WE HELP SAVE
LIVES + lIMBS IN Gaza and Palestine

The humanitarian crisis in Gaza and the Occupied Palestinian Territories remains critical.

Decades of conflict have severely damaged local healthcare infrastructure, leaving medical professionals facing immense challenges. Hospitals urgently need more first responders trained  to effectively treat injuries and save lives.

Equipping Gaza’s Medical Heroes

The Primary Trauma Care Foundation (PTCF) delivers essential trauma-care training specifically tailored to the urgent needs of healthcare workers in Gaza and the wider Palestinian territories.

By empowering frontline responders, we help communities access timely, life-saving medical care—dramatically reducing preventable deaths and disabilities caused by conflict-related trauma.

We deliver our services via our own PTC Middle East faculty and Medical Aid for Palestinians - MAP.

Stand with Gaza’s Frontline Responders

Your donation empowers doctors and nurses working tirelessly in Gaza’s most challenging conditions.

Every contribution makes a lasting difference, helping increase access to trained first responders.

EVERY Little helps

£10

Helps towards essential operational resources, ensuring continuity of vital training.

ONE PERSON TRAINED

£50

Provides comprehensive trauma training for one healthcare worker, enhancing immediate emergency response.

Train four new instructors

£500

Trains four new instructors who go on to train hundreds more healthcare workers, significantly expanding trauma care knowledge and capability in the region.

Donate Today – Be Part of the Change

Together, we can provide frontline heroes in Gaza and Palestine with the skills they desperately need.

Your generosity gives hope, saves lives, and bringshope to countless families facing unimaginable hardship.

Doctors' experience with Primary Trauma Care

The success of this pioneering programme is evidenced by its enormous global use, where it saves lives every day and enhances clinical practice, which directly benefits patients in the critical stages following a trauma event.

But to me it is more than that. There are the other positives such as the way it brings people together, from all disciplines, both in their own facility but also from further afield, enabling relationships and teams to be built up and developed, it truly is a formidable, well thought out programme

Tim Beacon

Head of MedAid International

PTC training is effective; it has been tested and delivered for the past 26 years in some of the most hostile and remote places in the world.

It saves lives and continues to prevent loss of limb and life. What makes this even more worthy of our praise is that it is sustainable in some of the poorest countries, with little funding or equipment. I have delivered many PTC course sand am proud to be a PTCF Ambassador.”

Andy Kent

Trauma surgeon Inverness, Co-Chair Faculty of Remote Rural & Humanitarian Health at the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh and Medical Director of UK-Med