Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Packed hospitals, treacherou­s roads, harried parents: Newborns in Gaza are facing steeper odds of survival

- By Wafaa Shurafa and Jack Jeffery

DEIR AL-BALAH, GAZA STRIP » The birth of their daughter should have marked the beginning of a joyful chapter for the young Palestinia­n couple.

Instead, the devastatin­g war in Gaza, now in its third month, has turned childbirth and parenthood into a time of worry and fear for Salim and Israa alJamala.

First, they endured a perilous journey, dodging missile fire, to reach a maternity ward. And now, the couple is sheltering with their newborn in the partially tented courtyard of another hospital where they can't care properly for their now 3-weekold daughter, her mother's namesake.

His wife's breast milk is not sufficient because she cannot eat enough as a result of widespread food shortages, said the 29-yearold Salim, rocking baby Israa, swaddled in blankets in a crib cobbled together from wood scraps. Baby formula and medicine for the infant's persistent cough are not available and in any case not affordable.

The war, triggered by a deadly Oct. 7 Hamas assault on southern Israel, has unleashed unimaginab­le destructio­n, with more than 18,000 Palestinia­ns killed and close to 50,000 wounded in Israel's offensive, according to health officials in Hamas-run Gaza. The initial Hamas attack killed about 1,200 people in Israel, most of them civilians.

Amid the devastatio­n, about 5,500 births are expected over the next month, out of an estimated 50,000 women in Gaza who are currently pregnant, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Yet the health sector is close to collapse, with twothirds of Gaza's 36 hospitals now out of service. The 12 remaining health facilities are only partially operationa­l. Even in the functionin­g hospitals, doctors report a lack of basic medicines and the kind of equipment needed to treat newborns, including ventilator­s, formula milk and disinfecta­nt.

The severe shortage of fuel is another major concern for hospitals that have run solely on generators

dsince the early days of the war when Israel cut Gaza's electricit­y supply.

“Electricit­y sometimes comes on for a few minutes” before dropping off, said Wisam Shaltout, head of the neonatal intensive care unit at the Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.

Salim and Israa's odyssey began in mid-October. During that period, the Israeli military had been issuing daily warnings to residents of northern Gaza, including Gaza City, to head to the southern half of the territory ahead of a looming Israel ground offensive in the north.

Heeding the warnings, Salim, a heavily pregnant Israa and their 5-yearold son fled their home in the Sheikh Radwan neighborho­od of Gaza City and headed south on foot. The family of three shortly arrived at Shifa hospital in Gaza City before managing to secure a taxi later that day to take them to Al-Aqsa Hospital where they found shelter.

When 26-year old Israa went into labor on Nov. 23, the pair were told to head to Al-Awda Hospital, near the Nuseirat refugee camp, as it still had a maternity ward.

The couple managed to find a Red Crescent ambulance to take them to AlAwda, just 6 kilometers (3.7 miles) away. But it was a frightful stop-start journey that took more than an hour because three airstrikes hit near the road.

Most arriving at Al-Awda's maternity ward have no vehicle to help. Some pregnant women are too scared to go at all, fearing airstrikes that in some cases have also struck ambulances, said Dr. Yasmin

Kafarneh, who runs the obstetrics department at AlAwda.

She said she believes her department is the only functionin­g maternity ward in southern Gaza. Before the war, the department used to handle around six births a day. Now, pregnant women arrive from all over and more than 70 babies are delivered each day.

Under the current conditions, first-time mothers are permitted to stay and receive treatment in the hospital for around four hours after giving birth, while those who have previously given birth can stay for only half that time.

Israa gave birth at 2 a.m. on Nov. 24, but the joy was short-lived. Just after daybreak, the family was told by medical staff they had to leave to make room for others.

They secured a donkey cart to carry them back to their shelter at the Al-Aqsa Hospital. They have little to eat, some days just onions.

Their neighbors make fires to stay warm, sometimes burning plastic that releases toxic fumes. “The atmosphere here is all smoke, all dust,” Salim said. “It is not an appropriat­e environmen­t for a newborn girl!”

The baby's health has deteriorat­ed, said Salim, troubled by her persistent cough.

Israa was born just hours before a cease-fire took effect that lasted a week. After fighting resumed and ground forces advanced in central and southern Gaza, their shelter became even more crowded.

Given the circumstan­ces, Salim said he has done the best he can. But he's scared for his daughter. “I do not know whether she will be alive tomorrow,” he said.

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 ?? ADEL HANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mother Israa and father Salim al-Jamala, both Palestinia­ns displaced by the Israeli bombardmen­t of the Gaza Strip, sit around their newborn daughter Israa at their makeshift tent near al Aqsa Hospital in Deir al Balah, Gaza Strip on Dec. 10.
ADEL HANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mother Israa and father Salim al-Jamala, both Palestinia­ns displaced by the Israeli bombardmen­t of the Gaza Strip, sit around their newborn daughter Israa at their makeshift tent near al Aqsa Hospital in Deir al Balah, Gaza Strip on Dec. 10.

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