Gaza's health system remains in ruins despite the fragile ceasefire holding, with hundreds of thousands still facing urgent medical and humanitarian needs, the head of the World Health Organization warned on Thursday.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus welcomed the halt in hostilities but said "the crisis is far from over and the needs are immense."
He highlighted the toll of months of conflict: more than 170,000 people injured -including 5,000 amputees and 3,600 people with severe burns. At least 42,000 require long-term rehabilitation, and 4,000 women give birth each month "in unsafe conditions."
"The destruction has been physical but also psychological," he said. "An estimated one million people need access to mental health care."
Tedros described a system on the brink of collapse. "There are no fully functioning hospitals in Gaza, and only 14 out of 36 are functioning at all," he said, citing "critical shortages of essential medicines, equipment and health workers."
Since the ceasefire took effect two weeks ago, WHO teams have scaled up support, sending medical supplies to hospitals, deploying emergency medical teams, and facilitating evacuations.
"Yesterday, we supported the evacuation of 41 patients and 145 companions to several countries," Tedros said, thanking more than 20 nations that have received evacuees.
But with 15,000 patients still in need of treatment outside Gaza - including 4,000 children - he stressed that "more than 700 have died while waiting for evacuation."
He urged the reopening of the Rafah crossing and the restoration of medical referrals to the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, to enable urgent care and expand aid delivery.
"Although the flow of aid has increased, it's still only a fraction of what is needed," Tedros said, noting that "a significant amount of aid has built up at Al-Arish in Egypt" awaiting the reopening of Rafah at the southern tip of the enclave.
Rebuilding Gaza's health system, however, will cost "at least $7 billion," according to the WHO chief.
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