uh, and we haven't done fuel deliveries to the north
in the last three weeks since the since the pause.
Um, there were also concerns that it's a high value item, uh,
in a population that's very, very desperate,
uh, and that there could be, um, potential for,
uh,
some kind of,
uh, engagement along the route. So,
um, it was decided that we needed to
validate the route a bit more.
Um, which we did yesterday. We provided those supplies and we hope to deliver fuel on
in the coming days.
the fuel needs are enormous. Um, as I said, our
people
runs on about 10,000 litres a day.
The truck that we were planning to take is 20,000 litres. So even if we had made that
trip, that would be two days worth of fuel for the one referral hospital.
Um and then and then the other facilities we were targeting,
we would not have been able to access because
of activity in the area fighting in the area for
a number of challenges. But we think that we've been able to mitigate some of those,
and we'll give it another try in the coming days. Over.
Thank you. Thank you. Uh, so
next question, uh, Mohammed from Anadolu
News Agency. Mohammed
Tariq. Thank you so much for taking my question.
Yesterday, Minister of Health in Gaza announced that the Israeli army tortured
Kamal Edwin Hospital Director Kahlo
and detained him. Hundreds of health care workers have died in Israel attack since
7 October and Israel is detaining now
8093 healthcare workers inhuman conditions.
Uh, my question is, is
WHO what do you plan to do
to protect healthcare workers from Israeli attacks. Thank you.
Thank you very much. Mohammed.
As as you know, we have been always, uh, calling for healthcare to be protected.
But doctor
porn, Would you like to speak about this?
Yeah, I think WHO, I think. Let me explain again.
One of the roles WHO when it comes to, um, attacks on health care.
And it is a mandate for WHO, uh,
provided by the World Health Assembly by all the member states.
So WHO in every conflict an active conflict, an acute conflict,
chronic long conflict
WHO is obligated to monitor and analyse and report on attacks
on healthcare.
And that's what we are trying to do.
So we we always try to verify when we cannot
verify.
We will always say, Like, who reported those attacks, and then we will verify as
as as good as possible.
Uh,
what, of course.
Uh, the EHO. Makes a point that that
that any, uh, detention of health workers,
a R
of health workers is an attack on healthcare.
And we expect that anyone who gets arrested and detained,
including health workers, is treated
according to internationally returned law
and
and and and and, uh um, the
families,
they
well, they apart and should be, of course, informed
on on this. We are extremely worried
that we have seen numbers of health workers. And I just want to,
uh, also remind you that WHO was leading a mission to O
Shea
that is now weeks ago
and that six health workers were detained on that mission.
Two were released. There are still three health workers,
three for the Ministry of Health and one P CS.
A colleague,
uh, were detained and we know nothing about their work or about
the family. Of course, is extremely W worried.
Their colleagues are extremely concerned, and and also, we in the WHO are very,
uh concerned.
So
not so in, In, in in. In that sense. Yeah.
WHO, uh, has a system in place on attacks on healthcare
and
regularly reports on on on this, uh, including anybody.
Uh,
and we will keep doing this,
and we will keep raising this and just to
give you some figures since the seventh of October,
So we have documented 493 attacks on healthcare
in occupying
Palestinian territory
of 246 in Gaza Strip,
and they resulted in 582 fatalities and 7700 and 48 injuries.
So the attacks have also affected 61 health care facilities,
including 26 hospital damage out of 36
it affected. Also, 76 ambulances,
including
38 with sustained,
uh,
with sustained damage
over to you.
Thank you very much. Uh, the
people
I just, uh,
shared in a in a chat the link to our portal on attacks on health care where you can,
uh, look for the
period and the country, Uh,
and, uh, and have her latest numbers on, uh, on on what
Dr. P
was just explaining. What is the role of WHO Next question. Uh, Nina Larson from a FP.
Nina?
Yes. Hi. Thank you for taking my question.
Um, first, I just wanted to clarify, uh, something you just said,
Doctor Peppercorn,
Um, on the health workers that were detained. Um, last month,
you S you said two were released, and then you said three remained in detention.
I was just wondering I I wasn't quite clear on the numbers. Um,
is it three or four who remain detained? Um
and
I saw that amnesty yesterday was asking for, uh, for investigations into, um,
enforced disappearances.
Uh, in Gaza. Would you consider these enforced disappearances? Um,
sorry. That was That was my clarification.
And I have a question, but you can answer that first if you want, uh, or I can
Yeah, I can. So, I I mentioned on that mission,
which is now, almost a month ago.
So six initially
on the way back, Uh, from Shiva
to the
south,
six health workers were detained.
There were, um
uh, three from the Ministry of Health
and three from PR CS.
Two were released from PR CS.
Four remain detained, So three from the Ministry of Health
and one
P or CS colleague. So four people remain detained.
And there's we, uh, the their families, their colleagues,
including us WHO
we have We don't know anything about their whereabouts and, of course,
are extremely concerned.
