- Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has reached the limit of its capacity to respond in Abs hospital.
- Local authorities and humanitarian and development organisations must act urgently to address the gaps in healthcare across Yemen.
The high number of people seeking treatment at Abs hospital, in Yemen’s Hajjah governorate, has left hospital staff and essential services overwhelmed, according to Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).
Patients frequently have to share beds, and the emergency room, maternity unit, neonatal unit and inpatient therapeutic feeding centre frequently operate at way more than 100 per cent capacity. Our teams have worked in the hospital since 2015, but today we are stretched to the limit.
“Supporting Abs hospital has become one of MSF’s biggest humanitarian responses worldwide, but today we have reached the limit of our capacity to respond, in terms of space, human resources and supply,” says MSF head of mission Caroline Ducarme.
Today we have reached the limit of our capacity to respond, in terms of space, human resources and supply.Caroline Ducarme, MSF head of mission
“Urgent action is required from health authorities and humanitarian and development organisations to address the gaps in general healthcare, to ensure timely access to medical care and to reduce risks of complications, which lead to an increased demand for specialist healthcare services,” she says.
The increased demand on Abs hospital’s services is due to a number of factors, including the protracted conflict in Yemen. As a result, there is a lack of affordable quality general healthcare services, which means that patients who would otherwise seek care in local clinics are obliged to go to hospitals for treatment, often not arriving until their condition is serious. To make matters worse, the poor living conditions in camps for displaced people in Abs district, including a lack of clean water and sanitation, lead to disease outbreaks.
The situation was exacerbated in 2022 when funding cuts caused several health providers to stop working in Hajjah governorate and nearby Al Hudayda governorate. As a result, services were discontinued at several health facilities, while others were left with insufficient medical supplies, increasing the pressure on Abs hospital.
“Even though we have significantly developed our activities in Abs hospital over the years, increasing bed capacity from 33 to 288, and supporting more than 80 per cent of the hospital departments, we are still not able to cover everyone’s needs,” says Ducarme.
Abs hospital is the only hospital for around one million people in the region, and MSF is the only international organisation with a permanent presence in the area. In 2022, our teams at Abs hospital provided 79,325 emergency consultations, assisted 10,181 deliveries, cared for 3,095 newborn babies in the neonatal unit, treated 2,944 malnourished children in the inpatient therapeutic feeding centre, performed 5,237 surgical interventions and treated 1,202 patients for malaria.