TheTower.org
Staff 05.20.15
Thousands of
Gazans receive treatment in Israeli hospitals every year, the Associated
Press (AP) reported yesterday.
According to
the report, Israel’s Coordinator of Government Activities in the
Territories Unit (COGAT) has issued roughly 27,000 permits for Gaza
residents—including both patients and their families—to receive medical
treatment in Israel and elsewhere. According to the World Health Organization,
in 2013, the most recent year for which there are statistics, 3,840 Gazans were
treated in Israel.
The AP story
focuses on teenagers Ahmed and Hadeel Hamdan, who require kidney dialysis and
have been treated at Rambam Medical Center in Haifa since 2012. When not at the
hospital, they receive treatment at home with equipment provided by the
hospital. Their mother has been trained in how to use the equipment.
The children
were initially treated in hospitals in Gaza, Egypt and Syria before receiving a
medical referral to Rambam. That first lasted three months. The hospital would
not let them go back to Gaza until Hadeel was able to walk again after being
incapacitated for a month.
“I thank
them very much because they exerted tireless effort, especially with the girl,”
their mother, Manal, said.
Since then,
doctors said a special treatment called automated peritoneal dialysis was the
only way to keep the children alive, pending a kidney transplant. Without any machines
or technicians in Gaza, Rambam worked with Palestinian officials to get the
equipment installed at the family’s home and trained their mother how to
operate the machines.
Israeli
government spokesman Mark Regev told the AP that despite the frequent rocket
launches and terror attacks launched by Hamas, the de facto government in
Gaza, Israel’s efforts to treat the ill is a humanitarian matter. The
arrangements for the medical care are made with the Palestinian Authority.
Over the
past year, a number of relatives of Hamas officials have been treated in
Israeli hospitals, including the mother-in-law and daughter of prime minister Ismail Haniyeh and
the sister of spokesman Moussa Abu Marzouk.
Gazans were admitted for care in Israel even while
Hamas was firing barrages of rockets at Israel last summer during Operation
Protective Edge. During that time, Israel set up a field hospital on the
border with Gaza, but Hamas prevented Gazans from accessing the
hospital.
No comments:
Post a Comment