August 20, 2024 — The Ministry of Health has in a 10-month-old child in Gaza on 16 August 2024, and the has found traces of in wastewater. Polio mainly affects children under five years of age. However, anyone of any age who is unvaccinated can contract and spread the disease. There is no cure, it can only be prevented. Polio invades the nervous system and . The epidemic risks in Gaza are vast due to the destruction and lack of water and sanitation facilities, open air wastewater, overcrowding, displacement, and destruction of and lack of access to healthcare.
A polio epidemic is a risk that children in Gaza cannot afford. have been born in Gaza since the escalation of the conflict and are likely to have received no vaccinations whatsoever. who become infected will suffer from irreversible paralysis and require lifelong care. For some, the muscles they use to breathe will become paralyzed and they will die. Polio’s re-emergence in Gaza is a result of the crippled health sector, , compounded by its restrictions on repairs and supply access, and the presence of unexploded ordnance in and around key infrastructure.
This outbreak will hit a child population that has very few reserves left. We expect children in Gaza to be more susceptible to poliovirus infection due to high levels of malnutrition, destruction of the healthcare system, destruction of wash and sanitation systems, multiple displacements, and toxic stress. For children, the stress of this outbreak on top of everything else they have experienced will undoubtedly exacerbate existing mental harm.
Polio anywhere is a threat to children everywhere. If left unchecked, there is a high likelihood that the virus will spread through the region. Polio was close to elimination worldwide, and had been in Gaza two decades ago. Polio outbreaks are highly challenging to contain as vaccinated people (children and adults) can still be the disease without showing any symptoms. If swift action is not taken, there is a high risk that the virus will spread throughout the region and beyond. Israel in particular has a low level of vaccine coverage in many communities.
Gaza’s healthcare system is not capable of responding to a polio outbreak as the system is . There are only s for 2.1 million people. What health systems that are still standing will likely be overwhelmed, inhibiting the ability to respond to all other healthcare needs, including those being created by ongoing violence. Morbidity and
mortality will rise for all other injuries and illnesses, as scarce medical resources go to supporting children affected by this virus. Movements of people will be impacted and may slow down a humanitarian access system that is already deliberately denying civilians the assistance required to meet their basic human needs.
What humanitarians require to respond effectively to the outbreak:
- Guarantee and facilitate safe, unhindered access for all vaccines, associated equipment (including cold chain storage), and specialist staff through all crossing points into and within Gaza, as well as safe unfettered access for children and families to health points across the Strip. In addition to the vaccines, full, unhindered humanitarian access into and within the Gaza Strip is essential. All blockages must end now for the full range of assistance needed to sustain civilian’s basic human needs.
- In addition to the the only way to comprehensively address humanitarian and protection needs is through an immediate and sustainable ceasefire. Thousands of children do not have time to wait for a negotiations process that continues to delay. At a minimum, an immediate end to hostilities across the whole of Gaza must be instituted to facilitate the vaccination campaign in August and September.
- These should be full, consecutive days defined by the cessation of hostilities for no less than one week for each phase to enable setting up and undertaking the immunization campaign, though the amount of time needed may increase due to the challenges of operating in such a complex environment. The polio vaccine requires two rounds that each reach at least 95% of the intended child population.
- The timeframe is based on the assumption of no access impediments or violent incidents of the type and all attacks on humanitarian workers and medical staff must cease immediately, and permanently.
- It is essential that the geographic, timeframe, access and protection conditions are respected by all parties and the terms are outlined in writing including how compliance will be monitored and breeches addressed. These terms must also be communicated transparently in a timely fashion to affected communities and humanitarian actors in order to ensure there is time to prepare.
