| 21 Novembre 2016
 20 November 2016 - More than 250,000 men, women, and children living in Eastern Aleppo are  now without access to hospital care following attacks on the remaining  hospitals over the last week. According to reports to WHO from the  Organization’s partners in Syria, there are currently no hospitals  functioning in the besieged area of the city.
20 November 2016 - More than 250,000 men, women, and children living in Eastern Aleppo are  now without access to hospital care following attacks on the remaining  hospitals over the last week. According to reports to WHO from the  Organization’s partners in Syria, there are currently no hospitals  functioning in the besieged area of the city.
 
 Although some health services are still available through small clinics,  residents no longer have access to trauma care, major surgeries, and  other consultations for serious health conditions, despite urgently  needing this care. This further suffering is imposed on a population  that has had only precarious and steadily declining access to health  care for the past five years, as the conflict has brought relentless  damage and destruction to health facilities. The situation has become  critical since aid has been impossible to deliver to the besieged city  since July 2016.
 
 WHO once again urges all parties in the conflict to respect the safety  and neutrality of health care facilities as required by international  humanitarian law.
 
 WHO’s Representative in Syria, Elizabeth Hoff, will address the United  Nations Security Council on Monday to provide an update on the health  situation in the country, at the invitation of the Council.
 See http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/En/lateste.pdf for more information. The event will be webcast at http://webtv.un.org