Brussels - The conflict in northwestern Syria continues to cause fear, displacement and acute medical needs among people. Shelling on Thursday 24 October on the village of Janoudia in Idlib province, northwestern Syria, resulted in an influx of 17 casualties being rushed to a nearby hospital that MSF supports in a co-management partnership. Three of these people were children under 14 years old.
Three people died before arrival at the hospital, and one person died a few moments after arrival. Six other patients were in a critical condition but could be stabilised and given treatment or referred to other hospitals. Three patients had moderate wounds and four had light injuries.
“A mass casualty influx is really intense,” said the doctor managing the hospital. “When the injured started arriving at 5pm yesterday, we requested all of our staff to come to the hospital so that we would be able to respond; the medical team was fully mobilised to answer to the influx, and despite that, we had to refer one case to another hospital because all our operating theatres and medics were occupied and the case couldn’t wait. This patient had a double trauma in the head and in the chest. We stayed up all night to treat the injured as best we could.”
High medical needs for people across northwest Syria
The need for medical services in northwestern Syria is extremely high. Beyond the direct victims of the conflict – often from aerial bombing or shelling – there are huge needs for more than a million people who have fled areas of fighting over the past months and years, often with nothing more than the clothes on their backs. They are extremely reliant on external assistance for food, shelter, water and medical care.
In the past month, MSF has added a new mobile clinic team to help serve the basic healthcare and vaccination needs of families sheltering in makeshift camps in the cold mountainous terrain where many of the displaced people in northwestern Syria have fled.
Nevertheless, the numbers of people in need of high levels of assistance are huge, and there is definitely a requirement for a general increase in the provision of humanitarian aid, especially medical care.
Across northwest Syria, MSF teams provide maternal healthcare, general healthcare and treatment for non-communicable diseases (NCDs) through mobile clinics. They distribute relief items and improve water and sanitation systems. They also support regular vaccination activities in two vaccination centres and one hospital and through mobile clinic services.
Also in northwestern Syria, MSF runs a specialised burns unit that provides surgery, skin grafts, dressings, physiotherapy and psychological support. MSF provides distance-support provides support to primary and secondary healthcare in several hospitals and clinics around Idlib and Aleppo, and has co-management partnerships with three hospitals, including the hospital that responded to Thursday’s mass casualty event.
MSF’s medical programs across Raqqa and Al Hasakeh governorates in northeastern Syria have been reduced or suspended since 15 October 2019 as we have been unable to ensure the safety of our teams due to the conflict in the region.
To ensure independence from political pressures, MSF receives no government funding for its work in Syria.