The Moyen Cavally region was one of the worst affected areas with only 10 of 44 health centres now open and providing limited services, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) reported on Tuesday, adding that all surgeons and gynaecologists fled, as well as most general practitioners and specialized nurses.
"Those who stayed have not received salaries for three months," Tarik Jasarevic, WHO spokesperson, told reporters in Geneva. "In the districts of Touslepleu and Blolequin, all health facilities have been looted and destroyed," he added.
The treatment of patients who require surgery has become difficult because two of four district hospitals remain closed and the other two have no sufficient capacity and lack ambulances, Jasarevic said.
"Patients were left to find their own means of transportation for travelling to the nearest functioning referral structure, sometimes hundreds of kilometres away," he added.
He said that the WHO team had also visited the Catholic mission in the town of Due'koue', where more than 27,000 people who had fled from violence found refuge.