THE AMERICAN MEDICAL MISSION TO GAZA (AMMG) AIMS TO REPORT THE HUMANITARIAN AND MEDICAL OBSERVATIONS OF AMERICAN DOCTORS TRAVELING TO THE GAZA STRIP. THE AMMG DOES NOT ADVOCATE POLITICAL ACTION OR ESPOUSE POLITICAL VIEWS.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

American Doctors Return to US after Gaza Mission

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Lombard IL (February 11, 2009) -- The physicians who returned from the 10 day humanitarian medical mission to the Gaza Strip - have resumed their daily practices. The group of eleven doctors - were the only American and Canadian physicians to travel to Gaza to provide humanitarian aid to the war-torn region.

“Going there really enlightened me and opened my eyes.” said Dr. Ismail Mehr, an anesthesiologist from Hornell New York - who led the group of specialists. “The situation was worse that we had ever imagined.” Along with Mehr, other doctors from American Medical Mission to Gaza treated patients with an assortment of injuries—burns, shrapnel wounds, and amputations.


“I was surprised and shocked to see the extent and degree of civilian casualties,” said Dr. Irfan Galaria a Salt Lake City plastic surgeon who treated several burn patients, some presumably from white phosphorus-related injuries. Galaria operated extensively on a facial injury of a 1-year old girl without the use of local anesthetic – a reoccurring problem in area desperately needing medical supplies.

“Every time I stuck her with the needle she could feel it.”

In a case that received international attention, Texas urologist Saeed Akhtar and Mehr removed a watermelon-sized tumor from the kidney of Abdullah Shawwa – a four year child. The tumor was attributed to untreated chronic disease that many in Gaza Strip are afflicted with because of the embargo posed on the region. Furthermore, Mehr noted “Due to travel restrictions and the embargo, kids like Shawwa may not be able to receive appropriate follow-up care due to lack of medical expertise and equipment.”

Dr. Rick Colwell, an emergency room doctor from Sioux City, Iowa who was part of the mission said, “Something has to be done about this embargo...it’s inhumane.”

“We were the only Americans to go to Gaza and we will probably be the only ones to go as far as a relief team that is strictly defined under the charter of an American charitable organization,” Mehr said. With the announcement that Egypt will reseal the Rafah border crossing with Gaza and Israel continuing its embargo on the region – Mehr and his team might be the last group of American physicians to provide any humanitarian aid to a area inflicted with high number of causalities and fatalities due to Israeli strikes and poor medical resources.

The team of volunteers also included Dr. Imran Qureshi, a radiologist from Naperville, Illionis, Dr. Kanwal Shazia Chaudhry a pediatric and emergency room specialist from New York City, Dr. Labiq Syed, a research fellow at Johns Hopkins, Dr. Labib Syed an interventional radiologist from Baltimore, and Dr. Shariq Sayeed a vascular surgeon from Atlanta. Ahmed Kasem, an attorney with the California firm, Kasem, Ko & Ahmed assisted the team with logistics.

Gaza and the Aftermath Part 1

Kevin Doran of WLEA 1480 AM interviews Dr. Ismail Mehr

** Please note the views of the host do not represent those of AMMG


Gaza Fundraiser in Buffalo NY

Organization of Arab Students, Muslim Student Association, and Western New York Peace Center are presenting a Charity Banquet (a fundraising event for Gaza)

February 27th,2009 from 6pm-11pm
*Dinner served at 7pm (Halal Meat)

Salvatore's Italian Gardens Restaurant,
6461 Transit Road Depew, NY 14043

Speaker Laila El-Haddad (Past Al Jazeera Correspondent)
Speaker Dr. Ismail Mehr (IMANA Relief/American Medical Mission to Gaza)
Auctions

**Donations to the Palestinian Children Relief Fund
**Tickets are on sale! You may purchase them from eboard members or
SBI Ticket Office 221 Student Union
$20 Students
$30 non-students

For further information feel free to contact Tamera Akarah (716) 400-3741

Monday, February 9, 2009

Gaza Fundraiser in Wayland MA

Gaza: An Eyewitness Account
Raising Awareness and Funds

Featuring

Dr. Ismail Mehr of IMANA/American Medical Mission to Gaza

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

6:30 PM
Islamic Center of Boston

126 Boston Post Road
Wayland, MA 01778

The
American Medical Mission to Gaza was the only group of American doctors to enter Gaza after the recent fighting to provide medical assistance and to witness the humanitarian crisis first-hand. Dr. Mehr led the group of doctors to the Gaza strip in January 2009.

Donations will be collected at the door and throughout the evening for Islamic Relief USA.

Student $10/Non-Student $15

Event open to Public.
Please Forward Widely,
Hosted by
Islamic Center of Boston Youth Group
Co-sponsored by Islamic Center of Boston and Muslim Public Affairs Council-Boston
RSVP to
wayland.yg@icbwayland.org
Questions? Contact: Wayland.yg@icbwayland.org
Facebook Event

Local Doctor Describes Chaos in Gaza

Dolly A Butz of the Sioux City Journal reports:

St. Luke's physician treated conflict's injured

SIOUX CITY -- You hear machine gunfire in the distance. F-16s break the sound barrier overhead. Patients are suffering from chronic illnesses all around you, but you don't have the necessary drugs to treat them. The patient you treated a few days before for a gunshot wound is found smothered in his hospital bed.

Working in the emergency room at a hospital in Gaza City is "a little different" than working in the emergency room at St. Luke's Regional Medical Center-Sioux City, Dr. Rick Colwell learned during a recent 10-day humanitarian and medical mission to the war-torn area.

The World Health Organization reports that more than 5,200 Palestinians, including 1,552 children, 652 women and 22 health-care professionals, have been wounded in the recent fighting between Israelis and Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

On Jan. 21, Colwell was one of nine American and four Canadian doctors who left for Gaza on a trip sponsored by the Islamic Medical Association of North America.