That applies, of course, to all
the health workers.
And and we are trying to to get a better overview of that health workers,
we get detained.
And when there's no information about that,
we will constantly raise that over to you.
Thanks. Uh, Nina you have a question?
Yes. Thank you very much. So, um, I wanted to ask about, um uh,
Israel has, uh, accused, uh,
people of turning a blind eye to the use of the hospitals by Hamas.
And some hostages have also said
that they were detained
in or near the hospitals. Um, is that something that you've seen?
Uh uh, on the ground. Do you think there that's credible? And if so,
um, why haven't you condemned that? Thank you.
Um
uh, Nina? No.
Uh, I think we in our missions have not seen anything of this on the ground,
but we cannot verify.
We are not in a position to to ascertain how any hospitals being used.
Uh, other than a health facility. We cannot verify that.
And I want to make that point as well. It always comes back on a tax on health care.
So attacks on health care again. I say the role of WHO
is to monitor, analyse and report.
We are not attributing
the attacks on health care. We are not a crime investigating organisation.
I think that should be very clear.
Thank you. Over to you.
Thank you very much. Uh, I'm just looking at the zoom. Uh, do we have, um,
any more questions from, uh, from reporters?
Ah, here. We, uh We have a nick coming. Bruce from New York Times. Nick.
Yeah. Thank you. Um,
I wanted just to check. Um
uh, you you've indicated that water is in acute short supply.
I mean, what is is any water at all reaching any of
Al
Ahli
or Al
Shifa? Um
and, uh,
you know,
this must be one of perhaps one of the most critical shortages. It's a any emergency
deliveries that you can foresee in
becoming days. Um, that can alleviate that. Um,
And then a question that my colleague John Zac
Costas has often asked.
I just wonder, Wanted to check if you had any update on it.
And that is on the scale of amputations that is being conducted. And perhaps
whether you can provide that in relation to one hospital or in relation to many,
that that would be useful.
Thank you.
Ok, um,
if you let me start and I'm sure that Sean will want to compliment on this as well,
because they are discussing this, of course, with the one UN.
Um
uh
Yeah, the one UN in Gaza and parts of Gaza on your last question, Nick on the level.
Amputations. No, we don't have an overview of that. The only thing I could say it's
it's everywhere.
When I was there for more than two weeks,
I visited most hospitals in the South and specifically also the larger one.
The the European Gaza Hospital, the
NASA
medical complex. But
but actually all the hospitals, including Al
Ali.
And when I visited Al
Ali, the the
the incredibly sad thing was there were then still two medical specialists,
an orthopaedic surgeon and
and a general surgeon, which we both worked with the
WHO. We did training together. We know them very well,
but
they left,
and I reported
on that they elect a vascular surgeon. So
they they indicated they occasionally had to do amputations which
normally would not be needed if there would be a vascular surgeon.
We see a lot of, uh, we everywhere around a
lot of, um, empties, men, women, Children as well.
Lots of Children, lots of Children.
And we don't have an overview. We should get an overview.
We working trying to work on that,
uh,
I also want to make a point on what you said about water,
and Sean will get in
on that
currently. And this is, I think is also a current and real problem.
We talk about getting more aid,
humanitarian aid into Gaza and there's a little
bit of good news with the opening of Ker
Shalom.
But it's still
not enough.
It's absolutely no no.
The big problem is getting it then specifically to the north.
These missions, as Sean already described they. They need a lot of planning.
They need a lot of deconflicting and even then it's not completely deconflict.
They need
constantly to change routes and and and and and roads and very bad roads
going over 40 kilometres and sometimes taking 45 hours, et cetera.
That's reality checkpoints, etcetera.
So it's very difficult to organise this
these missions and that is why why, of course,
a humanitarian ceasefire is incredibly important, but also to
make sure
that those missions can take place not once a day or once every two days. But
there will be multiple missions to the north.
That's that warehouses can be set up in the north
that the storage facilities can be set. And from there
you can distribute food, water,
and and and and and other supplies that's not there at the moment.
So it's all haphazard.
And And
I would say, the UN doing what they, uh, what they can do.
Uh, maybe Sean, you want to add on this a little bit?
How you currently discussing this
at
short,
Over to
you.
Thanks.
Yes. So,
first on the water, Uh, I'll I'll speak about water and food.
Um, because even within the hospitals,
patients who were severely injured
um, are crying out to us, um, for water and food. So, uh, and and even as we
walk on the streets, we're we're at, you know, in the hospital yard,
everybody's asking for water and food.
And and yesterday, when I was in Al
FFA,
uh, I was asked, they said, Oh, you're back again, Sean, uh, by
the
people who happen to be in the courtyard And they And they said,
um, it's great that you're bringing medical supplies.
Uh, but we need food and water.
the challenge
the challenges are many, uh, one is that,
um
the The level of desperation is huge. And the numbers of people in need are huge.
And so doing orderly
distribution of food or water is very challenging.
