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Israel bombs, children die and this British surgeon keeps working
Israel bombs, children die and this British surgeon keeps working

Times

time4 days ago

  • Health
  • Times

Israel bombs, children die and this British surgeon keeps working

F irst there is the six-year-old girl whose left cheek and shoulder were blown off. Then the two-year-old. The baby girl of one. The three-year-old orphaned boy. The four year old. And the 11-year-old boy who lost all nine of his siblings. 'We always start with the children,' Dr Victoria Rose, 53, says. It is a typical morning in Gaza and, over a makeshift breakfast of peanut butter on digestive biscuits (everything in Gaza is makeshift), the British plastic surgeon is thinking about the day ahead at Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis. She will operate on 12 cases. 'Most of my list is blast injuries to small children, including amputation of arms, legs and hands,' she says with a sigh. 'It makes me feel really angry but I can't stop and think about it or I won't be able to work.'

UK surgeon in Gaza says ‘never seen so many blast injuries'
UK surgeon in Gaza says ‘never seen so many blast injuries'

Free Malaysia Today

time28-05-2025

  • Health
  • Free Malaysia Today

UK surgeon in Gaza says ‘never seen so many blast injuries'

Palestinians mourn their relatives killed in an Israeli airstrike at a local hospital in Jabalia, northern Gaza Strip. (AP pic) GAZA : A British surgeon visiting a Gaza hospital said Monday she had 'never seen so many blast injuries' as Israel ramps up operations in the coastal Palestinian territory ravaged by 20 months of war. 'I've never seen so many blast injuries in my life and I've never seen so many injuries in Gaza in my life,' said Victoria Rose, a part of a British medical delegation to Nasser Hospital in south Gaza's Khan Yunis. Rose, who has previously visited Gaza to work, said she had seen a lot of severe burns, typical injuries for people who have been in an explosion. 'We're seeing these injuries in really small children as well', Rose said from Nasser Hospital's paediatric wing. With Israel conducting dozens of air strikes every day in Gaza since restarting bombardments on March 18, humanitarians have said that nowhere is safe in Gaza. The surgeon added that the large burns she had witnessed during her visit 'are very difficult to survive from even in the Western countries where there is no war, and we have functioning hospitals and all the medical supplies at our fingertips.' 'So, here, most of these burns are going to be unsurvivable.' Rose said the other type of injuries from blasts occurred when 'whatever is around you gets whipped up in the explosion and ejected at very high force, and that then hits the civilians and it causes penetrating injuries'. Often, the victims suffer partial or complete amputations in the bombings, Rose said, and because they are living in tents they turn up with large amounts of dirt in their wounds. 'Our first course of action is to try and clean the wounds, and then to try and cover them and salvage as much of the body part as we can.' These challenges are compounded by the dwindling number of functional medical facilities in Gaza, Rose said, including Nasser Hospital. 'On the second floor, one of the wards has been blown up, and also on the fourth floor the burns unit was blown up'. The UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said last week that '94% of the hospitals in Gaza are now damaged or destroyed, and half of them are no longer operational'. Rescuers said Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip killed at least 52 people on Monday, 33 of them in a school turned shelter.

UK surgeon in Gaza says 'never seen so many blast injuries'
UK surgeon in Gaza says 'never seen so many blast injuries'

Khaleej Times

time26-05-2025

  • Health
  • Khaleej Times

UK surgeon in Gaza says 'never seen so many blast injuries'

A British surgeon visiting a Gaza hospital said on Monday she had "never seen so many blast injuries" as Israel ramps up operations in the coastal Palestinian territory ravaged by 20 months of war. "I've never seen so many blast injuries in my life and I've never seen so many injuries in Gaza in my life," said Victoria Rose, a part of a British medical delegation to Nasser Hospital in south Gaza's Khan Younis. Rose, who has previously visited Gaza to work, said she had seen a lot of severe burns, typical injuries for people who have been in an explosion. "We're seeing these injuries in really small children as well", Rose said from Nasser Hospital's paediatric wing. With Israel conducting dozens of air strikes every day in Gaza since restarting bombardments on March 18, humanitarians have said that nowhere is safe in Gaza. The surgeon added that the large burns she had witnessed during her visit "are very difficult to survive from even in the Western countries where there is no war, and we have functioning hospitals and all the medical supplies at our fingertips." "So, here, most of these burns are going to be unsurvivable." Rose said the other type of injuries from blasts occurred when "whatever is around you gets whipped up in the explosion and ejected at very high force, and that then hits the civilians and it causes penetrating injuries". Often, the victims suffer partial or complete amputations in the bombings, Rose said, and because they are living in tents they turn up with large amounts of dirt in their wounds. "Our first course of action is to try and clean the wounds, and then to try and cover them and salvage as much of the body part as we can." These challenges are compounded by the dwindling number of functional medical facilities in Gaza, Rose said, including Nasser Hospital. "On the second floor, one of the wards has been blown up, and also on the fourth floor the burns unit was blown up". The UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said last week that "94 per cent of the hospitals in Gaza are now damaged or destroyed, and half of them are no longer operational". Rescuers said Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip killed at least 52 people on Monday, 33 of them in a school turned shelter.

UK surgeon in Gaza says ‘never seen so many blast injuries'
UK surgeon in Gaza says ‘never seen so many blast injuries'

Arab News

time26-05-2025

  • Health
  • Arab News

UK surgeon in Gaza says ‘never seen so many blast injuries'

KHAN YUNIS: A British surgeon visiting a Gaza hospital said Monday she had 'never seen so many blast injuries' as Israel ramps up operations in the coastal Palestinian territory ravaged by 20 months of war. 'I've never seen so many blast injuries in my life and I've never seen so many injuries in Gaza in my life,' said Victoria Rose, a part of a British medical delegation to Nasser Hospital in south Gaza's Khan Yunis. Rose, who has previously visited Gaza to work, said she had seen a lot of severe burns, typical injuries for people who have been in an explosion. 'We're seeing these injuries in really small children as well,' Rose said from Nasser Hospital's paediatric wing. With Israel conducting dozens of air strikes every day in Gaza since restarting bombardments on March 18, humanitarians have said that nowhere is safe in Gaza. The surgeon added that the large burns she had witnessed during her visit 'are very difficult to survive from even in the Western countries where there is no war, and we have functioning hospitals and all the medical supplies at our fingertips.' 'So, here, most of these burns are going to be unsurvivable.' Rose said the other type of injuries from blasts occurred when 'whatever is around you gets whipped up in the explosion and ejected at very high force, and that then hits the civilians and it causes penetrating injuries.' Often, the victims suffer partial or complete amputations in the bombings, Rose said, and because they are living in tents they turn up with large amounts of dirt in their wounds. 'Our first course of action is to try and clean the wounds, and then to try and cover them and salvage as much of the body part as we can.' These challenges are compounded by the dwindling number of functional medical facilities in Gaza, Rose said, including Nasser Hospital. 'On the second floor, one of the wards has been blown up, and also on the fourth floor the burns unit was blown up.' The UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said last week that '94 percent of the hospitals in Gaza are now damaged or destroyed, and half of them are no longer operational.' Rescuers said Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip killed at least 52 people on Monday, 33 of them in a school turned shelter.

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