From Cairo, Egypt, the American Medical Mission to Gaza made a six-hour drive to the Gaza-Egypt border. They were able to cross the border on the second day with the help of an attorney. When they arrived in Gaza City, a cease fire had been called and Israeli troops were pulling out.

Colwell described the scene at the hospital in Gaza City where he put in 10-12-hour days as "controlled chaos." It contained no triage unit and people were milling around outside, making it difficult to determine who was a patient and who was not. The hospital's doctors were working 20 hour-days, for nearly four weeks straight with few supplies, equipment and medications to treat patients, Colwell said.

Colwell went to work immediately treating patients with gunshot wounds, fractures and lacerations.

A tumor on a 3-year-old boy's liver had grown to the size of a football when the child came to the hospital for surgery. Colwell said the boy, who needs chemotherapy, could have easily been treated in the United States, but due to the embargo and border closings medicine is not available.
"Something has to be done about this embargo," he said. "It's inhumane to lock people in an outdoor prison, basically."

Colwell, who returned to Sioux City Sunday, said he intends to go back to Gaza and bring medical equipment with him, but he has no definite plans at this time.

Witness to war
Dr. Barbara-Anne Huculak, instructor of the physical therapist assistant program at Western Iowa Tech Community College, was staying at a hotel five blocks from the Old City in Jerusalem, when Israel launched missile attacks against Gaza on Dec. 27.Huculak, who was in Jerusalem on a historical and archeological tour of Israel and Jordan, said her group took alternate routes to sites in Jerusalem, and wasn't allowed to venture out within the city of Amman, Jordan, because of protesting."I guess I just go with the flow and don't let those things bother me, but I keep alert and I'm aware of my surroundings," she said. "It is unusual because it's not an everyday experience."

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Updated 2/8/09 Coverage

UPDATED 9:38PM EST

[NEW] Sioux City Journal to report on Dr. Rick Colwell

Gaza children traumatised according to International Herald Tribune

Gazasiege.org features Dr. Irfan Galaria

Christians and Muslims come together in Australia for Gaza

CBS Affiliate WJZ-TV in Baltimore interviews Dr. Labiq and Labib Syed




Jessica Kartalija of WJZ-TV Reports:

As bloodshed continues in the Gaza strip, a team of doctors including two brothers out of Johns Hopkins, travel overseas to provide medical care.

Humanitarian aid supplies intended for some 5,000 wounded Palestinians has repeatedly been confiscated. The Israeli offensive has killed 1,300 Palestinians and left thousands homeless. Doctors Labiq and Labib Syed are part of a team of doctors with the Islamic Medical Association of North America that traveled to the war-torn region.

"Basically the medical system is in despair. It's in collapse. There's no medicines going in, going out," Dr. Labib Syed said.

Syed is an assistant professor of radiology and surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital. As a father, he says working with the children hit very close to home.

"There aren't supplies coming in or out, so all the children--any procedure we had to do, we had to do without local anesthetic, even putting sutures in without anesthesia," he said.

When they arrived in Gaza, the team of doctors was divided based on their specialties.

"Only when you are standing at ground zero and you look around can you sort of get the depth of this whole situation," he said. "Even the locals had never witnessed this type of destruction before."

Labiq has hundreds of photos, many from his time spent with orphaned children.

"Speaking and communicating with the children...the stories that were coming out were stories that I could barely make up with my imagination and they're talking about their realities," Labiq said.

The doctors say, politics aside, something needs to be done quickly to save the thousands of children.

"The most important thing that we would like to bring out is that there's a humanitarian crisis," Labib said.

The doctors had also assisted with hurricane relief efforts in the Dominican Republic.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Where's the Beef?

In the 80's, "Where's the Beef?" was a catch phrase for a popular Wendy's commercial. Unfortunately in Gaza, this is no laughing matter. On the 29th of January, the team took a break from the demands of Al-Shifa Hospital to meet with the local Gazans who were trying to make a new start once again, following the Israeli strikes. As we were driving through Jabaliyah, passing the UNICEF refugee camp, we suddenly came upon a gut-wrenching smell. The stench was so strong many of us began to gag and feared for the worst. I looked out the window and towards the right I saw scattered throughout an open field—what appeared to be over 100 dead cow carcasses. I asked one of my friends if this was collateral damage, as I covered my mouth holding back what I thought inevitably was going to be my lunch coming back up.

I guess in war, nothing is safe. We had already seen numerous children, women and elderly as patients—those who had been wounded and maimed during the 22 days of conflict in this war-torn territory. We had no idea how these animals were killed or for what reason, but their death remains incomprehensible to me.


In addition, we were informed that the Gaza Zoo was also attacked, with most of the animals killed in their cages. We will most likely never know the answer or understand why these animals were killed. It's a shame that the children of Gaza, who escaped and survived the attacks will no longer have the simple pleasure of visiting a Zoo. In the Gaza Strip there are not many reasons for the children to smile. And the one place that children universally respond to with curiosity and a smile, is no longer.





Read more about Zoo Animals

Dr. Ismail Mehr is an anesthesiologist from Hornell, NY. He was the team leader for the American medical mission.

2/7/09 Coverage

Egypt Reseals Rafah Crossing Border

2300 Mile Aid Convoy from UK to Gaza

Gaza: MSF Finds Patients at Risk for Re-infection

Dr. Ismail Mehr's profile picked up by Steuben Courier (Bath, NY)

ScrippsNews also reports on Dr. Irfan Galaria

Friday, February 6, 2009

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Dr. Irfan Galaria Interviewed by BYU News

CW Affiliate WENY-TV interviews Dr. Ismail Mehr



Ted Fioraliso of WENY-TV reports:

A Southern Tier doctor is back from a medical mission to Gaza. “Going there really enlightened me and opened my eyes,” said Dr. Ismail Mehr.