There's lots of security concerns around shooting that,
um, the planning, uh, that rick mentioned,
um, is the complex, and the scale, uh, is is enormous. And so
we can bring
tank truck tanker trucks with water.
Uh, but it will be a a drop in the bucket relative to the need.
Uh, one of the efforts that's underway, uh, by UN colleagues is to, uh,
put fuel delivery to the desalination plant in the north
so that some water flow can be established.
Uh, potable water flow can be established there,
uh, through that also working to address the sewer system in the north so that,
um, the water sources can avoid being contaminated.
on a on a related point on water
in Gaza, a lot of the groundwater is has high salinity and
healthy.
Uh, so even with filtration systems,
uh, it's not potable. Um, and so there's there's an
an issue in terms of the water sources here,
Um uh, and in terms of the scale and complexity of delivering,
uh, particularly to places like northern Gaza,
on amputations. Um,
I think what Rick said is correct. Um,
we we see as it is,
everywhere we go, Um uh, and unfortunately, many of them are really unnecessary.
What would be considered unnecessary amputations in,
uh, the rest of the world.
And where there's capability to save limbs Where there's Orthoplast,
there's
vascular, uh, surgical capability
that's not there. But there's no surgery happening right now in in northern Gaza.
And,
uh and so actually, many of the patients that I saw yesterday
will need amputation
when they are if and when they are able to,
uh, access surgical care.
Uh, but
we saw limbs that are not salvageable.
Um, and people may die of the infections that they have
because their limbs are infected.
Um, uh, and we saw patients who are septic and and dealing with the serious,
complex infection.
So,
there are a huge number. We don't have a a clear tally.
Um, many of them, unfortunately are,
uh, last resort amputations, Uh, just to save a life. Um, if it if you can save a limb,
Uh, and it just as Rick said, speaks to the need to
have a humanitarian pause. So that we can,
uh,
bring in the the teams and the supplies and the fuel to make the surgery possible.
Evacuate these cases to a place where they can be safe, Um, A.
And
and hopefully save some of these lives and save some of these ones. But
this is not. It's not just about the number of amputations. It's also
that we're talking about small Children
who have lost their legs,
who lost both of their lives. We're talking about,
um, elderly people who have lost them, who have nobody to care for them.
They can't move.
They're they're really
bound to their bed and they can't.
Even if there was a lot of distribution, Even if there was a food distribution,
they would struggle to get to it.
So there's there's really layers to this, but, um, it's a It's a horrible scene
where there's lots of amputations.
There's lots of amputations that are becoming infected
because there isn't even water to to manage the post op, the post operative care.
I'll stop there.
Thank you very much. Uh, I'll just go in the order of hands that we have.
So we have more questions coming. Uh, Lisa
Schlein Voice Voice of America.
Tari. Yes. Good morning. Um, thank you. To you and to you gentlemen.
Um, a
couple of questions. One. There have been
in increasing warnings
about, uh,
people at risk of starving to death
because of lack of, um, food
and water
and also that it's likely that more people will die from disease than from bombs.
The longer the, um, conflict goes on,
I'd like to, uh, ask for your response to that whether you believe that,
uh, sorry to use this phrase, but
whether this is a ticking time bomb, uh, how much time
actually is
available is left to respond to the needs of
the people before it does reach a point of,
uh, well, horrible. No return. Thank you.
Thank you, Lisa.
let me start. And then maybe Sean might also add to that, uh, you know, like
we already
just coming back to Jerusalem and and what I witnessed,
and I want to make that point very clear.
Uh, so
Gaza, before this crisis had a reasonably functioning health system, I
told them as well we had also in the case part and neighbours.
Also, when you look at nutrition?
Yes, there were some
some
some groups of the population with what we call food insecure, but it was limited.
We mainly talk from the health point of view.
We talked about micronutrients deficiency
in some areas. Uh, iron et cetera,
uh, pre
women and I iron deficiency et cetera.
Uh, but they were very limited.
Um, and already what I saw over the last couple of weeks,
you could see that that,
uh, that
the food insecurity
was becoming a major is becoming a major topic.
I understand that the I BC and FRC will will actually
raise much more and much more detailed information about that.
And hopefully today, or at least in the coming days,
they are experts on that.
But what we already see that and and you can you've seen it also on the news from WFP
uh, they
that this rapid food security assessments following a significant
deterioration of food security situation in the south of Gaza
and also the large influx of IDPs. 1.95 million people are IDPs
and and with research
of hostilities
and very,
very high levels of hunger, levels and, uh were reported so on let's say extreme
and and large uh, part of the population. Extreme food is insecure
and we will get more data
on on this
now the,
uh
and the proportion of of IUP households
not only ID P households Also
no
ID P households, I say
going to sleep hungry or maybe have access to one
small meal a day is increasing and it's increasing from the ID.
P from, uh was already increasing 34 to 50%. So it's
a it's a it's a major, a major concern. And that's in combination of what you
what you actually said with
the
the the huge number of
not only in the UN run shelters but also in the nation.
