logo
Long-term effects of Gaza war could quadruple Palestinian death toll, warn UK doctors

Long-term effects of Gaza war could quadruple Palestinian death toll, warn UK doctors

The Guardian22-02-2025
British doctors who worked in Gaza during the war have issued dire predictions over the long-term health of Palestinian civillians, warning that large numbers will continue to die.
The prevalence of infectious disease and multiple health problems linked to malnutrition, alongside the destruction of hospitals and killing of medical experts, meant mortality rates among Palestinians in Gaza would remain high after the cessation of Israeli shelling.
British-Palestinian reconstructive surgeon, Prof Ghassan Abu-Sittah, who worked in al-Shifa and al-Ahli Arab hospitals in Gaza City shortly after the war began, said levels of malnutrition there were so acute that many children would 'never recover'.
Scientists have estimated that the total deaths from Israel's war on Gaza could ultimately be as high as 186,000. The figure is almost four times higher than the 46,700 deaths that Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry have reported.
Prof Nizam Mamode, a retired British transplant surgeon from Hampshire who last year worked at Nasser hospital in southern Gaza said the number of 'non-trauma deaths' could ultimately be considerably higher than 186,000. One factor, he said, was the targeting of healthcare workers during the war.
He said that of six vascular surgeons who once covered the north of the strip, just one had remained. There were no cancer pathologists left alive.
Abu-Sittah said entire teams of medical specialists had been eradicated from Gaza, and the training required to replace them would take up to 10 years.
'Certain specialities have been eviscerated,' he said. 'There are no more nephrologists [a doctor specialising in kidney care] left. They've all been killed. There are no more board-certified emergency medicine physicians.'
The 55-year-old plastic surgeon from London said the long-term health of people in Gaza depended on how quickly the territory and its infrastructure were rebuilt.
Last week, thousands of Palestinians began returning to northern Gaza to scenes of utter destruction after the withdrawal of Israeli troops from a strategic corridor that divides the north and south of Gaza.
'But to get doctors to move back to the north, you need to house them. Where are they going to live? Where are their families going to live?' said Abu-Sittah.
He said irreversible damage had already been done to large numbers of children.
'Studies on people who survived the second world war showed they are more likely to get NCDs [non-communicable diseases] if they had malnutrition as children. They're also more likely to become diabetics, more likely to have hypertension, more likely to have diabetes in old age. You don't recover.'
Last month, the UN estimated that more than 60,000 children in Gaza would need treatment for acute malnutrition in 2025. Some had already died, said the organisation.
Another concern is the spread of disease, helped by the destruction of infrastructure such as sewage facilities.
Abu-Sittahhas provided evidence to Scotland Yard and the international criminal court over what he witnessed working in Gaza. He described the prevalence of disease there as a catastrophe.
'Hepatitis, diarrhoeal disease, respiratory disease, polio that re-emerged in the war, will all continue because there's still no sewerage and clean drinking water, still no housing, no primary-care clinics. You're not going to be able to stop, or even stem, infectious diseases.'
Sign up to Global Dispatch
Get a different world view with a roundup of the best news, features and pictures, curated by our global development team
after newsletter promotion
He warned of the proliferation of drug-resistant bacteria, recounting an instance when six out of seven consecutive patients he saw had 'multiple drug-resistant bacteria'.
In addition to the long-term impacts, he said 13,000 Gazans required immediate surgical interventions from war wounds. 'The sheer number of complex injuries that need treatment means that it's going to consume the health system for a generation,' he said.
Both doctors said the brutality and number of injuries they witnessed while working in Gaza was hard to overstate. Mamode, who gave evidence to MPs on the British parliament's international development select committee inquiry into Gaza's healthcare, said up to 70% of those he operated on were children.
'You'd have a three-year-old in intensive care for a week and we'd be told, 'The parents are killed, the siblings are killed. Wait and see whether anyone is going to turn up for them.' That was quite common.'
Abu-Sittah said that half of his patients were children and that despite working in numerous conflict zones including Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen, he had never performed as many amputations each day as he had in Gaza.
Mamode, a former clinical lead of transplant surgery at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust in London, warned that another vital long-term health issue was the psychological scarring on a population after 15 months of fighting.
'In the coming months, those issues will start to come to the fore, because people have just been focusing on day-to-day survival. When that pressure comes off [the psychological impacts] are going to manifest themselves in all sorts of ways.'
A spokesperson for the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) said it had been 'well documented that Hamas uses hospitals and medical centres for its terror activities'.
They added: 'If not stopped, under certain conditions, this illegal military use can make the hospital lose its protection from attack.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brit teen told mum ‘I'm sorry, goodbye' before collapsing in her arms during fatal allergic reaction on dream hols
Brit teen told mum ‘I'm sorry, goodbye' before collapsing in her arms during fatal allergic reaction on dream hols

