Missiles struck a hospital in Syria's northern rebel-held province, putting the facility built underground for protection out of service and killing a number of its staff, opposition activists said on Saturday.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that air strikes had seriously damaged the medical centre in Abdin village, in Idlib. The activist-run Aleppo Today media group also reported on the air strikes.
But later the Observatory said missiles, likely fired from land, have also hit the underground centre, penetrating it and causing serious damage. Air strikes then followed, the Observatory said.
International medical charities said Syrian government forces target hospitals, clinics and ambulances in opposition-held areas. To protect against the targeting, many opposition-area medical facilities have set up their operations underground.
The attack against the Abdin medical centre caused fires and killed a person, the Observatory said. Rescue workers sifted through the rubble to find survivors, lifting nine medical staff as a search continued for four still missing.
The Aleppo Today group said three medical staff members were presumed killed.
According to Physicians for Human Rights, government and allied Russian forces have killed 727 medical workers in the course of the conflict.
The medical centre in Abdin is only a few miles north of Khan Sheikhoun, the town that was hit earlier this month with a chemical attack that left more than 80 people dead.
In Damascus on Saturday, Syrian President Bashar Assad said his war on terrorism would not cease as long as there is any terrorist "desecrating the sanctity of the Syrian soil".
He made the remarks as he presided over a meeting of the central committee of the ruling Syrian Arab Socialist Baath Party.
Assad said the US strikes against a Syrian military base in the country's centre following the Idlib chemical attack were in response to the "terrorists'" defeat in the central city of Hama's countryside, where they had launched an offensive.
Assad's government, which denied using chemical weapons in the Idlib attack, calls all armed opposition groups terrorists.