Mehr is happy to be home at St. James Hospital in Hornell after a weeklong trip to Gaza with other American doctors.


“It’s sort of addictive work. After you've done it once, I think anyone who goes and has any human sense to them --it affects you in a different way,” said Mehr.


Dr. Mehr, an anesthesiologist, performed a handful of surgeries each day at Gaza City's Shiffah Hospital.


Some of his patients had war-related injuries, but others were suffering from substandard medical treatment. Since Israel imposed an embargo on Gaza, nothing comes in and nothing goes out -- including medicine and equipment.


“Everyone is focusing on the 1,300 people who were killed in these strikes and the 6,000 or so wounded. But, there's a number that's unspoken for that is going to continue if this embargo stays in effect,” said Mehr.


Mehr and the others spent their down time at a local orphanage. He says being with the kids was rewarding, but what they told him was horrifying.


“That was something really overwhelming. They told stories of their parents in the rubble, or their house blown away,” he said.


Mehr says he really didn't know much about the conflict before his trip, and says you have to see it yourself to see what it's done to the people of Gaza.


“Despite them losing everything, and basically not having anything left to live for anymore, they went out of their way to host us. And we made some very strong bonds, and we all felt we left some family members behind,” said Mehr.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Salt Lake City Physician Treats War Victims in Gaza Strip

KCPW’s Jeff Robinson interviews Dr. Irfan Galaria


















Mercy in a War Zone

Justin Head of the Hornell Evening Tribune reports:

Hornell, N.Y. - It’s a trip he will never forget.

When St. James Mercy Hospital’s Dr. Ismail Mehr headed out to Gaza for the third humanitarian relief effort of his life, he thought he knew how bad conditions were going to be in the war ravaged region. But he soon found out nothing could have prepared him for the conditions he would experience.

“The first thing that we saw was the destruction and the tank tracks through fields, houses blown up ... One vivid thing that I caught was a children’s playground that had been torn a part because the tanks had driven through it. There was a zoo in Gaza and the animals had been killed. We got a sense of war. I’ve never been to battle grounds and I got to see what it looked like,” said Mehr.

Mehr, an anesthesiologist at St. James, was the leader of a 10-day medical mission receiving national recognition. The trip was sponsored by the Islamic Medical Association of North America and has had stories about it done in the Washington Post and the Chicago Tribune.

“We were the only Americans to go to Gaza and we will probably be the only ones to go as far as a relief team that is strictly under the charter of an American charitable organization. The other Americans there were journalists or people who worked for the United Nations,” said Mehr. He crossed the border with 36 South Africans.

“I think that is a shame that we pride ourselves in the United States on wanting to help others and in the end we were the only ones that went, from the Islamic Medical Association,” said Mehr.
The trip almost became impossible as Mehr and his team were hassled at the Egyptian border where they crossed as they ventured to the El Shifa Hospital in Gaza city.

Gaza has a large, military-patrolled wall erected around the entire densely populated urban city. No one is allowed to travel in or out. Israel and the Hamas government have battled each other for years, causing sporadic and sometimes long periods of devastating violence.

On the first day of his trip Mehr had to go to the U.S. Embassy in Cairo to sign a waiver to be allowed to cross into Gaza because the borders to Gaza are completely sealed from anyone going in or anyone coming out. Representatives at the embassy told the team that they would be offered no help if any fighting broke out. Mehr stayed in a hotel that was running on generators and frequently heard bombings.

“The guts and the trauma and the severed limbs and you know the gory stuff everyone from the media and people when I return to the states always want to know ‘What did you see? Was it bad?,’ had sort of passed. Either people had already died or been treated by local doctors. We missed that by a couple of days. But what we did see was a lot of wounds, infections, amputations, or people that needed to be amputated, shrapnel wounds and what not,” said Mehr.

He said the media is biased and fails to report how the area has been crippled by an embargo that is slowly killing the people there.

“We saw war crimes there, we saw kids burnt with white phosphorous, on the same side we haven’t seen the suicide bombings and what happens over in Israel because we haven’t been over there, but I think both sides are wrong,” said Mehr.

During his trip he took photos of horrific scenes, dead children covered with rubble, animals that had been executed, gaping wounds from shrapnel that civilians were hit with, bombed buildings and other images that paint a horrific picture of the conditions there.

“Most of my procedures were cancer-related surgerys and most of them were on children ... The local doctors had these patients with cancer and they didn’t know how to treat it because they didn’t have chemotherapy. Their tumors had grown so large they just didn’t have the skills or instruments to use them.” said Mehr.

He talked about this as he discussed the case of a 5-year-old child that had a kidney tumor about the size of a watermelon that he had been living with for several months. Doctors in Gaza have no way to obtain new medical materials or fix broken equipment in the hospitals so they use dated instruments or are unable to treated certain ailments entirely.

“They have to improvise and make due. There are only two CT scanners for a population for 1.5 million. If you look at Rochester they service a population of about a million and they have probably about 50 scanners running all the time ... People need to realize there is a humanitarian side to it and the people that are hurting are the civilians and the public. It’s not the politicians and we need to stress that with our politicians and the effects of the embargo,” said Mehr.

Mehr plans on going back to Gaza in the future if it is possible.

Trip to Gaza Heartbreaking for Utah Doctor

Matthew D. LaPlante of The Salt Lake Tribune reports:

Humanitarian mission » Irfan Galaria traveled with 13 other doctors to treat wounded in recent conflict

The mother wrapped her arms around her 1-year-old daughter's body. The nurse held the child's head. And the doctor worked, stitch by stitch, to repair a laceration that stretched from the little girl's cheek to her lip.

There was no anesthetic to ease the child's pain.


"So this little girl, you know, she could feel it," said Irfan Galaria, a Salt Lake City plastic surgeon who returned Sunday from a 10-day humanitarian mission to Gaza. "Every time I stuck her with the needle she could feel it."

