Nyala , May 6(Darfur 24)

On Sunday, the National Dialysis Center of the Ministry of Health delivered supplies to the dialysis center in the city of Nyala, the capital of South Darfur State, which provides its services to all states of the region.

The Nyala Dialysis Center continued to warn that it was about to run out of dialysis materials and consumables, leaving patients with difficult choices, including deterioration of their health or death.

The director of the dialysis center, Engineer Hamid Musa, revealed in a statement to “Darfur 24” that the dialysis consumables that arrived from Port Sudan were sufficient for three months, as the problem of the consumables that were present in the center, which were sufficient for one week, was solved.

Hamed said that the Nyala dialysis center is the largest in the Darfur region and has 18 dialysis machines, 16 of which are operational and provides its services to all states of Darfur.

The representative of the Director General of the Ministry of Health in South Darfur, Hafez Mohamed Nour, stated that the consumables that arrived in the number of “195” cartons containing “artificial kidneys, solutions and connections” are sufficient for several months, especially since the state is heading into the autumn season, during which trucks face difficulty in reaching the state capital, Nyala. .

Hafez said, in a press statement, that the dialysis center in Nyala continued to suffer from a shortage of dialysis consumables that occurred with the arrival of this quantity, and the problem of providing fuel and motivating workers still exists.

Hafez appealed to organizations and philanthropists to support the center so that it does not stop, especially since the staff working there did not receive their incentives, and despite the suffering of their families, they remained steadfast to serve patients.

The Secretary-General of the state government, Governor-designate Salah al-Din al-Mouj, praised the efforts of everyone who contributed to delivering dead patients to Nyala, noting that the dialysis center is the only one in the state and stopping it means losing patients.

Al-Mouj said in a statement to the media after receiving the washing materials at the center’s headquarters in Nyala that the center’s workers continued to work in difficult conditions in order to serve patients in light of the shortcomings and lack of work requirements.