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Brit teen told mum ‘I'm sorry, goodbye' before collapsing in her arms during fatal allergic reaction on dream hols

A BRITISH teenager told her mum "I'm sorry" after collapsing in her arms from a severe allergic reaction on holiday. Lily King, 18, from Buckinghamshire, tragically died after eating a carrot in a meal to celebrate top grades in her first year at Exeter University while on holiday in Morocco. Advertisement 7 Lily King died from fatal Anaphylaxsis shock on holiday Credit: JustGiving 7 Lily King with her mum Aicha, who were on holiday in Morocco when Lily died Credit: JustGiving 7 Lily was just 18 when she died Credit: gofundme The student was diagnosed with severe allergies to fish and seafood, nuts, sesame, milk and eggs when she was two-and-a-half – and her mum Aicha had packed a whole suitcase of safe supplies. While Lily's childhood had been dominated her allergies - along with eczema and asthma - she hadn't ever needed hospital treatment until five months prior to the holiday. She had bought a burger at a music festival in Exeter and suffered anaphylaxis – the most extreme allergic reaction, where rapid swelling in the throat and tongue cause breathing difficulties and sometimes cardiac arrest. Then, on the last night of their holiday last year, Lily discovered that she had received a first for her first-year exams and wanted to celebrate - so the pair decided to go out for a meal. Advertisement read more in world news FIND MICHELE Cops probe 'sighting' of Brit who vanished from sunbed as search area expands It was somewhere they had eaten before, including for Lily's 18th, and they were confident that it would pass without hitch. Upon arrival, Aicha, who is Moroccan and speaks Arabic, gave staff repeated clear instructions about her daughter's allergies. Lily herself even said in Arabic: "I don't want to be killed," Aicha told the Mail. But when the food arrived, it came with vegetables and a sauce they hadn't asked for. Advertisement Lily put a small piece of carrot into her mouth, saying: "Don't be silly mum, it's just a carrot," but her tongue instantly felt itchy. She took an antihistamine and went to the bathroom, then used her EpiPen and went outside for some air. Megan McKenna blasted the Prime Minister today for 'abandoning' a vow to create an 'allergies tsar' After just 15 minutes, Lily was struggling to breathe. She used her second EpiPen and Aicha called an ambulance. Now desperate, the mum ran back into the restaurant to grab her bag of money and passports but, agonisingly, the waiter wasted vital minutes by insisting she paid the bill. Advertisement When she got outside again, Lily was gasping for air and slipping out of consciousness. According to the Daily Mail, she collapsed into her mum's arms and said: "You know Mum, I love you. I'm sorry. Goodbye." With the ambulance nowhere to be seen, Lily's cousins bundled her into their car and rushed to the hospital – but she stopped breathing on the way. 7 Lily wanted to go out for the meal after finding out she had earned a first in the first-year uni exams Credit: Facebook Advertisement 7 Lily's family want to raise awareness about the dangers of travelling abroad with allergies Credit: gofundme 7 Lily was eating at Maya Restaurant and Lounge, Rabat, in Morocco when her throat began to itch Credit: instagram Medics performed CPR but refused to begin further treatment until Lily's mum had written a check - further stalling the process. The desperately ill teen was eventually put on life support - but with no brain activity doctors were forced to switch it off three days later. Advertisement It was found that she had already suffered a heart attack and a catatonic fit, which rendered her brain dead, before being hooked up to the machine. Reflecting on the terrible ordeal, Aicha said: "Neither the waiter nor any of the doctors spoke English. "Without Arabic, it would have been impossible to make myself understood. "It is my mother tongue and yet I still couldn't get the care Lily needed." Advertisement A JustGiving page set up to raise funds for Natasha Allergy Research Foundation has racked up nearly £9,000 in donations.

