Wednesday, July 9, 2025

'No doctors, no nurses, no equipment': Inside a Syrian hospital

Syria's healthcare system is crippled by war, sanctions Patients depend on poor public services Only 57% of hospitals are fully functional DAMASCUS - Like a mother duck leading her ducklings, gastroenterologist Bashar Hamad steers dozens of white-coated trainee doctors through the dim hallways of Damascus's Al Mojtahed hospital, a crumbling symbol of Syria's devastated healthcare sector. Blood treatment machines, many of them missing vital parts, clutter the dingy wards, where rooms lack doors and floors are covered with dirt and leaking water. The derelict hospital is a legacy of former leader Bashar al-Assad's brutal rule. He presided over a vicious crackdown against dissent, and a 13-year civil war led to the imposition of crippling sanctions that decimated the economy. "They left the country with no doctors, no nurses, no equipment and a bad healthcare system," said Syrian-born Hamad, who lives in the United States and is volunteering in Damascus. "Considering what they have in their hands, they (local doctors) are doing a wonderful job ... There are not enough resources. That's not safe for the patient." Assad was ousted by Islamist-led rebels in December, but his 24-year presidency and years of violence and sanctions have brought the healthcare sector to near collapse. Only 57% of hospitals and 37% of primary healthcare centres remain fully functional, a United Nations assessment said in May. Between 50% and 70% of health workers left the country during the war, the assessment said. In Al Mojtahed, Hamad said anaesthesia is rarely available and if so, it is often administered by general doctors instead of specialists. Single-use surgical balloons are used multiple times after being manually cleaned. Needles are sterilised in soap and water in grimy basins. "Syria's public health sector remains at a critical juncture," said Christina Bethke, acting representative for Syria for the World Health Organization (WHO), in emailed comments to Context. "Syria's poorest communities have been hardest hit," she added. "Negative coping mechanisms may result when families face catastrophic health expenditures and have to choose between life-saving health care and other necessities like food, water and education." But for residents like Mohammad Abed, a wheat farmer from the northeastern city of Raqqa, more than 400 km (about 250 miles) away, state hospitals are nonetheless the best option. Abed, like most Syrians, cannot afford to pay privately for medical treatment. Between 2004 and 2022, private hospitals in Syria increased their bed capacity by 70%, while public hospitals saw a 40% increase during the same period, according to the Syria Report newsletter, citing Syria's Central Bureau of Statistics. Abed raised about $70 from family and friends to travel to the Mouwasat University Hospital, another state hospital in Damascus. "We have nowhere else to go," he said after undergoing an endoscopy procedure. 'We have to do something to help' Hamad has been working with the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS), a relief organisation, since the civil war broke out in 2011. Sometimes he helped displaced Syrians in Lebanon and in Syrian areas outside Assad's control. After the president was ousted, he started coming to Damascus. "I had a feeling that we have to do something to help the ones who have no money to get treatment," he said in an interview between ward rounds. During Assad's rule, Western sanctions made it difficult to obtain drugs, equipment and foreign expertise. The United States and the European Union pledged to lift sanctions in May, and this week U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order terminating a sanctions programme against Syria. Nevertheless, the U.N. says more than 15 million Syrians - out of a population of 23 million - are in "dire need" of primary or secondary health assistance. Some 7.4 million people remain displaced inside the country, living in overcrowded camps or informal settlements where outbreaks of cholera, measles and other diseases are common.

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