Jerusalem, 28 August – Following an evacuation order issued by Israeli forces and an explosion approximately 250 metres from the MSF-supported Al Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al Balah, Central Gaza, almost 650 patients fled the hospital fearing for their lives.
Consequently, and in coordination with the Ministry of Health, our teams have prematurely opened a field hospital and started receiving the hospital’s first patients amid a severe lack of supplies and resources. Field hospitals are not a solution, but a last resort in response to Israel’s dismantling of the health care system. MSF calls on all warring parties to respect and protect the last remaining hospitals in Gaza.
Even as it opens, the field hospital in Deir Al Balah already faces huge pressure as the other remaining hospitals are under threat and access to supplies is extremely limited. This field hospital was designed to be complementary and to provide support for other larger hospitals, like Al Aqsa. However, as the frontline rapidly approached Al Aqsa hospital on Sunday, many patients fled in fear for their lives. Without hospitals like Al Aqsa and Nasser in Khan Younis, field hospitals will struggle to cope with the urgency and abundance of medical needs.
“There is a cumulative impact to the dismantling of Gaza’s healthcare system by Israeli forces. Each health structure dismantled increases the pressure on those remaining, while decreasing people’s access to healthcare. Without an immediate and sustained ceasefire, the notion of a true medical humanitarian response is an illusion,” explains Juliette Seguin, MSF Emergency Coordinator.
On Sunday 24 August, before an evacuation order was issued in close proximity to Al Aqsa hospital, there were approximately 650 patients receiving care there, and hundreds more seeking sanctuary in the hospital grounds. Today, Al Aqsa hospital is almost unrecognisable.
“The hospital looks really empty. Before the evacuation order and explosions, the hospital was so crowded that patients sometimes had to be treated on the floor. Patients were everywhere, often queuing in front of the hospital, desperately seeking care,” explains Dr Sohaib Safi, Deputy Medical Coordinator for MSF in Gaza.
“The atmosphere is one of anxiety due to the imminent threat. We encountered several patients with burns, complicated wounds and people in need of amputations, who are currently receiving care at the hospital. These cases are likely the tip of the iceberg – we know there are many more people in need of urgent care who can’t reach the hospital”.
Displaced people sheltering around the hospital has become commonplace; the majority of Palestinians in Gaza have been displaced multiple times since October, and the so-called ‘humanitarian zone’ identified by Israel, has reduced significantly. In official terms, there are just 41 square kilometres for 1.9 million people that aren’t designated an active combat zone. However, the so-called humanitarian zone has also been routinely bombed, leaving people with impossible dilemmas on how best to survive in Gaza.
For months, MSF supply and medical teams have been working to establish this field hospital, repeatedly delaying its opening due to continued challenges in bringing essential supplies into Gaza. However, as the threat to Al Aqsa hospital grows, MSF teams were left with no choice but to prematurely open the field hospital located few kilometres west.
“No amount of field hospitals will replace what was a functional healthcare system in Gaza. This is the last resort to provide urgently needed medical care. But it really is a drop in the ocean – as the facade of a ceasefire is presented time and again, the ability to sustain human life in Gaza diminishes,” explains Dr Sohaib. Despite the enormous supply and access challenges, a second field hospital in the same location is being set up.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 20 out of 36 hospitals in Gaza are now non-functional, and temporary structures like field hospitals lack the capacity for advanced surgical care, and many other lifesaving essentials to treat patients in critical condition or with long-term medical conditions. Over the last 11 months MSF teams have been forced to leave 14 medical structures in the Gaza Strip.
The last 11 months have clearly illustrated that without an immediate and sustained ceasefire, there can be no meaningful medical humanitarian response. MSF calls on all warring parties to respect and protect the last remaining hospitals in Gaza.
MSF Australia was established in 1995 and is one of 24 international MSF sections committed to delivering medical humanitarian assistance to people in crisis. In 2022, more than 120 project staff from Australia and New Zealand worked with MSF on assignment overseas. MSF delivers medical care based on need alone and operates independently of government, religion or economic influence and irrespective of race, religion or gender. For more information visit msf.org.au