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Words from Gaza youngest patients

26 Feb 2018
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Occupied Palestinian Territory
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Ahmed Faranji, 10 years old

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In 2016, Ahmed’s left leg and right hand were seriously burned. He was playing with a metal bar on the roof of his house, when it got trapped in nearby power cables. Ahmed was immediately lifted half a metre offs the ground by the electric current, as his leg began to smoke. He fell back to the ground, fainted and could not be revived by his brother, who was afraid he had died. When Ahmed finally woke up, he could not see or feel his arm anymore.

After a surgery and more than a year of fresh dressings, physiotherapy and occupational therapy sessions in an MSF clinic, he has now recovered partially his range of motion. He has made great progress, but what makes him most proud is being able to close the buttons of his shirts by himself. With that, he feels independent again.

Asma Skaik, 6 years old

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As is the case for so many families in Gaza, Asma’s home is not connected to the water grid and does not have central heating. She was burned at home when some water that had been boiled for use in the family shower, fell on the ground and made contact with an electric socket. ‘It was a terrible pain,’ says Asma, ‘I was screaming so loud that the whole family heard me, but I could not move my hand from the water.’

"After the accident, Asma had to have surgery and was not able to move her hand for three months. She was referred to an MSF clinic in Gaza where she has been working with our nurses and physiotherapists for five months."

"After the accident, Asma had to have surgery and was not able to move her hand for three months. She was referred to an MSF clinic in Gaza where she has been working with our nurses and physiotherapists for five months."

Ramzi Shalayel, 6 years old

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In October, Ramzi’s family was organising a big party at home to celebrate a visit of an aunt coming from the West Bank. Movement in and out of Gaza is extremely restricted by Israel. Over the first six months of 2017, only 240 people per day (out of almost two million) were allowed to cross the border in either direction.

A big soup was prepared in the living room and put on the ground before serving. The family was about to eat even as Ramzi was still playing around. He walked backwards into the pan, full of hot soup, and fell into it.

‘In the end we did not eat all together’, his mother says, ‘but we all went to the hospital instead.’

Ramzi was treated in an MSF clinic, where he received clean dressings and physiotherapy. Ramzi was severely traumatised by the experience. Since the accident, he has become more aggressive and stubborn, wanting more attention. His mother hopes that he will return to his old self when he goes back to school, which he had to miss for a semester due to his injuries.

Shahed, 15 months

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Socio-economic conditions are deteriorating in Gaza over the past years. One day, in November 2017, Shahed’s parents were entertaining their wider family at home, but couldn’t afford to buy a new canister of gas to cook with. Instead they decided to build a fire to cook over. During the family gathering, as everyone stood around the fire, Shahed accidentally elbowed a teapot that had been placed on top of it, spilling hot tea over her legs, back and chest.

In the hospital, where she stayed for a month and a half, her mother met with many other mothers whose children had been burned in similar ways. In MSF clinics, 70% of patients admitted for burns have been in accidents involving hot liquids.

It was very painful for her mother to see her daughter in that condition. Since that day, they haven’t made tea at home.

Ussaid Hanoon, 14 months

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In Gaza, the population has to live with four to six hours of electricity per day, which sometimes only come at night. So, in Ussaid’s family, they admit that when the electricity is working, they are in a rush to do several things at the same time to take advantage of it: cooking, running the washing machine, etc. One day, after baking some bread, Ussaid’s mother switched off the electric pan and left the kitchen, rushing to get to all the activities that had to happen during the brief window where they had power. Unfortunately, Ussaid then came into the kitchen and put his hands on the pan that was still scolding hot.

After two months in an MSF clinic under the care our nurses and physiotherapists, Ussaid was discharged from the clinic and his little hands looks like just before the accident. He was very lucky. But his grandmother is clear and firm: she says.

"Now, the rule at home is not to do anything in the kitchen while the children are around. They are better crying outside the kitchen, than being hurt inside."
she says.