Sudan (IP): Iranpress images show that Sudan's health and treatment situation has become critical after the civil war on April 15, 2023.

Iran PressAfrica: According to Iranpress, nearly 80 percent of medical centers in Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, and other cities are no longer able to provide medical services to patients, and the humanitarian and health crisis of the Sudanese people has intensified.

Sudanese patients who have problems with diabetes, kidney, heart, and blood pressure and suffer from the lack of medical services are thinking of leaving Sudan so that they can treat themselves.

Ammar Jabril, a doctor at one of the treatment centers for kidney patients in Sudan, told Iranpress reporter that after the start of the war in Sudan, the crisis in the healthcare sector has intensified, especially for kidney patients.

Mohammad Suleyman, a Sudanese pharmacist, also stated in an interview with an Iran Press reporter that the war was the main cause of the shortage of medicines, especially medicines for chronic diseases. And the critical state of the economy has also caused the price of drugs to double.

This Sudanese pharmacist stated that the lack of medicine and the poor economic situation have doubled the suffering and problems of Sudanese citizens seeking treatment after the war.

According to UNICEF, 9 million Sudanese children are at risk of death due to a lack of food and medicine.

Nearly 80 percent of medical centers in Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, and other war-torn cities are no longer able to provide medical services to patients, and the humanitarian and health crisis of the Sudanese people has intensified. 204

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