Shelters are bring 1.95 million people.
The water and sanitation conditions are
are completely below par
and the water consumption, I mean, like an unsafe sources, etcetera persist
and even more in the north, as just described by Sean and myself and where the water
desalination plants are not working, et cetera,
Uh,
so what we what we also have seen and we try to monitor and I must say U NRW
is trying to assist as good as possible.
It's difficult to monitor,
but what we have seen is loss of acute respiratory infections.
We're talking about 170,000 cases, a lot of scabies and mice,
50,000 cases of diarrhoea over 125,000
under 5, uh, 61. 62,000, which is way, way more than normal this time.
Skin rash. Uh, chickenpox, Uh, J
dish close to 4500 which is actually very worrisome for hepatitis I like.
Is it hepatitis A or is it E, which is much more grave
and no lab capacity
to actually, because it's all destroyed. Nonfunctional.
So WHO has just got in some some lab kits that testing kits, and we will try the UN W A
to set up an early warning and response system.
So
the routine surveillance system, which was working pretty well in Gaza,
has been completely hampered.
It's not working currently,
and and many of these people of the people who need
no access will go undiagnosed. So the situation is probably worse than it seems.
An area of vexing vaccination,
routine vaccination. Gaza
had a
fantastic operational routine vaccination better than most
countries around the world close to 100%
now.
So at the moment, that's maybe not
a risk, but very quickly that will become a risk.
And think about measles epidemics, what you get and when
when this is not, uh, not addressed.
So, yes, we are very concerned. We have not yet seen major
outbreaks. But of course we are.
We are actually simply waiting for that. If this doesn't change,
if the excess is not improving,
if the supplies are not improving, if the
the the
shelter conditions are not improving if the water
and sanitation conditions are not improving if the access
to health services and health care is not improving,
I don't like to phrase what you mentioned.
Uh, yeah, taking time bomb. Yes, but it definitely is
over to you.
Maybe. Sean, Do you want to add something from the field? Correct.
I'll add one brief point, which, uh,
addresses the question of when is when is it too late?
And I think it's too late.
We
were behind. There is not enough food.
Every single person I speak to everywhere I go in Gaza
is hungry.
It's
the time is now. We we we are dealing with starving people now
adults,
Children
and
it it's it's
unbearably Everywhere we go, uh, people are asking us for food,
even in even in the hospital.
As I said,
I walk around an emergency department. Somebody with an open bleeding wound.
Open fracture.
Um, they ask for food.
if that's not an indicator of the desperation and the
I mean, I don't I don't know what it is. We we We
move around Gaza to deliver medical supplies,
and
people rush towards our trucks hoping that it's food.
Um, and when we say that it's medical supplies, actually,
they clear the way for us. They they help move debris out of the road.
Um, but everybody is just constantly on the lookout for for food.
So there's efforts underway with with the one UN to
look at cash options in some parts of God's, where there is food on the market.
But nobody has money to buy it in other parts.
There's really nothing on the market,
and there's an urgent need to bring in flour and and basic food stuff. So
yeah, II, I think, um, we're we're behind on a lot of things here in
Gaza and there are trucks. There are hundreds of trucks
sitting in Rapa
Rick said it is good that you
shalom
is open.
Um, but we need more food to come in,
uh, the private sector. The commercial trucks also need to come in.
Um, cash needs to be put in people's hands,
and that will address some of the food prices.
But we're seeing the consequences of it already in the hospitals
and and in our daily interactions with people across across the
country.
Yeah, and I want to add all that. There is what Sean said There's no economy going.
So the private sector
is, of course, key to get it reactivated again.
And And we've raised this by the way many times over the last couple of weeks.
I mean, if this is not a real big indicator, every hospital you go,
so there's a lack of food for patients.
But there's also a lack of food for health workers.
So health workers they have to scavenge around,
and they have to to to spend their time at the moment, probably.
We estimate that less than 30% of the of the
25,000 health workers in Gaza is actually operational because everyone
and that's including from our own staff. The WHO staff we have,
and one third is still incredibly operational.
But a lot of other people I just say they are. They are in a mode
of, of, of surviving.
They're focusing on surviving and focusing on. What can we get from the market?
There is no money around, so there's even there are still some farming done.
I've seen some farming in the middle area and Southern area, et cetera, but,
of course, and there is no economy
people cannot cannot access. So it's
everywhere.
There's talk about foods and people ask for food and water.
And and every time we broke in a truck of medical supplies up north in the south,
etcetera,
we had to protect those trucks
and constantly raise out our voice.
These are Dawa.
These are medicines. These are medical supplies for hospital, a
hospital Y, because people jumped on those trucks to see if we were not.
If we were in a line. If we were, you know, if there may be more water in supply and
that truck would be empty in no time.
That is the reality in the ground. And I think sometimes I feel that
it's voices are not heard enough.
The misery is so much large, larger than than I think. What people?
