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Dr. Maram, pictured above, is one of the local health care workers working at Project HOPE’s primary health clinic in Deir al Balah. "The hardest part is that I’m displaced too,” Dr. Maram explained. “So I’m struggling to get a safe place, good food, and warm clothes while I’m counting on my job.”
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Yenoh is a midwife at a rural clinic in Sierra Leone. It’s not uncommon for midwives at the clinic to deliver 40 or more babies a month — a challenge compounded by severe shortages of medicines and medical equipment. “I like saving lives,” Yenoh says. “I like the job very, very much. Especially the deliveries. Everyday practice and everyday improvement are important. When you do things with your hands, you can remember fast.”
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Svitlana is a paramedic from Kharkiv, working near the front lines of the war in Ukraine, where over 1,200 health facilities have been attacked since Russia’s full-scale invasion began. "The calls are difficult, the roads are bumpy, the circumstances are dangerous,” she told us. “[But] I am very proud that I am not sitting at home and can help instead. I can be there quickly and in the right place and time.”
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