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In Gaza, Palestinians with treatable injuries face amputations as medical supplies run out

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Nurses in Bologna treat amputee Shaymaa Shady, 5, one of a group 16 young Palestinians airlifted to hospitals in Italy. Shaymaa had her first amputation in January after an explosion in Gaza, where her prospects for recovery are not good as war strains the health-care system.Nariman El-Mofty/The New York Times

First came the crushed bones, seared skin and soft tissue gouged by shrapnel from Israel’s intense bombing campaign in Gaza, which has injured many more than it has killed.

Then came the infections. For some, amputation has followed. Others have died.

Roughly a third of Gaza’s hospitals have continued to provide acute care through more than six months of war, with medical personnel working to provide life-saving interventions to those not killed by aerial attacks.

But doctors and aid workers say the often lengthy healing process has created a new set of medical difficulties, as the wounded struggle to secure proper medication and maintain hygiene in crowded camps.

Palestinian health authorities have counted nearly 34,000 dead but say more than 76,000 people have been injured.

Hospitals able to provide surgeries, set broken bones and stop bleeding have little space to keep patients after their initial care.

“Those that are lucky with lesser wounds might heal. But those who have serious wounds or untreated fractures – they can only worsen,” said Federico Dessi, a regional director for French aid group Humanity & Inclusion who recently returned from 12 days in Gaza. “That can lead to an amputation, or sometimes even to death if they get septicemia.”

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Palestinian journalist Sami Shehada, wounded in an Israeli strike, lies on the floor at Deir Al-Balah’s Al-Aqsa hospital.Doaa Rouqa/Reuters

Some lose limbs because they are too badly damaged. For others, amputation is a

Why ditching fast fashion never goes out of style, and can save money in the long run

Danielle Cosentino used to give bags of unwanted clothes to her cousin every year.

While her cousin loved the free stuff, Cosentino grew tired of buying so much and wearing so little. She had become caught up in acquiring trends through fast fashion retailers only to realize she was locked in a loop of buying cheap clothes, having them degrade quickly, then having to buy more.

“I’ve always been told if you haven’t worn it in two years, then it should go,” says Cosentino, a massage therapist and nutritionist. “And I felt like that would be half my closet.”

A variety of studies and sources go even further than that, estimating that most of us don’t wear 70 to 80 per cent of our clothes.

Averaging out census data over several years, Canadian households spend roughly $300 a month on clothing, according to Statistics Canada. If most of that will be barely worn, our closets are essentially graveyards of disposable income.

Cosentino wanted to change. She hired Jaclyn Patterson, a personal wardrobe stylist and founder of  Shopwise, an online sustainable fashion retailer that focuses on “slow fashion.”

Cosentino began evolving her shopping habits and treating her wardrobe like a long-term investment, which she describes as a “psychological shift.” Even packing for vacations is easier now, as she’s learned how to build outfits and re-wear classic pieces in different ways.

“Yes, you will spend more on sustainable brands, for obvious reasons, but they’re timeless pieces and they really take you the distance,” Cosentino says. “In the long run, you actually spend less. Now I see the value in spending on quality, well-made pieces that aren’t going to make it into a garbage bag.”

As a stylist seeing clients in Toronto and remotely, Patterson has worked with celebrities, Olympians and executives, analyzing

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