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Non-functional
Gaza Psychiatric Hospital
Facility Type
Speciality Hospital
Ownership type
Government sector
Governorates / District
Gaza
Address
Al-Nasr area – Al-Ayoun Street
Founding Year
1980
Facility director
Jamil Suleiman
Beds Capacity
44
Number of workers
39
List of medical specialties and services
Addiction services
Outpatient clinics
Description (About the Facility)

The Gaza Psychiatric Hospital was established in 1980 on an area of 6,000 square meters within the Nasr Medical Complex in the Nasr neighborhood in the center of Gaza City. The hospital is the only hospital in Gaza specializing in mental and neurological health. It has a capacity of 44 beds and employs 39 medical staff, including 16 doctors and 26 psychologists. It hosts a men’s, a women’s, an outpatient, and an addiction department[1].

Funding Details
The Gaza Psychiatric Hospital is a government hospital administered and funded by the Ministry of Health in Gaza. The ministry dedicates about 2% of the total healthcare budget towards mental health. Of those 2%, 56% is directed to Gaza Psychiatric Hospital and 44% to community mental health centers[2].
Effect of siege (2007 - 2023)

The Palestinian National Mental Health policy was developed in 2004, revised in 2010, and approved by the Ministry of Health in Gaza in 2011. The policy focused on reducing reliance on institutionalization and hospitals in dealing with mental health in Palestine by developing community-based mental health care, downsizing psychiatric hospitals, and developing psychiatric reception units in primary health care centers. As a result, the number of beds in the Gaza Psychiatric Hospital decreased by 17%, between 2010-2015.

The Gaza Strip suffers year-round from medication shortages, especially psychiatric medications[2]. Due to the age and small size of the Gaza Psychiatric Hospital, the Ministry of Health began preparing to establish a larger hospital under the name Aman Palestine, in 2021. The project was funded and supported by the Aman Malaysia Charitable Foundation, and was expected to open in 2023, however, this did not happen[3]. 

In addition to the hospital's small capacity, it also suffers from a shortage of staff and specialists in the field of psychotherapy. As a result, retired specialists are employed, providing a ratio of one psychiatrist per bed in the hospital. The shortage of psychiatrists and staff is one of the main challenges facing the hospital and this challenge is exacerbated by the reliance of the mental health system in the Gaza on biomedical and pharmaceutical treatment rather than focusing on social and psychological factors in treatment[4]. 

Gaza also suffers from the lack of emergency psychiatric units in public hospitals and the reliance on the psychiatric hospital to provide tertiary care, leading to an exacerbation the pressure on the hospital[2]. 

In February 2018: The crisis in health, water, and sanitation services worsened and was on the brink of collapse due to electricity shortages, prompting the Ministry of Health to take drastic precautionary measures, including the temporary closure of the Gaza Psychiatric Hospital[5]. 

narrative during this war

On November 5, 2023: The World Health Organization confirmed that occupation forces directly targeted the Gaza Psychiatric Hospital, but that the hospital remained operational after the bombing[6].

On November 9, 2023: The Ministry of Health, citing the PRCS, announced that the hospital no longer was operational after running out of fuel and sustaining damage in the direct targeting on November 5, 2023[7][8][9].

The main targeting and assaults During the genocide

Sources
  1. DW (Deutsche Welle), Press report.
  2. International Journal of Mental Health Systems, Policy paper.
  3. Sama - Palestinian News Agency, News release.
  4. Watan News Agency, Press report.
  5. Relief Web Information Portal, quoted from the World Health Organization, Report.
  6. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Report.
  7. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Report.
  8. Palestinian Ministry of Health – Gaza, Telegram.
  9. Palestine Red Crescent, Report.