The Grave Long-Term Effects of the Gaza Malnutrition Crisis

The moment Merry Fitzpatrick realized that Gaza’s malnutrition crisis had progressed to a newer and deadlier phase was when surgeons at the few hospitals still operational on the Strip reported that wounds were no longer closing.

“There’s so much traumatic injury, like blast wounds and broken bones,” says Fitzpatrick, an assistant professor at the Friedman School of Nutrition at Tufts University. “But they’re not healing, because people don’t have the nutrients to build the collagen necessary to close them. So wounds that are a month, even two months old, still look as fresh as if they had occurred in the last week.”

According to the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza, malnutrition

→ Continue reading at Wired - Science

More from author

Related posts

Advertisment

Latest posts

How Traditional Institutions Can Lead the Next Phase of Blockchain Finance

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. An unprecedented shift is reshaping the foundations of global finance. Cryptocurrencies are gaining greater...

Why Smart Entrepreneurs Are Embracing Prenups — Not Out of Fear, But Strategy

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. For decades, prenuptial agreements carried a stigma. They were seen as cold, transactional documents...

3 Tactics to Turn One-Time Holiday Shoppers Into Year-Round Buyers

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. Every winter, retailers watch revenue lines spike and then flatten again by February. What...