Gaza children running out of time to treat blast-induced hearing loss
Wateen al-Ajrami was just more than a year old when the blast shook the simple storage room in northern Gazaโs Jabalia that her extended family were sheltering in. Her mother, Mariam, explains that Wateen was standing next to a door at the moment of the Israeli strike in August
Wateen al-Ajrami was just more than a year old when the blast shook the simple storage room in northern Gazaโs Jabalia that her extended family were sheltering in.
Her mother, Mariam, explains that Wateen was standing next to a door at the moment of the Israeli strike in August last year.
Mariam grabbed Wateen, seeing the fear in her eyes as the child covered her ears and screamed.
But there were no apparent physical injuries. Wateen wasnโt bleeding or had any fractures, and there was no shrapnel embedded in her.
Two or three days later, Mariam and her family started noticing something alarming.
โI would call Wateen and she wouldnโt respondโฆ I would speak to her and there was no reaction,โ Mariam says, adding that Wateen would point to her ears.
A hearing test scheduled by a medical specialist soon revealed what Mariam had begun to fear: Wateen had almost completely lost her hearing due to the impact of the explosion.
The young girl had suffered approximately 85 percent hearing loss in her left ear, and 90 percent in her right ear, generally classified as between severe and profound hearing loss.

