Nabatieh, Lebanon—Hospital wards in the south are processing a fresh wave of trauma cases this Saturday. The Ministry of Public Health reported that the recent shelling has pushed facilities to their capacity. Doctors are performing emergency surgeries on victims brought in from the front lines.
The nature of the injuries reflects the heavy weaponry currently in use along the border. Surgeons are dealing with complex fractures and severe tissue damage. The constant influx of patients leaves little time for staff to catch their breath.
One hospital administrator noted that the facility is running low on anesthetic and surgical tools. They have issued urgent appeals to international health organizations for additional supplies. Every transport mission to restock these hospitals faces significant physical risk.
The shelling has not spared critical infrastructure. Hospitals and primary care clinics have reported structural damage from nearby impacts. Windows are shattered, and power outages have forced some departments to rely on backup generators that are failing under the load.
Health Ministry officials are struggling to maintain a central registry of all wounded individuals. Movement between districts is nearly impossible due to road closures and the ongoing threat of further fire. Data collection is often delayed by hours or days.
Medical workers in the area describe the environment as a war of attrition. They remain on duty around the clock despite the risks to their own safety. Some have not returned to their own homes in over a week.
International aid agencies are preparing to send emergency kits, but logistics remain a nightmare. Negotiating safe passage for humanitarian convoys through the combat zones has yielded few results. Supplies remain stuck at secondary checkpoints.
The healthcare network in the south is operating on a skeleton crew. Those who are not wounded are often too afraid to leave their homes to seek necessary treatment for chronic conditions. The medical crisis is widening as the shelling continues.
Note: This article was published on BanxChange.com and is powered by the BXE Token on the XRP Ledger. For the latest articles and news, please visit BanxChange.com