Signed:
Islamic Relief Worldwide
MedGlobal
ActionAid
Churches for Middle East Peace (CMEP)
War Child
Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC)
WeWorld
CARE
Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP)
Humanity & Inclusion / Handicap International (HI)
Dan Church Aid
Child Fund Alliance Plan International
Accion Contra el Hambre (ACF)
Médicos del Mundo (Médecins du Monde Spain)
Oxfam
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Mercy Corps
Children Not Numbers NGO
Save the Children
Doctors and medical professionals:
Feroze Sidhwa, MD, MPH, FACS, FICS
Trauma, critical care, acute care, and General Surgeon
Served at European Hospital, Khan Younis, March 25 - April 8, 2024
French Camp, CA
Thaer Ahmad, MD
Emergency Medicine Physician
Served at Nasser Hospital, January 2024
John Kahler, MD, FAAP
MedGlobal Cofounder
Served in Tel al-Sultan, Rafah, Gaza, January, March 2024
Abdullah Ghali, MD
Orthopedic Surgery Resident
European Hospital in Khan Younis, April 3 - 8, 2024
Houston, TX
Abeerah Muhammad MSN, RN, CEN
Emergency and Critical Care Nurse
European Hospital, May 2024
Yipeng Ge, MD, MPH, CCFP
Primary Care Physician and Public Health Practitioner
Tal Al Sultan Primary Health Care Center in Rafah, February 12-19, 2024
Ottawa, Canada
Benjamin Thomson, MD, MSc, MPH(c), FRCPC
Internal Medicine, Nephrology, Public Health
Multiple sites in Rafah, Deir-el-balah
March 2024
Toronto, Canada
Noor Amin, MD, CCFP(SEM), FCFP
Primary Care, Emergency and Sports Medicine physician
Al Aqsa Hospital and European Gaza Hospital April 2024
Mississauga, Canada
Ahmad Yousaf, MD
Internal Medicine/Pediatrician
Al-Aqsa Shushes Hospital, June 24- July 16, 2024
Nabeel Rana, MD
Vascular Surgeon
Served at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, Deir al-Balah, June 20 - July 9, 2024
Hina Cheema, MD
Obstetrician and Gynecologist
Served in Al Emirati hospital, Rafah March 2024
Served in Nassar hospital, Khan Younis, June-July, 2024
Ahmed Ebeid
Anesthesia
Served in European General Hospital, January - February 2024
Served in Kamal Eledwan Hospital, March- April 2024
Bilal Piracha, MD
Clinical Assistant Professor Emergency Medicine
Served at Aqsa Hospital, DeirAl-Balah, March 7 -19 & July 19- 25, 2024
Served at Al Ahli Hospital (Gaza City), July 26 - August 1, 2024
Professor Nick Maynard MS, FRCS, FRCSEd
Consultant Surgeon (General and Thoracic Surgery)
Oxford University Hospitals, Oxford, UK
Served as member of Medical Aid for Palestinians Emergency Medical teams in Gaza:
December 26, 2023 – January 8, 2024, Al Aqsa Hospital, Deir Al Balah, Gaza
April 22– May 6, 2024, Al Aqsa Hospital, Deir Albalah, Gaza
Javid Abdelmoneim FRCP, DTMH
Emergency Medicine Physician
Nasser Medical Complex, Khan Younis June -July 2024
Khaled Dawas MD, FRCS (General Surgeon)
Consultant Surgeon
University College London Hospitals
Member of Medial Aid for Palestinians Emergency Medical Teams in Gaza 2023/4
Dr. Trish Scanlan
Pediatrician & Co-Medical Director
Children Not Numbers
Dr James Smith MBBS, MA, MSc, MSc
Emergency Physician, UK
Lecturer in Humanitarian Policy and Practice, UCL, UK
Served in Al Aqsa Hospital, December 16, 2023 - January 8, 2024
Served in Al-Mawasi, Rafah, Al-Aqsa Hospital, & supported patient evacuations ins Gaza City, North Gaza)
Alia Kattan MD
Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine
Served in European General Hospital, Gaza, April 29 - May 17, 2024
Tanya Haj-Hassan, BMBCh, MSc
Served in Gaza March 11-25, 2024