logo
‘Nothing prepares you for the devastation': Physiotherapist recalls Gaza horrors

‘Nothing prepares you for the devastation': Physiotherapist recalls Gaza horrors

Rachael Moses, from Newcastle, has been visiting the Gaza strip as part of a rehabilitation programme working with local physiotherapists since 2017.
The 46-year-old health professional said nothing could have prepared her for the level of devastation she witnessed during her recent visit.
Ms Moses who spent a month at Nasser hospital, one of the last functioning hospitals left in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, described daily bombardments and seeing parents carrying their dead children in their arms.
'I kind of thought I was prepared as best I could for what I was about to see in Gaza but I think nothing can really prepare you for the level of devastation,' Ms Moses told the PA news agency.
Ms Moses, who travelled to the war zone with a group of British Medical Aid for Palestinians volunteers, described how her bed would shake at night from the drone strikes nearby.
'We entered Gaza in a kind of UN armoured vehicle and we were also in body armour,' she said.
'When we were there, there were bombardments continuously through the night.
'If the drones didn't keep you up, your bed would shake.'
Ms Moses, who spent the month assisting local doctors and physiotherapists, said the hospital was bombarded twice by Israeli airstrikes while she was there.
'They hit the second floor and killed a ministry of health official,' she said.
'They also destroyed the men's surgical ward of the hospital and they also killed a journalist at the main entrance at the hospital, where the press tents were.'
As one of the last main hospitals in southern Gaza, Nasser hospital is providing care for people with severe burns and trauma injuries, newborn babies, and pregnant women.
The hospital is facing several challenges with supplies, including hygiene items, medication and surgical items.
Ms Moses described how the hospital had a triage tent outside to help support the wounded as quickly as possible.
'They had a big triage tent outside, so people who got into the hospital had, as best we could guess, a chance of survival,' she said.
'But many would die in the triage area and go straight to the mortuary.'
She described seeing parents every morning carrying the bodies of babies wrapped in cloth to the mortuary following the bombings from the night before.
'People are forbidden to drive cars or vehicles or anything that's not co-ordinated,' she said.
'So, they have to walk on foot carrying their loved ones to the morgue or use donkey carts to bring them in.'
Ms Moses who was assisting local physiotherapists with their rehabilitation programme said alongside the devastation of so many deceased, there is another layer of trauma for survivors left with disfigurements.
'They're (the local medics) really trying to give hope to these people, often children who have devastating and life-changing injuries, to kind of try and get them the best function they can,' she said.
'There's another layer of devastation as those people that don't die are left with such horrific disfigurement, injuries.'
Ms Moses, who hopes to return to Gaza again in a few months, said despite the risk of being in a warzone she said leaving is so much harder than going there.
'You're going back to your very privileged life, your very safe life,' she said.
'These people have nothing, they don't have clean water, they don't have toilets, they don't have enough food.'
Alongside the strikes, malnutrition and hunger are becoming prevalent in Gaza.
Israel has cut off Gaza from all imports, including food and medicine, since the beginning of March, leading to what is believed to be the worst humanitarian crisis in nearly 19 months of war with Hamas.
Israel says the blockade is an attempt to pressure the Palestinian militant group to release hostages it took during the October 7 2023 attack that triggered the conflict.
Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel that day, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251. Hamas is still holding 59 hostages, 24 of whom are believed to be alive.
In response, Israel launched an offensive that has killed more than 52,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's health ministry, which does not distinguish between fighters and civilians.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Malnutrition in Kenya's Kakuma refugee camp after US aid cuts
Malnutrition in Kenya's Kakuma refugee camp after US aid cuts

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Malnutrition in Kenya's Kakuma refugee camp after US aid cuts