Galaria was among 14 doctors from the Islamic Medical Association of North America who traveled to Gaza in the wake of an Israeli military assault there that left more than 1,000 dead and several thousand more wounded, according to both Israeli and Palestinian casualty estimates. Although the two sides dispute the number of casualties that were civilians, Galaria said it was clear from his perspective at Gaza City's al-Shifa Hospital that noncombatants -- including children -- suffered greatly in the fighting.

And among the wounded he treated were many suffering from what appeared to be white phosphorus burns. U.S. manufacturers, among others, produce phosphorus shells for use in lighting up nighttime battlefields and creating smoke screens, but international law bans the use of the hot-burning shells in densely populated areas like Gaza.

It is Gaza's density -- the small stretch of land is similar in size and population to Philadelphia
-- that makes it a difficult place to conduct military operations without a large degree of collateral damage. "I was surprised and shocked to see the extent and the degree of civilian casualties," Galaria said.

Making matters far worse, he said, was the utter lack of medical supplies, everything from towels for surgeons to dry their hands after scrubbing to anesthetics for use in minor surgeries like the one Galaria performed on the young Gazan girl.

Galaria said the recent fighting aggravated a situation that was already dire. "They lack medical supplies, food, clothing -- anything that you can imagine," he said.

California lawyer Ahmed Kasem, who helped arrange transportation, lodging and served as a translator for the doctors, said he fears that the world has been given an incomplete picture about the situation in Gaza.

"It's heartbreaking," he said, "because from my personal vantage point, these people have no future. There are no jobs. There is nothing coming in or out. They've been locked up, isolated and forgotten."

Many of the doctors on the trip have agreed to look into further opportunities to return to Gaza to continue to care for those in need.

Iowa surgeon Rick Colwell said he is sadly certain that there will be plenty to do when the doctors return. "There was so much to do, you could stay there for years and never finish," Colwell told Sioux City's KPTH-TV, "but you do what you can."

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

A Thank You From the Orphanage



31 January 2009
Dear Ahmed:

It was a pleasure having you at Al-Amal Institute for Orphans in Gaza. Your sincere concern about our kids was really appreciated by all of us. We wish you all a safe trip back and God willing you will be rewarded for your efforts.

It is true we have been through a very tough period during the war on Gaza. We have lost many beloved ones. In the Institute, we have lost one of our most beloved children (Mohammed Al Ewadi), who was killed by the very first bombing of the police station nearby his school. I just read the article in your blog about Mohammed Al-Ewadi.

On the other hand this tragedy has united all the good people around the world. Justice must prevail at the end.

Dear Ahmed, please convey our best regards to all the members in your group.

Yours truly,

Al-Amal institution for Orphans

CBS Affiliate KUTV in Utah interviews Dr. Galaria

Surgeon Returns from Helping Patients in Gaza

NBC Affiliate KSL-5's Nicole Gonzales Roports


A Utah plastic surgeon just came back home today after spending a week in Gaza. He was part of an American team sent to help war wound victims.

The sound of war is something you don't hear every day here in Utah, but Dr. Irfan Galaria wanted to leave his practice at University Hospital to help the wounded in Gaza.

"Going there, I was aware of the risks. The opportunity to help these people outweighed any of these concerns," he said.

He was one of 14 physicians from the United States. He represented Utah. The group spent five days in Gaza working at the main trauma hospital.
Galaria said, "I would say almost all the people I worked on were children, except for one patient."


By the time their team arrived, most acute injuries had been cared for, so their job was to reconstruct wounds that were cared for incorrectly.

"The second day I was there I was called to the emergency room to repair a laceration, a cut on a 1-year-old child, pretty extensive across the lip and cheek," he said.

Galaria says in Gaza they had few resources and staff, and supplies were limited. "There was no sedation, there was no local anesthesia, and the nurse was used to hold the child down. So usually one parent and one nurse were holding the child down," he said.


The Utah surgeon says he saw so many disturbing injuries resulting from bombs, shrapnel and a chemical called white phosphorous. It burns victims, leaving them with second- and third-degree burns.

"That was difficult to deal with and try to understand why a 5-year-old child, why half her body is burned or why we're repairing cuts on little kids' faces without anesthesia," Galaria said.

He says he'd do it again, though, especially since the Palestinians were so grateful, kind and generous to him at a time when their lives were falling apart.
Galaria says he is actively trying to plan another trip in the coming months. He wants to take supplies, new equipment and other doctors to help teach the staff in Gaza

Monday, February 2, 2009

Dr. Imran Qureshi: Travelogue

Dr. Imran Qureshi's Travelogue Day 8

Dr. Imran Qureshi, is an Interventional Radiologist from Naperville, IL.

Sioux City Doctor Returns From Medical Mission

Fox-Affiliate KPTH 44's Samantha Suttle reports




A few weeks ago we told you about a Sioux City doctor traveling to the Gaza Strip to provide medical relief to the Palestinians wounded in the recent fighting. On Sunday, Dr. Rick Colwell returned home from his 10 day trip. Reporter Samantha Suttle sat down with him to find out how he helped those in need.

It was a dangerous mission for Dr. Colwell to take on, entering a war zone that had left thousands dead or wounded. But he says the trip was necessary, to help others who were suffering.

Sioux City Doctor Rick Colwell is back home, after spending 10 life-changing days in the Gaza Strip, performing surgeries on injured Palestinians in overcrowded hospitals.

"They just don't have the capability to handle the kind of influx they have, even before the war. They really are an overstressed system that's really on the verge of collapse," says Dr. Rick Colwell.

He spent other days at an orphanage, where he performed check-ups on hundreds of children.

"That was one of the really rewarding things. Those kids were really excited and amazingly, they still had plenty to smile about," says Dr. Colwell.

A humbling experience that ended too soon.