What people think,
Obviously.
Thank you. Thank you both.
Uh, let's, uh we have, uh, three more questions for your hands.
Uh, Jamie Keaton, Associated Press. Jamie.
Hi, Tarek. Thank you very much.
Um, I just wanted to know if you thank you very much for all the detail about the, uh,
food, uh, and and water situation
Could do you have any numbers about, uh,
the people that have actually been treated for malnutrition?
Is there any sort of, uh, metric or gauge? It could, uh, indicate, uh, we did it.
And And if if it does bear repeating, um, the numbers that, uh, that WFP has provided,
of course.
Which, uh, you know, the other day saying that
you know, 90% regularly go an entire day without a meal. Um,
and, uh, and a half of Gazans are starving.
Uh, you know, is there are we getting close to a a famine like situation there?
I mean, that sounds like it could be, uh
uh and the offer with those kinds of numbers.
Um, so So basically, my question for you really is just
about the, uh, about the the the treatment for, uh, for malnutrition And, uh,
and anything you might say about those figures, those other figures.
Thank you.
Yeah, I say it's a very good question.
Um and, um,
at the moment.
So I think you also say that the even the one UN and the one UN the various clusters,
etcetera.
We talk about relatively small numbers with their partner trying
to focus on the priority for WO the priorities.
How do we make sure that the hospital, uh uh, health system, which is on it? Knees.
How how do we make sure it's
at least
keeps on providing basic health services? That's our key priority.
That's what we focus on. And
we try to to get a sustained supply
supplies, medical supplies, essential medicine, etcetera
to those facilities, which is already incredibly difficult to
do.
Now, uh,
with this
with this, uh uh,
with these figures coming out and what we have
observed about the situation around hunger and malnutrition,
food insecurity, extreme food insecurity,
Yes, the both the health cluster and nutrition.
They they want to work first. With that, the primary health care facilities is just
what always should be done.
And and under five clinics that you do middle upper arm circumferences
et cetera that you separate the system
that you also do that and try to get them do that in some sentinel sites in, in, in,
in some of the shelters and some of the makeshift makeshift shelters.
Plans are made currently to do that to
to each other.
But first, the first priority should be that
there should be sustained flow of food
and water
and reaching everywhere
within the south. Within the north, that should be the
the the key priority. And, yes, we need to, uh, to get
to get to, uh, to get better data on on on this,
uh, work is being done by the nutrition cluster and the house cluster show.
You might want to add something on this,
and I'll say, I mean,
we're struggling with numbers on a number of fronts
because communications was down for much of the last,
uh, week. I mean, we have
very often no cell signal
people in the north, actually, when When I go to the North,
people ask me what's happening because they don't have
Internet access. They don't have cellular service. They don't have
any visibility on what's happening outside of
a small area where they're staying, where it's safe to to to, to exist.
and as a consequence of that,
you know, we have limited reporting.
We have people who are unable to access
services to even get screened for malnutrition.
Um, we we have challenges in transporting
the therapeutic foods to the North because, uh,
supplies are sometimes compromised.
Trucks are,
uh,
looted is I. I hate using the word looted because looted
implies criminal intent.
But there are desperate people who are looking for food who will, as Rick said,
jump on the trucks and and and they're desperate to eat something.
So
we have challenges just in the security and transport of therapeutic foods for
for young Children and infants
and, um,
uh, challenges in getting information and challenges for
patients themselves for mothers to take their babies,
parents to take their their small Children
to a clinic.
Uh, because there's fighting in the area.
Uh, and they don't feel safe moving from whatever location they happen to be in.
Uh, that's all up.
Thank you. Thank you both. Uh, next question. Kathrine
Jan
Campo conga
from France.
Van
Katrine.
Thank you, Tariq. And good morning.
Uh, thank you to both doctors for, um, meeting us this morning.
Um, I have two questions. Um, the first is to Doctor Sean
Kei. Uh,
he spoke about amputations that could
have been avoided in normal circumstances.
So, uh, doctor, could you give us a percentage
of the amputations that could have been avoided
if we were, um, in a place where, uh, people could get access to a normal, um
uh,
hospital, Uh, services or doctor Richard? Uh, uh, paper,
one of both of you. And I'd like also to know
if, um you have, um, some more Children
that have been evacuated.
Uh, could you please um,
give us more details on on that one? Thank you
to both of you.
Thanks, I. I can comment on the the amputations. I mean, the the
simple
answer is no, I don't have the numbers.
Um uh of limbs that could have been saved.
I think the hospitals that are functioning, particularly in the north But even here
in the southern part of, uh, the Gaza Strip in, uh,
in ho,
they're absolutely overwhelmed. Um,
I mean, hundreds of patients coming in every day,
uh, with serious injury
and staff who were not able to access the hospital. So
not long ago, I was at European Gaza
Hospital where they said
the staff who live across the road, you know, 500 metres away
are unable to get to the hospital. And consequently, they're unable to perform
Uh, some of these very simple procedures, actually, not just amputations.