Hundreds of thousands of people are "slowly starving" in Kenyan refugee camps after US funding cuts reduced food rations to their lowest ever levels, a United Nations official has told the BBC. The impact is starkly visible at a hospital in the sprawling Kakuma camp in the north-west of the East African nation. It is home to roughly 300,000 refugees who have fled strife in countries across Africa and the Middle children fill a 30-bed ward at Kakuma's Amusait Hospital, staring blankly at visitors as they receive treatment for severe acute baby, Hellen, barely moves. Parts of her skin are wrinkled and peeling, leaving angry patches of red - the result of malnutrition, a medic tells the the aisle lies a nine-month-old baby, James, the eighth child of Agnes Awila, a refugee from northern Uganda. "The food is not enough, my children eat only once a day. If there's no food what do you feed them?" she Hellen and thousands of other refugees in Kakuma depend on the UN's World Food Programme (WFP) for vital sustenance. But the agency had to drastically reduce its aid operations in many countries after President Donald Trump announced sweeping cuts to US foreign aid programmes earlier this year, as part of his "America First" US had provided around 70% of the funding for the WFP's operations in Kenya. The WFP says that as a result of the cuts, the agency has had to slash the refugees' rations to 30% of the minimum recommended amount a person should eat to stay healthy."If we have a protracted situation where this is what we can manage, then basically we have a slowly starving population," says Felix Okech, the WFP's head of refugee operations in Kenya. Outside Kakuma's food distribution centre, the sun beats down on the dry, dusty ground and security officers manage queues of refugees. They are led into a holding centre and then a verification area. Aid workers scan the refugees' identity cards and take their fingerprints, before taking them to collect their Bililo Mami, a mother of two, has brought a jerrycan to collect cooking oil, along with sacks for lentils and rice."I am grateful to receive this little [food] but it is not enough," says the 51-year-old, who arrived in the camp 13 years ago from South Kivu, a region in conflict-hit eastern Democratic Republic of Congo Ms Mami says the refugees used to "eat well" - three meals a day. But now that rations are at 30% of their usual amount, the food she has been given is not enough to last one month, let alone the two that she has been asked to stretch it has also been affected by another casualty of the cuts - cash transfers. Until this year, the UN was giving around $4m (£3m) in cash directly to refugees in Kenya's camps each month, intended to allow families to buy basic Mami, who is diabetic, used the cash to buy food, like vegetables, which were more appropriate for her diet than the cereals handed out at the distribution centre. Now, she is forced to eat whatever is also used the money to start a vegetable garden and rear chicken and ducks, which she sold to other refugees, at a market. But the discontinuation of the cash transfers, locally known as "bamba chakula", has meant that the market faces like Badaba Ibrahim, who is from the Nuba Mountains in Sudan, are no longer able to extend lines of credit to fellow refugees. The 42-year-old runs a retail shop in the local shopping centre. He says his customers, now unable to purchase food, at times camp at his shop all day, begging for help. "They will tell you, 'My children have not eaten for a full day,'" Mr Ibrahim in the Kakuma camp, 28-year-old Agnes Livio serves up food for her five young sons. They live in a cubicle, which is roughly 2m (6ft 6in) by 2m made from corrugated iron Livio serves the food on one large plate for all to share. It is the family's first meal of the day - at 1400. "We used to get porridge for breakfast but not anymore. So, the children have to wait until the afternoon to have their first meal," says Ms Livio, who fled from South at Amusait Hospital, medics are feeding a number of malnourished infants through tubes. Three toddlers and their mothers are being discharged - back to the community where food is scarce and conditions are the prospect of more funding is not very promising and unless things change over the next two months, the refugees are staring at starvation come August."It is a really dire situation," admits Mr Okeck."We do have some signals from some one or two donors about support with that cash component."But remember, the very kind and generous US has been providing over 70% - so if you're still missing 70%… those prospects are not good." You may also be interested in: 'My wife fears sex, I fear death' - impacts of the USAID freezeAfrica is important to Trump, despite aid cuts, envoy tells BBC]Nigeria and Kenya among nations running out of HIV drugs - WHOHow Trump locked out contraception in Africa Go to for more news from the African us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica

Assisted dying: UK doctor says helping patients die in Australia is ‘privilege'
Assisted dying: UK doctor says helping patients die in Australia is ‘privilege'

North Wales Chronicle

time6 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Assisted dying: UK doctor says helping patients die in Australia is ‘privilege'

