Qatar

Tuesday, April 23, 2024 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Qatar

Gulf Times

QC supports Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh

Qatar Charity (QC) continues to implement the agricultural ‘Livelihood’ project, launched in June 2023, aiming to support 200 Rohingya refugees on the Bhasan Char Island of Bangladesh.The project has enabled the refugees to grow various vegetables at no expense, helping them fulfill their food needs while allowing them to sell the surplus produce to meet other requirements.Currently, 40 refugee families benefit from this project, cultivating an area of 2.86 acres of land. Throughout the year, refugee families are able to produce a diverse range of vegetables.Jamila Khatun, one of the farmers involved in the project, said: "Accessing fresh vegetables was challenging in our camp due to limited supply and high prices. However, we have now overcome this obstacle and can meet our family's nutritional needs, enhancing our food security."Another beneficiary, Mohamed Rafiq, stated: "We're delighted to be able to sell our surplus produce to fellow refugees and NGO workers on the Bhasan Char Island, generating income to purchase essential items for our families."Rahima Khatun expressed gratitude towards QC for providing them with land, agricultural resources, and technical assistance. She hopes that its support will extend to other refugees in need.The local authorities also expressed their appreciation for the project benefiting the refugees. Mahfuzur Rahman, a high official of the Rohingya camp in Bhasanchar, said, "It is a very good initiative of Qatar Charity. The project ensures the food security of the beneficiaries."QC's various interventions for Rohingya refugees on Bhasan Char benefited 550,000 individuals in the last three years. It provided food and non-food aid to meet their essential needs.

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Damage in Israeli air base after Iran attack

Israeli army footage of what it says is the damage caused by the Iranian attack on the Nevatim Air Base, which was launched late Saturday in retaliation for a deadly air strike widely blamed on Israel that destroyed its consular building in Syria's capital early this month. AFP

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Six months of bloodshed: The toll on Gaza’s children

The bloodiest ever Gaza war which broke out over six months ago has taken an appalling toll on children. NGO Save the Children estimates that some 26,000 children have been killed or injured in the war, 17,000 have been orphaned, according to UNICEF, and 1 in 3 children under two years old in northern Gaza is suffering from acute malnutrition. In total, at least 33,207 people have been killed in the besieged Palestinian territory in Israel's retaliatory campaign for the October 7 attack, according to Hamas-run Gaza's health ministry. The unprecedented Hamas raid on southern Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,170 Israelis and foreigners, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures. AFP

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Gazans struggle to secure flour for daily bread

"I spent the night on Kuwait Roundabout to secure this bag of flour", says a Palestinian in Gaza City carrying a bag of flour he managed to get from an aid truck. A UN-backed report warned that half of Gazans are experiencing "catastrophic" hunger, with famine projected to hit the north of the territory unless there is urgent intervention. AFP

The Cornell Stars event brings together faculty, students, staff, and their children.

WCM-Q’s Cornell Stars connects trainee doctors with young patients

Students at Weill Cornell Medicine – Qatar (WCM-Q) had the opportunity to develop their core physicianship skills of communication, interaction, and performing basic clinical examinations for children during the annual Cornell Stars event.A highlight of the WCM-Q calendar, the event is part of the Introductory Clerkship Course, during which third-year students in the WCM-Q medical programme attend a clinical orientation week to prepare them for their full-time clinical courses.The Cornell Stars event allows trainee doctors to examine babies, toddlers, and children up to six years old under the supervision of qualified and experienced paediatricians and family physicians from the WCM-Q, the Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC), and Sidra Medicine.As part of the Cornell Stars course, WCM-Q faculty and staff members invite their own children so that the students can learn the best techniques for interacting with and examining youngsters in a simulated clinical setting.The medical students performed basic clinical skills, including physical examinations of the youngsters at the WCM-Q’s Clinical Skills & Simulation Lab (CSSL), which features several practical examination rooms that mimic a clinic.This year, 24 children participated in the event, along with 48 WCM-Q medical students and 13 physicians.Attending paediatric consultants from the HMC included Dr Anas AbdulKayoum, Dr Sohair Elsiddig, Dr Sara Hamad, Dr Suzan Nassar, and Dr Khalid Zahraldin.WCM-Q faculty and family physician Dr Stella Major, WCM-Q alumni Dr Moza al-Sulaiti, Dr Saleha Abbasi and Dr Mohamed al-Hajjaji, with Sidra Medicine’s paediatric fellow Dr Khadija KhudaBakhsh and paediatric residents Dr Hadeel Ali Alzoubi, Dr Aya Kojan, and Dr Samer Ali, also took part.Dr Amal Khidir, associate professor of paediatrics at the WCM-Q and organiser of the Cornell Stars programme, said: “We are very grateful to all the physicians who shared their expertise with our students and the families and children who volunteered their valuable time.”“We sincerely appreciate the overwhelming support we continue to receive in ensuring the success of the Cornell Stars event and in teaching our students the art of paediatrics,” she said.Student Mohamed al-Ansari said: “This was my first time working with paediatrics in a medical setting, and the experience was both enjoyable and fruitful.”“The session provided us with the opportunity to understand the differences in conducting physical examinations between adult and paediatric patients,” he said. “This platform has given me valuable insight into paediatrics, and I may consider it one of my career options.”Fellow student Jassim Taimour said: “The experience was enlightening in terms of paediatric care.”“We learned to conduct general, neurology, pulmonary, and cardiology examinations, he added. “By observing experienced doctors, we gained insight into how to handle paediatric patients effectively.”Misty Laudato, a WCM-Q employee who brought her two-year-old daughter to the event, said: “The experience was really good and very interactive.”“I know it’s not just the students who learn but also us as parents, because we can ask questions and contribute to our students’ knowledge,” she said. “I have been participating in this activity for three years now, and each year, I see improvements in how the activity is organised and see students ask more and deeper questions.”“The activity offers a really good opportunity for our students to learn more from the experts in the field,” Laudato added.

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