"There was so much to do, you could stay there for years and never finish. But you do what you can," Dr. Colwell says.

Assisting anyway he could, to relieve so much suffering.

"I just feel like that's what you are supposed to do, that's what God would want you to do, no matter what your religion, He wants us to help those that need it the most," says Dr. Colwell.

Treating victims of war who need it the most, but are crippled by a poor healthcare system.

Dr. Colwell didn't make the trip alone -- he went with a team of doctors from the Islamic Medical Association of North America. They blogged about their experiences in Gaza, which you can read at http://www.ammgaza.blogspot.com/.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Dr. Imran Qureshi: Travelogue

Dr. Imran Qureshi's Travelogue Day 6 & 7

Dr. Imran Qureshi, is an Interventional Radiologist from Naperville, IL.

Dr. Imran Qureshi: Travelogue

Dr. Imran Qureshi's Travelogue Day 4 & 5

Dr. Imran Qureshi, is an Interventional Radiologist from Naperville, IL.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Dr. Imran Qureshi: Travelogue

Dr. Imran Qureshi's Travelogue Day 3

Dr. Imran Qureshi, is an Interventional Radiologist from Naperville, IL.

Dr. Imran Qureshi: Travelogue

Dr. Imran Qureshi's Travelogue Day 1 & 2

Dr. Imran Qureshi, is an Interventional Radiologist from Naperville, IL.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

A Tribute to Mohammed El-Ewady




When I agreed to help the American medical team in Gaza, I expected to be able to assist in many ways--transportation, communication, and other forms of logistical support. What I did not realize was how powerful and life-changing this experience would become. I write this today as I feel obligated to honor a special boy of whom I learned.

As an Arabic-speaker, my skills as a translator were in constant need. Almost by default, this allowed me get to know the patients and people particularly well, especially children we visited at an orphanage. Our medical team developed a special relationship with the Hope Institute for Orphans, who had requested our help. We made multiple visits and learned the children that resided there were lacking basic routine medical care. They needed everything from toothpaste to cardiac evaluations for irregular heartbeats.

Dr. Kanwal Chaudhry, a Pediatrician on our team identified physical manifestations of severe emotional distress in many of the boys. This exhibited itself as bed-wetting, uncontrolled bowel movements, and war-related nightmares. These symptoms were widespread, but not something easily appreciated. Hanging out--the kids generally preferred to clown around--run, yell, and make faces like most kids do.

After a couple of days, we began to develop a special trust and friendship with the boys as well as the staff. This led to the overwhelmed in-house counselor, El-Farra, to plead for our assistance in treating the boys' psychological trauma. Many had been orphaned as a result of the ongoing air strikes and conflict in Gaza. Our team lacked psychiatrists, but we were able to arrange for 2 clinical psychologists from Gift of the Givers, a South African NGO, to visit the afflicted kids. I returned with them, not only to help translate, but also to help the boys feel comfortable in the therapy sessions.

Mohammed El-Ewady, 17, was a shy polite orphan and the star pupil of the Institute who aspired to become a lawyer. He was loved by all and a role model to the younger kids. On the morning of December 27, 2008, Mohammed grabbed his pencil and ruler and headed out for his first final during exam week. After finishing the exam around 11:00 a.m., Mohammed left the school and began his walk back to the orphanage. Unfortunately for Mohammed, his path home took him past the local police station at the exact time air strikes had begun. Mohammed never made it home - he was struck in the head by a piece of shrapnel from an air strike. After spending seven hours searching for Mohammed, the head of the orphanage finally located him three blocks away, unconscious in the ICU of Al-Shifa Hospital. After spending 3 days in a coma, Mohammed passed away.

Mohammed's death was extremely traumatic for the orphans, many of whom were already victims of war--they had looked up to him as a beacon of strength and hope. Most also lost any feeling of the sense of security that they had regained after being relocated to the orphanage. The reality of the war set in for them--they felt that there was no safe place for them in Gaza.

Mohammed's death was particularly devastating for his younger brother Ahmed, 14. Ahmed took us to Mohammed's room, which had remained untouched since his death and showed us the only thing he had with him when he became a victim of war, his pencil and ruler. Although he was polite and excited to meet us, the counselor at the orphanage and his eyes told us that he was having a difficult time getting over the loss of his brother. Despite grief counseling, he suffers from nightmares.

I would like to pay a special tribute to Mohammed--as I remember looking at his exam schedule, still hanging on the side of his dresser in his quiet and empty room, showing the break between his tests on the 27th of December that still marks his ultimate fate.

Ahmed Kasem with Dr. Omar Qureshi. Kasem is a California-based attorney, who is providing logistical support to the IMANA team. Qureshi is a Radiologist in New York, assisting the team remotely from the United States.

Another Day in Gaza

Walking down the halls of Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, the American team was flagged down by a man desperately requesting help for his wife. Rana Khalil had suffered shrapnel wounds to her left lower extremity, which tore off the flesh from her heel to the midfoot. She also broke a part of bone off from the heel. A patient in Al-Shifa for 27 days, Khalil had no treatment plan for her wounds other than bandage and dressing changes. Dr. Ismail Mehr surveyed her x-rays, and consulted with vascular surgeon Dr. Shariq Sayeed, as well as Dr. Irfan Galaria. Galaria, a Salt Lake City-based plastic surgeon believed he could use a skin graft to successfully heal the foot. The fact, however is that Al-Shifa does not have the ability to maintain the graft after the procedure and it would be unlikely to succeed. Additionally, there is no opportunity to perform a bone graft to repair her heel. Her likely fate is a below-the-knee amputation by Dr. Sayeed.


As Internventional Radiologists Dr. Labib Syed and Dr. Imran Qureshi made rounds at the Al-Shifa dialysis center, they ran across Nafiz. Nafiz complained of of fluid building up in the abdomen--a condition known as ascites. The cause for his ascites is unknown as the doctors at Al-Shifa lack the proper resources and technology to make the diagnosis. The two physicians decide that he will most likely need a catheter to drain the fluid in his belly, and possibly a shunt in his liver.