'Sir Chris Hoy saved my life after I watched his BBC News interview'
'Sir Chris Hoy saved my life after I watched his BBC News interview'

Wales Online

time3 hours ago

  • Wales Online

'Sir Chris Hoy saved my life after I watched his BBC News interview'

'Sir Chris Hoy saved my life after I watched his BBC News interview' Sir Chris Hoy made the saddening announcement last October that his cancer had become terminal, but now one man has revealed how the Olympian has saved his life A man has revealed how an interview with Sir Chris Hoy on BBC News saved his life (Image: Visionhaus/Getty Images) A man claims watching an interview with Sir Chris Hoy made him realise he might have prostate cancer, potentially saving his life. ‌ Britain's second-most decorated Olympian was diagnosed with prostate cancer in September 2023 after complaining of a pain in his shoulder, going public with the diagnosis in a BBC interview the following February. In October last year he announced the disease was terminal as it had spread to his bones and had progressed to stage 4, adding that doctors have given him between two and hour years ‌ After receiving the heart-breaking news that it was terminal, he told the Times that doctors had told him that he has between two to fours years to live. ‌ While his condition was met with an outpouring of support from fellow Olympians, celebrities and the British public, the news had an even greater impact on Patrick Hughes from Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire. He revealed that his cancer was terminal last October (Image: Getty Images for Laureus) In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, the 57-year-old recalled watching an interview with Sir Chris, on BBC News: "When I heard Sir Chris Hoy say that his only initial symptoms of prostate cancer were pain in his shoulder and ribs, I realised I needed to check my risk of the disease. He was speaking on television last November, shortly after announcing that his prostate cancer diagnosis was terminal." ‌ He added: "Until that point, I'd never seriously considered being at risk of prostate cancer, despite my dad tragically dying of the disease in 2021. "But when Sir Chris told BBC News that his shoulder pain was actually a tumour, that's when my mindset completely changed - and just months later, I was diagnosed with the disease myself." Sir Chris won his first Olympic gold medal in 2004 (Image: PA) ‌ After being prompted to go and get checked for the condition, multiple tests later confirmed that he too was suffering from the prostate cancer. Thankfully it had been caught early enough for him to be treated, with him taking the gruelling decision of picking between hormone therapy and radiotherapy or having his prostate removed. Saying that the choice was easy, he opted for having an operation to remove his prostate entirely. Sir Chris has won six Olympic gold medals (Image: Getty Images) Article continues below Prostate cancer is believed to be the most common among men in the UK, with approximately one in eight men diagnosed with the condition in their lifetimes, according to the charity Prostate Cancer UK. According to the NHS, the condition usually doesn't cause any symptoms until the cancer has grown large enough to impact the tube that takes urine from the bladder out of the penis. They have said that some symptoms of the condition can include "needing to pee more frequently, often during the night, needing to rush to the toilet and difficulty in starting to pee (hesitancy)".

