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12 July 2026, 18:22
A mobile pharmacy will visit 19 villages in the Kherson region
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PHOTO: Kherson Regional State Administration
The mobile pharmacy continues to operate in communities across the Kherson region, providing residents of remote villages with access to essential medications.
This was reported by the Kherson Regional Military Administration.
From July 14 to 17, the mobile pharmacy will visit 19 settlements in the Velyka Oleksandrivka, Kochubei, Novovorontsov, Novooleksandrivka, Vysokopil, and Bilozerka communities.
On July 14, the route will cover the villages of Kar’ierne, Bilousove, Mykilsk, Zagradivka, and Novobratske. The following day, the pharmacy will operate in Myrolyubivka, Novovoskresenske, Trudolyubivka, and Petropavlivka.
On July 16, the mobile pharmacy will visit Novomykolaivka, Novopetrivka, Ivanivka, and Mala Oleksandrivka, and on July 17—Pravdyne, Tavriiske, Parysheve, Nova Zoria, Molodetske, and Nadezhdivka.
The regional military administration noted that the mobile pharmacy’s route may change depending on the security situation in the communities.
Earlier, Intent reported that the Kherson community is facing a critical shortage of personnel in virtually all sectors, most notably in healthcare and municipal utilities. Healthcare facilities are only half-staffed, and the workload on doctors is constantly increasing.
Meanwhile,theRussianinvadersare forced to bring their own doctors and support medical staff to the temporarily occupied territories of the Kherson region and other regions of Ukraine, as local medical personnel refuse to work for the enemy and have mostly left the region.
In addition, there isa growingshortage of medicines in the temporarily occupied territories of the Kherson region. The Russians are converting hospitals into military field hospitals. The occupiers are not providing medical services to the civilian population in the temporarily occupied territories. Meanwhile, as civilian hospitals are being repurposed as military hospitals, pharmacies are experiencing a shortage of medicines. This is because most medications are being allocated specifically to meet the needs of the Russian military, while the civilian population lacks access to sufficient quantities of medicines.