Simple procedures
that would save lives. So people are dying.
The doctors told us that European Gaza Hospital and a doctor medical complex
in communists and and as as well as in health facilities in the north,
that people are dying
because there are not the providers in place
to provide care for basic,
um, illnesses and injuries that would otherwise be very treatable.
Um, so we don't have a hard number,
but I can tell you in every in every hospital that I've been to in the last 2.5 weeks,
and
I've seen patients who have had amputations.
Um who? Uh
um
um lack access to care.
Uh,
simply because the providers are no
longer available because they've been displaced.
Um, they've had to flee,
Um, because they are,
um, scared to to go to work.
Or they're scared to leave their families to go to the hospital
and that they may never return.
They may not be able to get back across the room.
so no, no firm numbers on it, but, uh,
it's it's a common,
uh, a common occurrence. Unfortunately, that we're seeing,
um, that people are really struggling to access basic care, and
and they're dying of things that they shouldn't die from.
Uh, and they're losing them that they should have to lose
because of these, um, access constraint.
And because of ongoing conflict,
uh, I'll hand over to To Rick. Maybe on the evacuation.
Yeah, And maybe to add one thing on the amputation, I think it's for me.
It was more than telling that two
incredibly well trained medical specialists, um, a week ago when I was in this Ala
hospital
straight away told me that, like, Hey, I'm an orthopaedic surgeon, my colleague,
and we know them as a general surgeon, we do not have the skills.
I mean, like, we are not sexual surgeons.
So we have done and will be doing amputations
when
that should not happen.
That's I think is for me more than more than telling on the
on the Effi operation of patients. Uh
uh
so
SWHO political. We think that many more patients should be evacuated out of Gaza
and we know that that Egypt is ready for
that and they they raise Egyptian government and EFC
as such. And we are very grateful for that. But
it has to
speed up and increase
and including the There are other countries in the region
uh, which
which which are willing to also assist with with, um, accepting
patients and their companions. Uh, you know, when there are needs for referral.
Uh,
and I'm really literally thinking about hundreds,
maybe even thousands of patients over the next month, which should be referred,
uh,
the way
we were together with, uh with the Egyptian government
EC
That was already a couple of weeks ago, where we facilitated with SDU Hospital the
transfer of a number of I think, 30 Children with cancer
and and
to Egypt and from Egypt to other places,
but much more is needed. I also want to remind everyone that
before the crisis that on average 50 to 100 patients a day, five days a week would go
would go for referral care to East Jerusalem hospital or
east or east to East Jerusalem, to the hospitals there or to the West Bank.
40% of that was oncology related, paediatric oncology, adult oncology, etc.
Those patients we we don't even talk about anymore.
We only focus on trauma and say therefore
because it's so overwhelmed. But that's
another group of patients, uh, the
the the patients with
nonchronical diseases which cannot be treated in, uh,
in in in in Gaza
uh,
oncology patients, etcetera, which
so we need to. What is needed is a much better
medical evacuation
outside Gaza into Egypt, and
and they needed from Egypt to other countries in a more organised way. And
there's literally a need for hundreds, probably thousands, of patients.
This would also help to decompress the completely over
S
health care system.
Every hospital we talk about 33 times as many patients as their normal vets
and and all the IC U
and and the last point, which I've never seen in any conflict. But
the many patients which could be discharged
patients are afraid
to be discharged.
They don't want to be discharged because they are
afraid to go back to where they come from.
So they later around in this hospital and
like some of the hospital, said it is very difficult to
to get rid of these patients
over to you.
Thank you. Thank you both, Uh, we have two follow up questions from Nick and Katrine.
So let's do those and try to be short. Nick,
this is a very short one, and perhaps the answer is rather obvious.
But maybe you could just explain
what are the constraints on evacuation of patients at this point?
How much of this is is down to the fundamental
insecurity and and and continuing conflict and how much of it is due to,
um, if you would like bureaucratic procedure or or or political will. Thank you.
OK,
I would expect the political will is there, and people talk about it all the time,
so I think it has to be implemented.
I mean, like, I hear this from all sides. The political will is there to
to organise a better medical effi situation.
I think it's a lot of the procedures that has to do partly with,
uh with security and screening, etcetera.
But for me, that's not I don't want to go there. I mean, we see what is needed.
And many more patients need to be evacuated on a regular and a more organised way.
What we hear and see is like 20 to 40 patients, sometimes a day that is way too 20.
That's way too little.
We've seen lists of patients which are much longer than that,
and it should be facilitated. I understand everywhere where when I listen
that the political will is there that that the resources are there,
that's the,
uh, the hospital facilities are are there on the other side.
So let's just do it.
That would be my, uh,
plea.
Thank you. And, uh, let's go to to last follow up question from Katrine. Katrine.
Uh,
thank you, Tariq.
Um, in fact, the follow up is is regarding the French floating hospital.
