Right now, al-Khattab is most concerned about the abscess
which resulted from a wound when the woman, who asked to remain
unidentified because of security fears, fell on a bus while going to
Lebanon recently.
Iraqis in need
Dr Ahmed Shibad, 30, also left his medical practice at Baquba General Hospital for the security of Damascus.
Since he has arrived in Syria in March 2007, he still doesn't know
about as many Iraqis in need as al-Khattab does, but is doing what he
can.
He said: "I've helped on a case of an Iraqi here who needed help, free
of charge of course. If anyone asks me, I'll help them immediately."
And there probably are many Iraqis in need of free medical care.
Last month, Damascus called for international aid to manage the nearly
40,000 Iraqis entering Syria every month. The UN estimates that there
are some one million Iraqis in the country.
So far, Syrian authorities have maintained an "open door" policy and
have welcomed the Iraqis as "guests", but they are prohibited from
procuring gainful employment.
Plight of doctors
Another Iraqi doctor in Damascus fled Baghdad in February 2006. He
asked to be referred to as "Dr X" because "this indicates the plight of
all Iraqi doctors today".
He told Al Jazeera that doctors are targeted in Iraq because they treat
people who are sometimes fighters, militia men, or security personnel.
Treating one group may anger another.
"Dr X" said: "We receive dead bodies, blood, and innocent people, and sometimes people who are killers.
"I remember I was sitting in my room in the outpatient clinic at my
hospital south of Baghdad when all of a sudden two men arrived with
machine guns looking for someone. They went into the patients ward and
shot a man dead."
Soon after, militia members threatened him with a verbal warning, and decided to move to a hospital within the capital.
Dangerous name
A few weeks later, as the fighting in and around Baghdad intensified, a
nurse told him that he would have to leave - because his name could get
him killed.
He first fled to Jordan, but after six months of no work found it too
expensive, and opted for Syria where he joined the rest of his family.
Although "Dr X" came to Syria because he had hoped to resume working in
his specialised field, a series of bureaucratic entanglements has kept
him without work.
"First you need all these IDs and extra qualification tests. But they
have placed many restrictions like certificates from different
departments in Baghdad, which are so hard to get. They each cost around
$600 to get in Iraq so it's nearly impossible to work here.
"I am unemployed and homeless."
Treating relatives
Yet "Dr X" too is doing his best to help Iraqi refugees in Damascus and
says many of his colleagues have found ways to keep practising their
expertise by treating relatives, friends and other Iraqis in their
neighbourhoods.
He said: "We had good training in Iraq, and the people here trust you
so you can treat them and practice your work, and deal with your
relatives."
But Shibad and Khattab fear that soon they will have to leave Syria for countries where they will be able to gain wages.
Khattab is worried how long his savings will hold out, and is frustrated by his fruitless job search thus far.
He said: "I have applied through many websites, I have applied for work
in the Gulf and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia specifically but they said
they don't give visas to Iraqis.
"We have a very dark future. We don't know what is going to happen."