Islamic State-controlled areas in Syria pose the greatest difficulties. Nearly 1.7 million people are living in territory held by the group.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said that providing healthcare across Syria has become nearly impossible, especially for the 1.7 million people living in areas controlled by the Islamic State (IS) group. "Access is the principal //concern," said Elizabeth Hoff, the WHO's representative in war-shattered Syria.
‘Nearly 58 percent of the fully operational hospitals in Syria are now closed or functioning at a diminished capacity.’
"Operating in a conflict like Syria is almost an impossible situation in very many hot areas," she told reporters. Hoff stressed the challenges of getting access and supplies to patients across the country, including in areas controlled by the government and opposition forces.
But, as expected, IS-controlled areas pose the greatest difficulties, she said, citing recent estimates that 1.7 million people were living in territory held by the group.
The WHO has no contact with IS, but Hoff told journalists the organisation does work with doctors based in areas under IS control, who have relayed messages from the jihadists.
"We have actually transported medicine in, but not in large quantities," she said, referring to IS territory.
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Of the 113 fully operational hospitals in Syria before the conflict began in 2011, 58 percent are now closed or functioning at a diminished capacity, she explained.
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According to Hoff, the full impact of the healthcare crisis in Syria was not evident through the initial stages of the conflict, because the country "had the strongest health indicators in the Arab world."
But the relentless fighting has destroyed many of the systems that were in place.
"The national surveillance system has broken down," she said.
Source-AFP