That was, uh, initially, uh, supposed to to dock off the coast of Gaza.
So I'd like to know if, um you work with, um, this hospital.
And I know that the hospital is in Egypt for the moment.
Um, is it possible for any, uh, boat,
uh, to dock off the coast or, uh, did, um, the isra
Israeli bombing damage? Um, in fact,
uh, the Gaza port.
Yeah, OK,
I'm gonna I'm not a docking specialist or the specialist of ships and boats,
etcetera,
but, uh,
first of all,
the issue is not about balls in front of the Garza coach.
That's not going to help
the evacuation.
The medical evacuation to Egypt can be organised and should be organised
from there. That's the second step.
Can Egypt,
Egypt And and I think they'd be very grateful
that they are ready to receive many more patients.
Hospitals are ready. And if there's need to refer from Egypt to other countries.
And there are many countries in the region which we have offered
that we heard from from Qatar and from Iraq and from the UAE
and Turkey, for example.
They are already we heard from some European countries that they are ready to
to to if needed to accept. So
then maybe, I don't know, maybe they can go from from from Egypt to that. Bo,
I don't care. But I think there is, uh,
there is
there is. The best way possible is to get out of Gaza into Egypt and from Egypt.
Either remain into Egypt.
There's a lot of good services available in
Egypt or when either go to other countries.
Certain places
that should be the focus.
Thank you, Doctor
Phan. Uh, Sean, would you like to add something to that?
Thanks. Yes, I'll just just add. I mean,
as Rick said, it's about getting It's about getting out,
and there's plenty of destinations.
But the I think the fundamental point at the moment within Gaza is that we have,
20 or so percent of hospital bed functioning.
We have a huge reduction of staff available.
Um, there
even there are basically no bed available.
There's there's no room for patients to move within.
The,
um, the the biggest referral facilities
in the South in the South, which are still functioning, are 203 104 100% capacity,
so internal referrals are occasionally possible. Very complex,
but international referrals
are absolutely needed. We're we're scaling up bed capacity.
My role here as emergency medical team coordinator is to help
bring in field hospitals and expand bed capacity within the hospitals. We have
the IC RC at European Gaza Hospital,
adding beds within the hospital and adding a field hospital next door.
We have a number of
emergency medical team setting up additional beds,
but it's not even coming close to the number of beds that we've lost.
And we're so we've lost beds and at the same time notified
the number of injured and ill who need a hospital bed so the
they can't wait.
The people that I saw yesterday
and on Saturday in
Ka
yesterday at all
A. They can't wait for
two weeks or three weeks for additional beds to open or new hospitals to to be built.
They need to be evacuated. Now they need
they need care immediately. So we're working on
some,
you know, extreme cases. If we can move them,
uh, to a hospital here in Rafa,
for example, that can step one or two patients.
That's great for those one or two patients,
but there's hundreds or thousands more behind them.
Uh, and there will not be enough bed
in the short term to meet that need especially
uh, with,
um as we've alluded to some of the very complex surgical
cases that need care that require vascular surgery Orthoplast surgery.
Uh,
reconstructive surgery. We've seen
serious burns. Um, those are very complex
cases that just can't be cared for within Gaza at the moment.
There's no hospital that has that capability.
Yeah, maybe, Uh,
sorry if I may add to what she
raised. I think this is what we have tried to, uh,
to to push for,
uh, for weeks. Is that of course, the
the
what? We what we call
so
a of the protection of health care.
And I think what What has happened in the North
can absolutely not be a blueprint of the South.
So in the north, we talking now about four
well minimal,
barely functioning hospitals there are more like first aid centre. So
we we need to help
to make those hospital functional again because there's
between two and 600,000 people in the north.
And the first focus is, of course, to make sh
a research state
sh
a
hospital again. So that's that should be
that should be happening, should be allowed. And then you talk about fuel,
you talk about medical supplies, but you also talk about emerging medical teams.
And emerging medical teams are willing
to go to CIA
and to assist
the current staff.
So
that's that is, for the North. That should happen
immediately as soon as possible.
Make sure that there is a minimal level basic
level of health care available in the North to serve
the many thousands of remaining people now in the South.
We currently talk about seven hospitals
extremely overwhelmed, but they are the backbone of this
1.92 million,
uh, people. They are now the backbone of the health systems,
and and we have to make sure that not only to keep them functional and to rest
stop. Uh, we also have to make sure that
Ban is trying to do and help to get
emerging medical team
come in and are linking up to those hospitals. We have a good example.
IC IC is in the European Gaza Hospital
and and and and they are pledged to extend that hospital with another 150 beds
that needs to happen in Nassar
close to NASA medical complex. The Jordanian seven
field hospital.
Even NA
Medical Complex
needs an emergency medical team to assist to expand
the number of deaths
as a Nassar
medical complex. And the European
hospitals are
like, What, what she
was for the whole of Gaza Strip.
They are the
the third level hospitals, and they need to be functioning constantly.
