The Jordanian Field Hospital South Gaza/2 staff performed many emergencies surgical procedures on sick and injured patients, on Wednesday. "The operations conducted by the specialized medical personnel are part of the medical and therapeutic services that the hospital provides to families in the besieged strip," stated the field hospital's director. This statement highlights the fact that the hospital has handled 25,012 cases, (221) major operations and 1,370 minor operations—since its arrival on the mission field on March 8 and up until Wednesday evening. Because of the exceptional medical care it offers, he continued, the hospital is seeing an increase in the number of visitors, patients, and injured individuals. This is because the industry lacks a health incubator, and infectious diseases like hepatitis are becoming more widespread. Patients are assessed when they arrive, and cases that need regular or emergency procedures are reported. He pointed out that some of the operations that were performed in the hospital included restoring an injured hand and reattaching it without amputating it, “REIMPLANTATION,” as a result of its damage due to a bomb explosion, and performing another operation, which consisted of extracting a bullet from the right forearm, in addition to performing an operation in the facial area and removing part of the fat that caused it. For deformity, and another in the mouth and lips area “FACIAL SCULPTURE WITH COMMISSUROPLASTY” after the injured person suffered from a narrowing of the mouth as a result of being hit by shrapnel. The trauma and accident surgery specialist, for his part, clarified that the procedures handled involved complicated cases that called for surgical interventions, including thoracic, plastic, orthopedic, and vascular surgeries. These medical collaborations significantly contributed to the injured patients' survival.
The Jordanian Field Hospital South Gaza/2 staff performed many emergencies surgical procedures on sick and injured patients, on Wednesday.
"The operations conducted by the specialized medical personnel are part of the medical and therapeutic services that the hospital provides to families in the besieged strip," stated the field hospital's director. This statement highlights the fact that the hospital has handled 25,012 cases, (221) major operations and 1,370 minor operations—since its arrival on the mission field on March 8 and up until Wednesday evening.
Because of the exceptional medical care it offers, he continued, the hospital is seeing an increase in the number of visitors, patients, and injured individuals. This is because the industry lacks a health incubator, and infectious diseases like hepatitis are becoming more widespread. Patients are assessed when they arrive, and cases that need regular or emergency procedures are reported.
He pointed out that some of the operations that were performed in the hospital included restoring an injured hand and reattaching it without amputating it, “REIMPLANTATION,” as a result of its damage due to a bomb explosion, and performing another operation, which consisted of extracting a bullet from the right forearm, in addition to performing an operation in the facial area and removing part of the fat that caused it. For deformity, and another in the mouth and lips area “FACIAL SCULPTURE WITH COMMISSUROPLASTY” after the injured person suffered from a narrowing of the mouth as a result of being hit by shrapnel.
The trauma and accident surgery specialist, for his part, clarified that the procedures handled involved complicated cases that called for surgical interventions, including thoracic, plastic, orthopedic, and vascular surgeries. These medical collaborations significantly contributed to the injured patients' survival.