Birce Hansa, a 3-month-old girl, gets treated Tuesday at the SBU Adana City Training and Research Hospital in Adana, Turkey. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
A doctor gets interviewed next to Birce on Tuesday. The girl was thrown from the 5th floor when the earthquake struck her home on Feb. 6. Nearby residents then took her to the hospital. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
Birce’s condition is no longer life-threatening. Her mother Nilay tracked her down three days after the earthquake after seeing a post on Twitter. Unlike Birce, many children at the hospital remain unidentified. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
A girl lying on a bed gets treated at the hospital. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
The earthquakes have affected more than 7 million children in Turkey and Syria, the U.N. said on Tuesday. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
The hospital has grown so crowded that beds have overflowed into the hallways. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
Medical personnel wait to receive patient transfers on the hospital’s rooftop. The hospital has received more than 750 patients from across Turkey since the earthquake struck. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
A helicopter airlifts a patient to the hospital. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
Medical personnel wheel a patient into the hospital. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
Medical personnel examine a patient. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin
People distribute balloons in the hospital’s lobby. As of Wednesday, the combined death toll in the two countries from the Feb. 6 earthquake had climbed above 41,000 people. Photo: Zhang Ruixue/Caixin