Dr. Rick Colwell and Dr. Kanwal Chaudhry returned to the Institute of Hope for the Orphans to perform about 150 well-child exams. Basic doctor visits, that many of these kids have never had. What they discovered was that most children suffered from eczema, a condition related to dry skin, and poor dental hygiene; while many also suffered from poor nutrition and vitamin deficiencies. The team plans to purchase and donate whatever supplies they can find locally in the form of toothpaste, multivitamins, lotion, and hydrocortizone cream. The doctors also diagnosed a hernia, 3 hearrt murmurs, and several children suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. The IMANA team has arranged for the children with psychological disorders to be seen by 2 clinical psychologists who are a part of a large South African medical contingent, for further treatment.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Dr. Ismail Mehr seen in AP Video

The Epidemic of Poverty


On the eve of the 8th day of the Mission and as a stream of emails pour into my Inbox, of the various accounts and reactions, that our medical team in Gaza is experiencing - I begin to piece-by-piece understand the entirety of the Palestinian experience.

Amongst the stories of conflict -and while listening to and hearing about the inadequate medical resources and the shortage of basic needs - you begin to comprehend the level of poverty that Gazans are living under.

Not just any type of poverty - an overwhelming level - reports say that close to 80% of the community is under the poverty line. What that means is that there are a great number of individuals who are unable to provide food, shelter, clothes and other basic needs to there families.

But there seems to be a very unorthodox cause for this poverty. This is not a poverty due to a lack of economic prosperity because of mishandled credit loans by banks or ill doings by corporate CEOs. This is a byproduct of being segregated, isolated and deprived of resources.

Poverty makes international aid even more valuable as it is the only commodity in the region that can directly help in the rehabilitation. Aid arrives in warehouses in Gaza - seven to be exact and is categorized and disseminated to different medical centers and institutions across the region. IMANA visited two of the seven warehouses today and our team reports that the system is apparently working and aid is presumably being distributed.

Although we have reported that aid is trickling to the region - there is still an urgent need for additional supplies and goods for Gaza. Along with the injured and wounded, the epidemic of poverty inflicts all Gazans. We need to do all that we can to make sure we combat the ills of those that have fallen wounded, as well as win the fight against the poverty of circumstance.


Mansoor Khadir is assisting remotely from the United States, the American Medical Mission to Gaza.

Associated Press Photographs- January 27, 2009

AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus:

Doctors from the U.S., who rushed to the Gaza Strip after the war, quickly learn that their challenge goes beyond treating shrapnel injuries. The Americans find themselves operating on patients who fell victim to a 20-month-border closure that crippled the health care system.

A joint team of American and Palestinian doctors operated on Palestinian boy Abdullah Shawwa, 4, in the Shifa hospital in Gaza City, Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2009. Abdullah suffers from a kidney tumor the size of a watermelon and would not have made it without the quick intervention from the American surgery team.

Photographs of Abdullah's surgery



Additional Associated Press Photographs from Al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza City, Gaza on Tuesday, January 27, 2009

AP: US doctors face challenges in crippled Gaza

(As published in the Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, and across the world)

Karen Laub of the Associated Press reports:

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip – Doctors from the United States who rushed to the Gaza Strip to help the war wounded quickly learned that their challenge went beyond treating shrapnel injuries.

The eight American specialists found themselves operating on patients who had fallen victim to the 20-month-border closure that had crippled Gaza's health care system even before Israel's offensive against Hamas.

On Tuesday, the team removed a kidney tumor the size of a honey melon from a 4-year-old boy, Abdullah Shawwa, in a five-hour emergency surgery at Gaza City's Shifa Hospital.

The tumor was advanced and without quick intervention Abdullah would likely have died, said Dr. Ismail Mehr, an anesthesiologist from Hornell, N.Y. Doctors in Gaza didn't have the expertise to operate on him and Abdullah's father had been unable to get him transferred quickly to Israel or Egypt.

Even after the surgery, Abdullah's prognosis is uncertain. He'll need followup treatment, including advanced chemotherapy or radiation, which are not available in Gaza. But it's been difficult for Gaza patients to get out, ever since Israel and Egypt closed the borders in response to the violent Hamas takeover of the territory in June 2007.

The closure also dealt a further blow to Gaza's underdeveloped health care system, which lacks sophisticated equipment and key specialists. Hospitals often operate on generators because of disrupted power supplies, and spare parts for some machines are unavailable.

On the eve of the war, Gaza's hospitals had run out of 250 of the basic 1,000 health care items, and were short on 105 of 480 essential drugs, including some cancer medications and anesthetics, said Mahmoud Daher, a representative of the World Health Organization.

In this vulnerable condition, disaster struck. On Dec. 27, the first day of the war, Israeli warplanes bombed Hamas security compounds across Gaza, killing about 220 people, most of them Hamas police, and wounding some 300 people, according to Health Ministry officials.

Shifa, Gaza's central hospital, was overwhelmed.

Its six operating theaters couldn't cope with the waves of seriously wounded. Staff nurse Jihad Ashkar, a 22-year veteran at Shifa, said he had never before seen so many people with multiple injuries that required hours-long surgeries.

"The injured people waited for many hours to enter the theater, so we lost many injured people because we haven't the equipment or operating rooms," said Ashkar.

More than 1,280 Gazans were killed in the three-week offensive, according to the Palestinian Center for Human Rights. More than 4,000 people were hurt, including about 500 critically. The 600 most difficult cases were allowed passage to Egypt.

But the war has also changed the lives of those with lighter injuries. Policeman Sabri Elawa, 25, said he was the only one in his 60-member unit to survive the initial bombing raid. Hit by shrapnel in the right leg, he limps and moves with a walker.

