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Gaza: Inside the last maternity hospital in Khan Younis

18 Jul 24

Gaza: Inside the last maternity hospital in Khan Younis

MSF midwife Hin So checks on a newborn baby at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza Caption
MSF midwife Hin So checks on a newborn baby at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza

When Hanin first sought care for her malnourished daughter in Khan Younis, a city in southern Gaza, the clock began ticking on her chances of survival.

“[My] child was in a critical condition. They referred me to the hospital but there was no means of transportation,” explains Hanin.

Finally, they reached the Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) medical feeding centre on a cart.

“My child was tired. She was resting her head towards me and not moving. She was close to death before we reached the hospital.”

The most vulnerable

After nine months of relentless war, people’s access to healthcare in Gaza continues to worsen, particularly for those most vulnerable when healthcare is unavailable – such as pregnant women and children.

Their vulnerability has been exacerbated by repeated displacement, inadequate living conditions, insecurity, and poor access to nutrition.

As a result, MSF teams are seeing an increase in pre-term deliveries and malnutrition in children in the south of Gaza.

“The main health risks for pregnant women are blood-pressure related complications such as eclampsia, haemorrhage and sepsis – which can become deadly if not treated in time,” says MSF emergency unit health advisor Mercè Rocaspana.

“In contexts like Gaza, late access to care is posing a health risk to pregnant women and their children, where the health system has been decimated and collapsed, posing severe risk to the health of pregnant women and their children are tragic – even lethal.”

At MSF's out-patient department in Batil refugee camp Gandhi Pant, a nurse, escorts a patient with a possible appendicitis to a waiting ambulance. 

Batil is one of three camps in South Sudan’s Upper Nile State sheltering at least 113,000 refugees who have crossed the border from Blue Nile state to escape fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the SPLM-North armed group. Refugees arrive at the camp with harrowing stories of being bombed out of their homes, or having their villages burned. The camps into which they have poured are on a vast floodplain, leaving many tents flooded and refugees vulnerable to disease. Mortality rates in Batil camp are at emergency levels, malnutrition rates are more than five times above emergency thresholds, and diarrhea and malarial cases are rising.

Help us prepare for the next emergency

Nasser Hospital: The only option left

Nasser Hospital is the last referral hospital still able to provide maternal and paediatric care in Khan Younis.

In February, after several weeks of intense fighting with Palestinian armed groups in Khan Younis, Israeli forces stormed the facility, which had been under siege. MSF teams were forced to flee the hospital.

In May 2024, MSF teams returned, and in June, together with the Ministry of Health and other organisations, reopened the maternity and paediatric wards, including an inpatient therapeutic centre – which provides medical feeding support. They also started providing support to the paediatric intensive care and neonatal intensive care units.

As one of few functioning maternity and paediatric hospitals in southern Gaza, Nasser receives huge numbers of patients Caption
As one of few functioning maternity and paediatric hospitals in southern Gaza, Nasser receives huge numbers of patients
Suad, who recently gave birth at Nasser Hospital, talks with an MSF team member Caption
Suad, who recently gave birth at Nasser Hospital, talks with an MSF team member

The needs of women and children are skyrocketing, yet MSF teams at Nasser Hospital are witnessing a shortage of vital supplies, jeopardising the provision and quality of care.

However, with the lack of functioning healthcare centres in the area, Nasser is facing an overwhelming increase in patients every day.

Between 29 June and 5 July, the paediatric emergency department alone recorded more than 2,600 consultations, meaning staff attended to more than 300 children every day.

As more and more children are admitted for inpatient care they are being forced to share beds, pushing the paediatric services beyond their capacity.

“We are seeing malnourished children, an issue never seen in Gaza before,” says MSF medical coordinator Joanne Perry.

“People are living in tents with minimal access to clean water and abysmal sanitation. Bombing has devastated the sewage and water systems, resulting in diarrhoea, dehydration, and hepatitis A and skin infections among children.”

Giving birth in Gaza

As the last hospital providing maternity care in Khan Younis, Nasser Hospital and its medical team are handling from 25 to 30 deliveries a day.

In addition to functioning hospitals being destroyed or closed, the decimation of infrastructure has also created severe obstacles for pregnant women to reach medical facilities.

Pregnant women are often forced to navigate unsafe routes amidst the fighting and without safe transportation – often delaying access to healthcare and putting them at higher risk of complications.

An MSF midwife cares for two new arrivals in the delivery room at Nasser Hospital Caption
An MSF midwife cares for two new arrivals in the delivery room at Nasser Hospital

"I rode on a donkey-pulled cart to Nasser Hospital alone, as my husband couldn't afford to join due to financial constraints,” says Najwa, an expectant mother in Gaza.

At the same time, once women have given birth, they must quickly return to unsanitary conditions, often in tents, where lack of food and constant stress put them and their newborns at further health risk.

"Some women are delivering prematurely, often with postpartum complications exacerbated by their living conditions,” says MSF nursing team supervisor Mohamad, who works in the neonatal intensive care unit at Nasser.

“It's tough for a baby to live in a tent," says Khadra, after earlier giving birth at Nasser. "Caring for them here isn't like at home. My hope is for a safe return to our home."

Caption
“It's tough for a baby to live in a tent," says Khadra, after earlier giving birth at Nasser. "Caring for them here isn't like at home. My hope is for a safe return to our home."

In addition to maternity services, MSF is supporting the neonatal intensive care unit, which is equipped with 29 beds and incubators for high-risk newborns.

 "There's no diapers, or suitable clothing for my baby. Living in a tent exposes them to extreme conditions without even a proper bed,” says Khadra, who gave birth in the hospital’s maternity ward.

As the sole functioning maternity ward in the south of Gaza, Nasser Hospital will continue to face challenges.

Reopening the maternity and paediatric wards is one step forward to providing care, but an immediate and sustained ceasefire in Gaza, alongside unhindered humanitarian aid, is the only solution to alleviate the suffering of people trapped in the Gaza Strip, including pregnant women and children.  

MSF and the Israel – Gaza war

An unprecedented humanitarian crisis is unfolding in Gaza. MSF teams have worked to treat the wounded and supply overwhelmed hospitals as indiscriminate airstrikes and a state of siege threaten millions of men, women and children.