Dr Emma Boulton, from Oxfordshire, spoke of the difference between her mother's 'horrible' decline over a period of weeks with respiratory failure in England and the 'very dignified' deaths she has been involved with in New South Wales. The 59-year-old, who trained and previously worked in the UK as a GP but is now based in Sydney, said her main role is assessing patients who have applied for an assisted death, but that she has been directly involved in ending the lives of 10 people. Known as intravenous practitioner administration, this involves injecting someone with an anaesthetic. In an interview with the PA news agency, she said: 'It's quick, it's painless, it's very dignified.' She added: 'When people go, there's often this palpable sense of relief, and it can be very uplifting, because you see this person who's deeply, deeply suffering in lots of ways, and they've made this really gutsy decision that they want to exit this world on their own terms, and they do so. 'And it's in a very dignified and quick and painless manner. 'It's a very moving thing to be involved with. I consider it a tremendous privilege to be involved in it and be able to assist people to determine their fate, particularly when they're going through intolerable suffering.' Dr Boulton recently took part in an event in Parliament to support campaigners from Humanists UK and My Death My Decision working towards a change in the law in England and Wales. Intravenous practitioner administration does not form part of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, which is due to return to the House of Commons for debate and more votes on amendments on Friday. The Bill proposes that a terminally ill person would take an approved substance, provided by a doctor but administered only by the person themselves. The proposed legislation would allow terminally ill adults in England and Wales, with fewer than six months to live, to apply for an assisted death, subject to approval by two doctors and a panel featuring a social worker, senior legal figure and psychiatrist. Speaking about the challenges of her role in New South Wales, Dr Boulton acknowledged that it is 'not work that's for everybody'. She said: 'You have to be pretty resilient and comfortable in your own skin and be able to work with these things. 'For me, personally, particularly for the first few (deaths) that I was involved with, I felt very strange. It's like, 'what have I done?' You know, I've spent my whole life prolonging life, and now in my hand, you know, somebody has died as a result of my actions. 'So it's quite an odd thing to have to deal with, but the way that I get around it is by knowing, understanding that I am alleviating suffering, and I'm acting on the patient's express wishes, and that really helps me through.' The Westminster Bill states that no person, including any medical workers, are obliged to take part in assisted dying, meaning doctors would be free to opt out if the law was changed and a service set up. Dr Boulton said her mother, Margaret, had endured a 'horrible feeling of slow suffocation' in the lead up to her death aged 88 in February last year, and that it had been a 'very frustrating' experience for the family, especially as her mother had voiced support for assisted dying. She said: 'When she knew that she was on the way out, that she was dying, she got very angry and said, 'I would really like to be able to just stop this now and just go'. 'What I witnessed with my mother is not that different from the suffering that I see in my assisted dying work. But the good thing is that if they meet the eligibility criteria in our assessment then the patients that I see (in Australia) can access the assisted dying process, whereas people in the UK can't.' Medics remains divided on the subject of assisted dying, with some MPs who are also doctors among the Bill's supporters, but the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) and Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych) both airing concerns. The RCP said it believes there are 'concerning deficiencies' with the proposed legislation while the RCPsych said it has 'serious concerns' and cannot support the current Bill. Earlier this week, around 1,000 doctors signed a letter to MPs urging them to vote against a Bill they described as 'simply not safe'. The doctors, from across the NHS, urged lawmakers to listen to those 'who would have to deliver the consequences of this deeply flawed Bill', warning it 'poses a real threat to both patients and the medical workforce'. Dr Boulton said she believes much opposition to a change in the law is born from fear. 'I think objection is based in fear and I think a proper legislative framework would actually protect people and their practitioners,' she said. Many opponents of the Westminster Bill have raised concerns about people being coerced and the vulnerable being taken advantage of, but Dr Boulton said it is not a case of 'killing off granny'. She said: 'The patients I work with are incredibly calm. They're clear, they're very determined that this is a choice that they want to have. 'So, you know, people are worried about killing off granny because they want to get her money and that she's helpless and she can't make decisions for herself, and it's not like that at all. 'The process of assessment and making sure that people are fully aware and that this is an informed choice that they're making about their own life, having that really structured assessment framework actually protects people.'

