| 26 Janvier 2017
Cairo, 26 January 2017 – As the conflict in Mosul intensifies and  greater numbers of civilians are caught in the crossfire, WHO and  partners have increased trauma care services to ensure that patients  requiring medical care for injuries have a greater chance of survival.  However, additional funds are needed in order to provide a full scale of  health services to the 2.7 million people affected.  
 
 Trauma casuality rates remain high near frontline areas, with many  trauma cases requiring referral from Mosul to Erbil in northern Iraq.  From 17 October 2016 to 18 January 2017, 1610 wounded civilians were  sent to Erbil’s 2 main hospitals to receive trauma care. Many hospitals  in Mosul have suffered extensive damage and are no longer able to  provide health services to the general population and to civilians  injured. Without these services, patients are experiencing serious  complications, and in some cases death. 
 
 A patient’s chance of survival is greatly increased if they receive  medical care within an hour of injury – known as the “golden hour”. To  fill this gap, WHO and partners have established a 50-bed field  hospital, with two operating rooms, in Bartella, eastern Mosul to treat  severely injured patients with gunshot wounds, mine and shell injuries,  and other injuries. 
 
 The hospital is staffed by health professionals with various  specializations, including surgeons, paramedics and trauma care nurses.  Three additional field hospitals with a capacity of 40–50 beds will be  established soon to support access to trauma care to the west and south  of Mosul. Each hospital will be handed over to the Ministry of Health  after six months to scale-up national capacity for trauma care services  in the country. 
 
 These hospitals will fill a critical gap, as trauma patients are  currently transported to referral hospitals in Erbil, northern Iraq, a  one- to 2-hour drive away. To ensure that these patients have a greater  chance of survival during their journey, 4 trauma stabilization points  are currently operational, with additional points planned along referral  routes. 36 WHO-supported ambulances and 30 mobile medical clinics are  positioned in the suburbs of Mosul to provide health care to vulnerable  populations as part of the health response. In addition, WHO has  provided trauma and surgical kits for 3100 patients requiring trauma and  surgical care to national health authorities and partners working in  health facilities and camps. An additional 30 kits for 3000  beneficiaries will be delivered in the coming weeks.   
 
 “WHO remains committed to supporting the ongoing response provided by  the Ministry of Health and other health partners. However, additional  funds are needed to provide the full scale of health services to the 2.7  million people affected by the Mosul operation,” said Dr Ala Alwan, WHO  Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean.   
 
 To fully support the health needs resulting from the Mosul operation,  WHO requires a total of US$ 65 million of which US$ 14 million (21%) has  been received.