On Monday, he stood in an unruly line at Shifa for several hours, waiting to pick up a proof-of-injury document. With paper in hand, he went to two charities in a failed search for the office that would pay the 500 euros promised to each wounded person by the Hamas government.

Two of his relatives, Maisa and Sami Elawa, accompanied him, seeking emergency payment for their 3-year-old son, Zaher, who suffered a broken hip and burns on the face and chest in a shelling attack near their home.

The couple has no income, except for handouts from relatives. They said they can't afford the medication for Zaher, who was lying on a sofa in the modest living room Monday, alternating between crying and smiling. "He cried for a whole week," Maisa, 22, said of her son.

She said she's not sure the relief money will ever materialize. "All of them have forgotten us. We are the victims and every government just looks for their" jobs, she said.

With many of the wounded either sent home or to hospitals abroad, Shifa has largely settled into its prewar routine.

Some of the exhausted Palestinian doctors have been given relief by foreign medical teams that have arrived in Gaza since a cease-fire took hold Jan. 18. Doctors Without Borders set up a white tent clinic on an empty lot in downtown Gaza City and Jordanian specialists are to stay for several months, operating a 44-bed field hospital.

The eight Americans, including a plastic surgeon and a radiologist, performed more than 15 procedures since arriving Sunday, including skin grafts and cancer surgery. The group, which also carried cartons of medical equipment, is to stay through Friday.

Dr. Saeed Akther, a Pakistan-based urologist originally from Lubbock, Texas, performed the surgery on Abdullah, the 4-year-old with the kidney tumor. Palestinian doctors crowded around to watch, one even bringing a portable step so he could peek over the heads of the others.

"The (local) surgeons could not have done it here," said Mehr. "I am not knocking their ability. You could tell when we were doing it, they had lots of questions. They just would not have been able to handle a tumor this size."

Abdullah's father, Mussalam, a butcher in Gaza City's outdoor market, said the boy was diagnosed only a month ago, after his belly kept swelling. He said his request for treatment outside Gaza was still hung up in bureaucracy when the foreign doctors arrived.

For followup treatment, Abdullah would have to go to Israel. Even during the 20-month closure, Israel has permitted several hundred patients a month — some 900 at its peak — to reach Israeli hospitals for treatment not available in Gaza.

Each trip across the heavily fortified Erez crossing into Israel requires a complicated series of permits from officials in Gaza, the West Bank and finally Israel's Shin Bet security service.

In recent months, the number of rejections on security grounds has increased, said Miri Weingarten, of the Physicians for Human Rights in Israel, which helps Gaza patients.

She said about 1,000 referrals a month are needed, but that in the period before the war, only about half that number were reaching Israel.

Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Aviv Shiron said Gaza's Hamas rulers are responsible for any hardship in Gaza but that Israel has gone out of its way to ensure ongoing medical care.

"Israel has answered every request made by the Red Cross, the U.N. and other humanitarian organizations, regarding health care in Gaza," he said, adding that "any claims that Israeli policy is harming the health care system in Gaza are false, completely untrue."

However, international aid groups say the pre-war trickle of aid shipments is not sufficient to deal with Gaza's growing humanitarian crisis. Rebuilding homes, factories and several health care centers is estimated to cost about $2 billion. Many of the wounded will need rehabiliation.

The American doctors were careful to stay away from politics — the lifting of the closure is linked to complex negotiations between Israel, Hamas, Egypt and others.

But Dr. Ahmed Colwell, an emergency room physician from Sioux City, Iowa, said at least the sick should be given relief.

"It's inhumane ... to not allow them to even have basic medical care," he said.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Orphanage and Pediatric Surgery Rounds





The doctors visited Ma'had Amal Lilaytam (Institute of Hope for the Orphans) today, with pictures in the slideshow above. In December of 2008, this was home to 130 kids. As a result of the current conflict, they must now make preparations for 1800 to 2000 orphans.

In the pediatric ward they met Hassan 9, and Omar 5, two brothers who sustained injuries after playing with an unexploded shell. Hassan received injuries to the face and chest; Omar to the head and hands.

They also met Iman, 9, who told the team how she sustained injuries resulting in internal bleeding after being hit by falling debris.





They met Amira al-Girim, 15. You can read about the her
amazing story of survival. Amira has big plans to become an attorney when she grows up. Amira and countless other Palestinians require humanitarian assistance. Relief agencies, medical teams, and aid of all kind is needed. This is an urgent appeal to the world to help return a sense of normalcy to these kids and countless others, who are unamed.

NPR interviews Dr. Imran Qureshi in Gaza




Dr. Imran Qureshi is interviewed by Jerome McDonnell of Chicago Public Radio

ABC-affiliate WMAR profiles Dr. Labib Syed

1/27/09 Coverage

Geo News (Karachi, Pakistan) reports Pakistani-American medical collaboration in Gaza

Corning (NY) Leader also picks up profile on Dr. Ismail Mehr

Tune In, Turn On, Help Out blog draws attention to American doctors in Gaza

Photos







Monday, January 26, 2009

The Children of Gaza: Hope Admist Despair





Approximately 50% of the population of Gaza is under the age of 14. It is essentially a land of children. Kids are victims of both conflict, and a medical system ill-equipped to handle their complex and special needs. Kids are also witnesses to horrors such as Mohy, 9, who lost his father to bombing. Yet kids will be kids, and Mohy and others were thrilled when some of our team members met them in the streets. Like all other kids, Mohy was interested in talking about movies, America and cell phones. The kids thought that our members were famous actors or singers from a far away land. Resiliency in children is unmatched and they find a way to get by, even in the most darkest of hours.