Now we are very concerned
that we also see much more military activities in Khan Yis
very close to NA
complex. And we already saw one
of the ST
Shell landing on on
National
complex killing actually an amp
girl
in that hospital.
Uh,
and
there's many IUPS as well in this in that area.
Now
they're getting concerned. They say, Oh, it's the Shiva
scenario repeating here
and and and, you know, do we have to even move further
the same. And if you talk about middle area, the middle area and and and around Al
Aksa Hospital, uh, there
and and Arabella
thousands, hundreds of thousands of ID PS.
If
so, there's two things This hospital's infrastructure,
this vulnerable hospital infrastructure on his knees
needs to be supported and strengthened
with additional hospital beds with EMTS,
but also and I want to say to to help improve beyond trauma,
care to help improve the access to reproductive, maternal,
newborn and child health treatment of
comical and the non
comical diseases. And we don't even talk about mental health or psycho
psychological support services.
We have to
do
this in a in a much broader way
and and very concerning that MI
military activities are continuing in this area.
Communist,
they come to the mill area.
We will probably see more influx of ID PS coming from those areas to the south.
And then and then
uh, well, we can all describe the situation in
Arafa, a
town of 230,000 people normally.
And they have over a million people,
probably more than a million IEPs already sheltering in in that town.
All these makeshift shelters,
There's no space.
So I can understand why people don't want to go because there's no space.
Where do you want to go?
What is what is safer? So what? There is nothing safer.
So you don't want to go in a in a place where where you don't have any shelter
and and you have to say problems, so this should be prevented and
the the
almost a plea from us that health care services need to be protected in the South.
And we need to get it going again
in the north, starting with
with making Shea
again at least work as a first level hospital and maybe
then after that again to a 2nd and 3rd that hospital
over for me.
Thank you. Thank you, Rick.
I understand that, uh, Sean has to leave, so, Sean, we will let you go.
We are well beyond the hour and, uh, and 15 minutes now.
And we don't really want to abuse also the hospitality of our colleagues that you
information that I have one hand from John Z
Costas. So, Sean, if you have to leave, uh, please just, uh go.
And Sean, uh, John, please ask you a question. If it's possible just to be very brief.
Uh,
yes. Good morning. Uh,
uh, Doctor peppercorn.
I was wondering if you could give us, uh, a bit of a an outline.
What is your relationship with the Israeli authorities?
And what responses are you getting when you're asking
for
the access to the various facilities?
What are their responses? Just to give us a bird's eye view. Thank you.
Well, not just my relationship. It's the It's the one UN.
And I think the one UN is is is coordinating is coordinating
with with all parties to the conflict as as good as possible,
as good as possible. And that is on a very,
uh, I would say direct and in an intent way.
So that's
that's happening at levels above me. But it's
and and we are also all operational.
UN agencies are are constantly reaching out. We do this in a coated
fashion with um,
with the one UN and in Gaza UN, W
A
and and
OSHA leading leading in these processes both in in in in Gaza as well in in Jerusalem.
So there's a whole system in place
that the issue is what I what I, I think, said that from the from the start
that
specifically going up north
when there's a lot of military activities,
when there is
a roads are destroyed.
When, um
when there's a lot of insecurity
for any convoy,
and specifically when we talk about larger convoy convoys
which we would like to set up north convoys,
which would include fuel, food,
water medical supplies. It becomes incredibly difficult to
to plan for that.
There's constant planning, ongoing. There's constant interaction,
but the reality on the ground is that
we we we plan for the convoys. They often get delayed
or they take a lot of time
and they are very high risk.
So these convoys need to be properly deconflicting. It should happen,
uh,
in corridors that they can move quickly. So
there's a lot of work on that. Some progress has been made, but it has to be much,
much better.
And we struggled, for example, with larger Cold wars.
We at once we tried to plan a Cold War, both the medical supplies
and
and with with food and water, and
it is difficult to move around.
So the final decision was We have to keep this convoy small and and and and and agile.
It's another issue, for example, that
when the UN is struggling, something very, very simple. The number of a V vehicles
we need to increase our our our armed people to do those things.
We struggle to get them in
to get permission for that and to get a close
flow
PPS
as that it's absurd that such a large and there's such a large need.
And this is going to be such a large humanitarian operation that we struggle to get a
S
and PP etcetera and get more starving. And that, of course, has everything to do.
All of that is related to the to the volatile security environment
over to you.
Thank you very much. Uh, Doctor
Peppercorn. And thanks to all the reporters who were with us, uh, this morning, uh,
I
sorry.
I need to leave as well.
Yes.
Well, thank you. Thank you very much. We are. We are. We are really, uh, concluding.
Thank you, Doctor
Peppercorn. Thanks. Also to
To Sean Casey who, uh, had to leave as well. Reporters, uh,
thanks to reporters who were with us and, uh,
thanks to our colleagues from UN Information Service for facilitating,
uh, this, uh,
this press briefing. I wish you all a
nice rest of the day