Assisted dying: UK doctor says helping patients die in Australia is ‘privilege'
Assisted dying: UK doctor says helping patients die in Australia is ‘privilege'

Belfast Telegraph

time6 hours ago

  • Belfast Telegraph

Assisted dying: UK doctor says helping patients die in Australia is ‘privilege'

Dr Emma Boulton, from Oxfordshire, spoke of the difference between her mother's 'horrible' decline over a period of weeks with respiratory failure in England and the 'very dignified' deaths she has been involved with in New South Wales. The 59-year-old, who trained and previously worked in the UK as a GP but is now based in Sydney, said her main role is assessing patients who have applied for an assisted death, but that she has been directly involved in ending the lives of 10 people. Known as intravenous practitioner administration, this involves injecting someone with an anaesthetic. In an interview with the PA news agency, she said: 'It's quick, it's painless, it's very dignified.' She added: 'When people go, there's often this palpable sense of relief, and it can be very uplifting, because you see this person who's deeply, deeply suffering in lots of ways, and they've made this really gutsy decision that they want to exit this world on their own terms, and they do so. 'And it's in a very dignified and quick and painless manner. 'It's a very moving thing to be involved with. I consider it a tremendous privilege to be involved in it and be able to assist people to determine their fate, particularly when they're going through intolerable suffering.' Dr Boulton recently took part in an event in Parliament to support campaigners from Humanists UK and My Death My Decision working towards a change in the law in England and Wales. Intravenous practitioner administration does not form part of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, which is due to return to the House of Commons for debate and more votes on amendments on Friday. The Bill proposes that a terminally ill person would take an approved substance, provided by a doctor but administered only by the person themselves. The proposed legislation would allow terminally ill adults in England and Wales, with fewer than six months to live, to apply for an assisted death, subject to approval by two doctors and a panel featuring a social worker, senior legal figure and psychiatrist. Speaking about the challenges of her role in New South Wales, Dr Boulton acknowledged that it is 'not work that's for everybody'. She said: 'You have to be pretty resilient and comfortable in your own skin and be able to work with these things. 'For me, personally, particularly for the first few (deaths) that I was involved with, I felt very strange. It's like, 'what have I done?' You know, I've spent my whole life prolonging life, and now in my hand, you know, somebody has died as a result of my actions. 'So it's quite an odd thing to have to deal with, but the way that I get around it is by knowing, understanding that I am alleviating suffering, and I'm acting on the patient's express wishes, and that really helps me through.' The Westminster Bill states that no person, including any medical workers, are obliged to take part in assisted dying, meaning doctors would be free to opt out if the law was changed and a service set up. Dr Boulton said her mother, Margaret, had endured a 'horrible feeling of slow suffocation' in the lead up to her death aged 88 in February last year, and that it had been a 'very frustrating' experience for the family, especially as her mother had voiced support for assisted dying. She said: 'When she knew that she was on the way out, that she was dying, she got very angry and said, 'I would really like to be able to just stop this now and just go'. 'What I witnessed with my mother is not that different from the suffering that I see in my assisted dying work. But the good thing is that if they meet the eligibility criteria in our assessment then the patients that I see (in Australia) can access the assisted dying process, whereas people in the UK can't.' Medics remains divided on the subject of assisted dying, with some MPs who are also doctors among the Bill's supporters, but the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) and Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych) both airing concerns. The RCP said it believes there are 'concerning deficiencies' with the proposed legislation while the RCPsych said it has 'serious concerns' and cannot support the current Bill. Earlier this week, around 1,000 doctors signed a letter to MPs urging them to vote against a Bill they described as 'simply not safe'. The doctors, from across the NHS, urged lawmakers to listen to those 'who would have to deliver the consequences of this deeply flawed Bill', warning it 'poses a real threat to both patients and the medical workforce'. Dr Boulton said she believes much opposition to a change in the law is born from fear. 'I think objection is based in fear and I think a proper legislative framework would actually protect people and their practitioners,' she said. Many opponents of the Westminster Bill have raised concerns about people being coerced and the vulnerable being taken advantage of, but Dr Boulton said it is not a case of 'killing off granny'. She said: 'The patients I work with are incredibly calm. They're clear, they're very determined that this is a choice that they want to have. 'So, you know, people are worried about killing off granny because they want to get her money and that she's helpless and she can't make decisions for herself, and it's not like that at all. 'The process of assessment and making sure that people are fully aware and that this is an informed choice that they're making about their own life, having that really structured assessment framework actually protects people.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store