And by no surprise, many of the American doctors have had pediatric patients. The kind of expertise that this team brings is rare for Gaza, so they are attempting to tackle the difficult cases that are commonly sent out the country--something that is quite rare given tight border restrictions. Dr. Imran Qureshi had a 5 year old patient with sarcoma of the liver, an exceedingly rare form of cancer. This child had surgical removal of his cancer 6 months ago in Israel, but it had since reappeared--and he became very jaundiced. Using out-of-date 30 year old radiology equipment, Dr. Qureshi was able to place a drain into the liver, which would relieve the troubling symptoms the child was experiencing. Dr. Ismail Mehr performed anesthesia for this case without any standard monitoring equipment seen in normal operating rooms. He only had the use of an oxygen saturation device, despite complete sedation. The child is well now...but they know this is not a cure. They've only bought time until the cancer can be removed again. There is however, hope.


Hope is what the parents of a 4 year old boy are doing right now. Urologist Dr. Saeed Akthar and Dr. Mehr will be teaming up tomorrow to remove a Wilm's tumor of the kidney, another very rare condition. Dr. Akhtar does not know if the cancer has spread, but this is the boy's chance as he has been unable to move out of the country for higher level care. The boy comes from a poor family, that was unwilling to take any monetary assistance. The father, who owns a kabob shop, was overjoyed that somebody was helping his son; and showered the doctors with fresh kabobs. This in a place, where food is scarce and eating a kabob is a luxury.

Dr. Rick Colwell also encountered pediatric patients as he helped relieve an ER staff that has not taken breaks, days on end. Plastic surgeon, Dr. Irfan Galaria is also putting his surgical expertise to good use. Earlier today, he treated a 5 year old boy who had 10% burns to his body, primarily in the chest. He used extensive skin grafting and formation of skin flaps to heal the area affected by the burns. Many of his patients are requiring reconstructive surgery from blast injuries. And many other children are getting burned by fires from wood, and oil. The kids are lighting these fires to stay warm, as there is a lack of electricity in many parts of Gaza. While in surgery and treating wounds, Dr. Galaria and others have to make sure every stitch counts--there is limited suture material and a lack of local anesthetic.

It is these stories of triumph in a war-torn land that provide hope. To kids like Mohy, whose eyes are awe-struck at a chance celebrity sighting, in midst of despair.


Gaza: At a Glance

Inhabited by 1.4 million Palestinians - Gaza is a coastal strip of land along the Mediterranean Sea. The name originates from its main city, Gaza.

Most of Gaza's 1.4 million residents are refugees or descendants of refugees of the Palestinians exodus.

Bordering Egypt on the south-west and Israel on the north and east - it is about 41 kilometers (25 mi) long, and between 6 and 12 kilometers (4–7.5 mi) wide, with a total area of 360 square kilometers (139 sq mi).

Oslo Accords signed between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization allows Israel to maintain military control of the Gaza strip's airspace, land borders and territorial waters.
Source: Abridged from wikipedia.org

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Random Musings From Gaza City


  • Dozens of ambulances like the one above were hit. The ambulance depot was destroyed.
  • Anesthesiologist, Dr. Ismail Mehr participated in a mandible resection. He worked with another volunteer surgeon from abroad.
  • While touring a medical facility, Dr. Imran Qureshi was quickly able to make a diagnosis by CT Scan, in a suspected stroke patient. Fortunately, Dr. Qureshi was at hand as there was no other Radiologist in the hospital. There are only 2 CT scanners in all of Gaza--for a population of 1.5 million. In comparison, the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN has 23 scanners of its own.
  • Vascular Surgeon, Dr. Shariq Sayeed is in high demand. He constructed fistulas for Dialysis patients. There are few, if any physicians able to perform this in Gaza. Alot of long-term and chronic care needs have been put on hold to deal with acute trauma cases. The American team's expertise is helping with this.
  • The Palestinians have been extremely hospitable to the American-led contingent. Although the group is sponsored by IMANA, the team will treat all patients regardless of their race, ethnicity, or religion. Whether Arab or Israeli, the doctors view the patient as a person, and will heal and help in any way they can.



An Apparent Need




After being able to enter into Gaza through the Egyptian border and arriving at Al-Shifa Hosptial, the team of American doctors has provided more detailed news of the medical needs of the wounded.


We have been told through Gazan officials that of the estimated 6000 injured, approximately 13% will require an amputation.


The Israeli strikes have left a clear long term need for a team of multidisciplinary professionals, including Physical Rehabilitation, Specialization in Amputation, Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapist, Pain Management and Prosthesis Fitting.


This team would be required to be in place in about 2 months. Ideally, any group of medical professionals assembled would stay a duration of a few weeks--to treat the patients as well as provide medical training, to local physicians and therapists in order to continue the rehabilitation and therapy.


It has become apparent that along with requirement of a greater number of medical professionals to treat amputees - there is a need of additional prosthetics and medical resources.


Prior to the recent Israeli siege, medical staff in Gaza did not have a great need for providing care to amputees and so they are not properly equipped or trained to deal with the estimated 750-800 resulting amputees.


Mostafa, a physical therapist at El-Wafa Medical Rehab Hospital, mentioned that 90% of the current medical care needs in Gaza are surgical: Neurosurgery, Orthopedic Surgery, Reconstructive Surgery, Interventional Caridology and Eye Surgery.


With the current number of wounded at 6000, I am unable to comprehend how the limited surgical wards, 1900 government inpatient beds, and single Ophthalmology hospital will be able to handle the volume of injured.


I did not know what the team would expect upon arriving into Gaza - their presence and purpose there is to treat the wounded, and to assist local doctors. But the apparent and urgent needs of Gaza from the Israeli strikes have also made it a priority to disseminate information about the medical insufficiencies and to request further assistance for region. My heart has softened as I hear the news of those severely wounded by shrapnel, and by those people such as Mostafa, who work tirelessly with little resources."


I will continue to bring updates of our mission.


Mansoor Khadir is assisting remotely from the United States, the American Medical Mission to Gaza