Brits face £5,000 fines for bringing five items back from holiday in UK customs crackdown
Brits face £5,000 fines for bringing five items back from holiday in UK customs crackdown

Wales Online

time3 hours ago

  • Wales Online

Brits face £5,000 fines for bringing five items back from holiday in UK customs crackdown

Brits face £5,000 fines for bringing five items back from holiday in UK customs crackdown The government has introduced tough new rules earlier this year as a result of an outbreak of a serious disease across Europe, which means that anyone returning from affected areas must ensure they are not carrying any banned items in their luggage People coming back to the UK from holidays in Europe have been banned from bringing a number of items in due to new laws (Image: Getty) Holidaymakers have been warned they could be hit with fines reaching £5,000 for trying to bring five particular items through customs - even if they bought them from duty-free stores. The government brought in strict new rules earlier this year to tackle an outbreak of a serious disease spreading across Europe. This means that anyone coming back from affected regions such as Spain, France, Italy and Greece must make sure they don't have any prohibited items in their luggage. A foot and mouth disease warning was issued to Welsh farmers earlier this year. ‌ The current restrictions mean that anyone found carrying items including sandwiches, cheese, cured meats, raw meats or milk into the country will be stopped at the border. It remains forbidden for travellers from all EU countries entering Great Britain to bring items such as sandwiches, cheese, cured meats, raw meats or milk into the country. ‌ This applies regardless of whether the products are wrapped or packaged, or whether they were bought at duty-free shops. ‌ Officials said that those caught with these products will be required to either surrender them at the border or have them seized and destroyed, reports Bristol Live. In serious cases, those found with these items run the risk of incurring fines of up to £5,000. The government has put measures in place to stop the spread of foot and mouth disease (FMD) following a rising number of cases throughout Europe. Read the biggest stories in Wales first by signing up to our daily newsletter here ‌ Travellers are barred from bringing in meat from cattle, sheep, goats, and pigs, as well as dairy products, from EU countries into Great Britain for personal use. This is to safeguard the health of British livestock, the livelihoods of farmers, and the UK's food security. Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) poses no threat to humans, but it is a highly infectious viral disease that affects cattle, sheep, pigs and other cloven-hoofed animals such as wild boar, deer, llamas and alpacas. Despite there being no current cases, the outbreak on the continent presents a significant risk to farm businesses and livestock in the UK. ‌ The disease can cause substantial economic losses due to production shortfalls in the affected animals, as well as loss of access to foreign markets for animals, meat and dairy. In response to confirmed outbreaks of FMD in Germany, Hungary, Slovakia and Austria earlier this year, the Government has already prohibited personal imports of cattle, sheep and other ruminants and pig meat as well as dairy products from these countries. The new restrictions apply only to travellers arriving in Great Britain, and will not be imposed on personal imports arriving from Northern Ireland, Jersey, Guernsey, or the Isle of Man. ‌ Farming Minister Daniel Zeichner stated at the launch: "This government will do whatever it takes to protect British farmers from foot and mouth. "That is why we are further strengthening protections by introducing restrictions on personal meat and dairy imports to prevent the spread of the disease and protect Britain's food security UK Deputy Chief Veterinary Officer for international and trade affairs Dr Jorge Martin-Almagro said: "Following the detection of foot and mouth disease in EU countries resulting in a rising risk of introduction into Great Britain, we have extended restrictions on the personal imports of food products that pose a risk in FMD transmission. ‌ "Robust contingency plans are already in place to manage the risk of this disease to protect farmers and Britain's food security. This biosecurity measure combined with all others we have implemented are critical to limit the risk of FMD incursion. "I would urge livestock keepers to continue exercising the upmost vigilance for signs of disease, ensure scrupulous biosecurity is maintained and to report any suspicion of disease immediately to the Animal and Plant Health Agency." However, certain exemptions to these regulations remain in effect. Small quantities of baby formula, medicinal foods and specific composite items such as chocolate, sweets, bread, cakes, biscuits and pasta are still permitted. Article continues below

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store