Physicians and health professionals in Gaza, speaking during a virtual event hosted by Doctors Against Genocide, say the enclave’s health system is unable to provide timely cancer diagnosis or treatment for many patients. They describe women with breast cancer undergoing immediate mastectomies, which they say is sometimes the fastest option to save lives because deeper diagnostic tools and cancer drugs are largely unavailable.

Doctors cite the loss of core medical equipment and supplies. One doctor said Gaza previously had seven MRI machines but has none operating now. Another said cardiac catheterisation services have been reduced from multiple machines to reliance on one old machine, with limited ability to obtain stents.

The speakers also link the situation to severe constraints on medical goods, including claims that chlorine bleach to disinfect hospitals is prohibited from entering Gaza. They describe broader health impacts tied to shortages of clean water and fuel, including reduced water well production, degraded water quality, and lowered vaccination rates. They add that infectious diseases such as scabies, gastroenteritis, and hepatitis A have increased.

The Gaza health ministry says Israel’s assault has killed more than 1,700 medical workers and damaged or destroyed 38 hospitals and nearly 200 ambulances, while the ministry reports far-reaching civilian casualties.