A physician in an earthquake-stricken area of northern Syria described the hospital he was working at as “reminiscent of a warzone”.
Frantic efforts to rescue a whole lot trapped beneath rubble are persevering with after an enormous earthquake hit southeastern Turkey and northern Syria early on Monday, killing greater than 3,500.
Dr Osama Sallom, of the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS), is working on the Bab Al Hawa Hospital, which has acquired over 400 casualties and reported over 50 deaths.
“Most of the patients are children who are bleeding and dying from the cold [after being stuck under debris],” Dr Sallom stated.
“We are wanting beneath the rubble, nevertheless it’s very chilly. It’ll be -1 or -2C for rescue groups working in a single day.
“We receive more and more patients every hour and our hospital is overwhelmed with patients filling the hallways.”
Dr Sallom stated there’s a “huge lack of staff and equipment” on the hospital and all of the wards have been occupied by sufferers, primarily ladies and kids.
“All our beds are full – people are having to lie on the ground. After a few hours we will have no space left on the ground,” he stated.
“It’s reminiscent of a warzone – it’s giving many people traumatic memories.
“Every second I hear ambulances are available in with extra casualties. The likelihood to save lots of folks goes down each hour.”
SAMS responded to the 7.8 magnitude earthquake that hit Syria, Turkey, and the area of Atareb, the place the hospital is positioned, on Monday morning.
Dr Sallom stated the border was fully closed and sufferers couldn’t be referred to Turkey, which has put loads of pressure on the hospital he’s working in.
He stated: “We have to deal with complicated injuries ourselves – we only have one CT scanner and we don’t have specialist equipment. There’s a huge need for the CT scan, but [patients] have to wait three or four hours for a scan.”
He additionally spoke of the continual aftershocks which got here alongside “every five minutes” and have been “very strong”.
He added: “It’s catastrophic and we are afraid ourselves. My friend, the manager of the hospital, lost his family while my wife and child are in Turkey.”
‘I’m so unhappy’
The state of affairs reminded Dr Sallom of the Aleppo bombings in 2016 which destroyed hospitals, homes and killed a whole lot of civilians.
He stated: “I’m so sad – this incident is worse for Syrians because we have lived a lot of years as a war-torn country.
“Now we have now the identical feeling.
“We are losing hope to rescue children because of a huge need for consumables and medication which will run out in the coming hours.”
Source: information.sky.com”