This was rafah today, after 15 children from one family were killed in an airstrike. Translation show me one man among them. L theyre all children and women. You can see my identity is completely erased with the deaths of my wife and children. A pregnant woman was among the dead. Her Baby Daughter was saved in an emergency operation. A child born to a mother she will never know. There is the story of everyday death, and the story of what follows for the families caught in the shadows of death. Nawaras husband, abdulrahman, was one of more than 70 civilians killed in an israeli raid to rescue hostages in february. These were the couples children in the aftermath of their fathers death. We went back to see nawara, now eight months pregnant with her dead husbands child, and in grief, awaiting the arrival of a new life. Nawaras words the elegy of a wife and mother for all thats been lost. In central gaza, Israeli Forces hunt hamas. Theyre still launching attacks from tunnels and buildings.
rather than being told she has to go to this place or that place. if she needs her hrt, she can get it there, and all the specialists are around in one place and that they re open at the weekends and evenings. she said previosuly that s the kind of thing she wants. because most women when they need health care are well. they don t need to be in hospitals or tertiary centres, and that she wants to make it easier for women tojust get the stuff done and get on. yeah, so it s about accessibility as well, isn t it? and looking at this idea of a gender gap in health care, one area, for example, is research. so maybe research into a new medication or treatment. but most of the trials in the research are men, rather than women, so perhaps when it comes to actually applying that treatment, that medication, not as much is known about its impacts, its effects on women. so that s the sort of thing that she s looking to address as well at a very fundamental level, i presume? that s a huge area. and
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Palike will spend Rs 601 crore and boost health infra at constituency, ward levels to arrest the third wave
The two waves of Covid-19 which left the City gasping for breath have prompted the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (
BBMP) to augment the much-ignored health infrastructure. In what could be termed as a first-of-its-kind approach, the civic body has chalked out a Rs 601 crore plan to address gaps in the City’s healthcare system across all three levels – primary, secondary and tertiary. Officials now await the
State government’s assistance to strengthen healthcare facilities.
Key proposals submitted to the government include 57 primary healthcare centres (PHCs), 11 secondary centres with 50 to 100 beds and three tertiary centres like