Destruction in Gaza after Israeli airstrikes in October 2023.

How we're responding to the war in Gaza

What to know about the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza and MSF’s medical and humanitarian response.

Urgent

Four children among mass casualties at Deir al-Balah field hospital

December 9, 2024 — In the evening of December 8, following a bombing in southern Gaza, our medical team at the field hospital in Deir al-Balah received an influx of mass casualties, including four children.

“There is an 11-month-old in critical condition with a traumatic brain injury as well as a 7-year-old boy on a ventilator with penetrating abdominal wounds who may not survive the night," says Issa Willo, field hospital coordinator.

This event is not an isolated one but rather the norm in this war. Nowhere is safe in Gaza and no one is spared. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is reiterating its urgent calls for the protection of civilians and for an immediate and sustained ceasefire.

One year into the devastating war in Gaza, the situation in the Strip is worse than ever. Israeli forces’ unrelenting, indiscriminate strikes have reduced much of Gaza to rubble, upending the lives of millions of Palestinians.

Since the start of the war in October 2023, more than 41,500 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, nearly 100,000 wounded, and thousands are estimated to be buried under the wreckage. Over 1.9 million people—90 percent of the entire population—have been forcibly displaced, often many times. Water and food remain severely limited, essential supplies like fuel and electricity are scant, and while the threat of disease and starvation grows and the bombardment continues, lifesaving health care is increasingly inaccessible. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams in Gaza are witnessing firsthand how this war has turned Gaza's chronic humanitarian crisis into a catastrophe. 

Photo above: Palestine 2023 © MSF

How we're responding in Gaza

Medical services

MSF staff have been working in Gaza’s hospitals and clinics throughout the war. Our teams provide a range of essential medical services including:  

  • Surgical care  
  • Wound and burn care  
  • Postpartum care  
  • Physiotherapy    
  • Maternal and pediatric care
  • Vaccination    
  • Mental health support 

Our teams are continually adapting to extremely volatile conditions on the ground. However, various hospitals in Gaza have been subjected to sieges and evacuation orders, pushing our activities into an ever-smaller territory and limiting our response.

MSF teams at Al-Aqsa Hospital respond to bombings in Gaza's Middle Area, including Nuseirat camp, on June 8.
A mother and newborn recover in Al Nasser Hospital in Gaza.

From left: MSF teams respond to mass casualties at Al-Aqsa Hospital on June 8, Palestine 2024 © Karin Huster/MSF; a patient who gave birth at Nasser Hospital, Palestine 2024 © Mariam Abu Dagga/MSF

Hospitals and clinics we have supported

  • Nasser Hospital, European Gaza Hospital, and Martyrs, Beni Suhaila, Khan Younis, and Al Athar clinics in Khan Younis
  • Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah    
  • Al-Awda Hospital in northern Gaza
  • Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City    
  • Rafah Indonesian Field Hospital, Emirati Maternity Hospital, Al-Najjar Hospital, and Al-Mawasi Health Post in Rafah 
Learn more about our medical operations in Gaza >>

Water and sanitation 

A dire lack of drinkable water, poor sanitation, and the destruction of water infrastructure have had dire consequences for people’s health in Gaza, including the spread of diseases and skin infections. Water distribution is therefore an important part of MSF’s response. 

Currently, MSF is distributing 624,000 liters of desalinated water per day at over 40 water distribution points in Al-Mawasi, Khan Younis, Rafah, and Deir al-Balah. In Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis, MSF has been implementing water and sanitation activities in camp shelters through a partnership with the Agriculture Development Association (PARC). This includes building latrines for more than 30,000 people across six camps, distributing hygiene kits for 2,400 families, providing clean drinking water to a population of 25,000 people per day. We also equipped a camp hosting 400 people with disabilities with accessible latrines and showers.

At the end of March 2024, MSF set up a new desalination plant in Al-Mawasi with a capacity of 35,000 liters per day. In Al Attar, a desalination plant was set up with a capacity of 40,000 liters per day. Two more are being set up in Deir al-Balah, with an expected delivery of 70,000 liters per day. 

Flooded streets and wreckage in Gaza.
Tents are unloaded at the Médecins Sans Frontières logistics warehouse in the city of Rafah, Gaza.

From left: Sewage floods the streets around Nasser Hospital; tents are unloaded at the MSF warehouse in Rafah. Palestine 2024 © Ben Milpas/MSF

Humanitarian aid and medical supplies  

Since October 2023, MSF has provided 636 tons of logistic and medical equipment from our international supply centers—as much as 30 planes or 130 trucks full. However, some supplies critical to our operations and the security of our staff have been difficult to transport into Gaza, including generators, desalination stations and motor pumps, oxygen concentrators, vehicles, and equipment for communication.

The medical needs in Gaza are immense. Many Palestinians require urgent assistance—including people trapped under rubble, pregnant women who are about to deliver, and the elderly—and are not able to access the care they need. The core needs MSF is seeing and seeking to address include:    

Health care infrastructure

The collapse of health care infrastructure due to repeated attacks and lack of supplies has made medical care increasingly inaccessible as the overwhelming needs continue to grow. There have been more than 500 attacks on health care since the war started, according to OCHA, and out of the 36 main hospitals serving over 2 million people in Gaza, only 17 are functional—and only partially so. 

War wounds, crush injuries, and burns care

War wounds, crush injuries, and burns treatment remain an urgent need as Israeli bombardment and attacks continue. But with very little capacity inside hospitals and a dire lack of medical supplies, people aren’t getting the care they need to heal properly or even survive.

Infections

Infections resulting from poorly treated wounds are a growing concern, driven by the difficulty wounded people face accessing care and follow-up, shortages of supplies, and lack of access to hygiene.

Disease outbreaks

Infectious diseases including diarrhea, acute respiratory infections, skin infections, and hepatitis are on the rise due to overcrowding and poor hygienic conditions in camps where displaced people are sheltering, and shortages of medicines and medical supplies.

Starvation

Starvation is inevitable under the Israeli government’s policy of deliberate deprivation, and we are already seeing the impacts of food insecurity and hunger. According to the Integrated Food Security Classification (IPC), almost half a million people (22 percent of the population of Gaza) are facing catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity, and the high risk of famine will persist across the whole Strip as long as the war continues and humanitarian access remains restricted.  

Maternal and child care

In addition to the destruction or closures of once-functioning hospitals, the decimation of infrastructure has created severe obstacles for pregnant women trying to reach medical facilities. Pregnant women are often forced to navigate unsafe routes amid the fighting and without safe transportation—often delaying access to health care and putting them at higher risk of complications. 

Even before October 2023, Palestinians in the West Bank were facing one of the deadliest periods in the region, with recurrent, violent attacks by Israeli settlers and forces. Since then, the war in Gaza has reverberated in the West Bank through more frequent and violent military incursions and attacks by Israeli settlers, and increased checkpoints and movement restrictions. At least 693 Palestinians—including 160 children—have been killed by Israeli forces or settlers across the West Bank since the start of the war, and there have been over 500 attacks on health care, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

MSF has responded by expanding efforts to reach communities where people are unable to access care, bolstering local emergency response, and addressing the needs of Gazans who have been stranded in the West Bank after losing their work permits in Israel after October 7. Our activities include:

  • Supporting five primary health centers and running 15 mobile clinics in the Hebron area, including the Old City, and remote villages in the southern West Bank such as Masafer Yatta
  • Donations to hospitals and first-aid kits for community focal points in Beit Omar and Al Rshaydeh, and the emergency care center in Um El Khair
  • Providing relief items, hygiene kits, and food parcels to displaced Gazans and West Bank residents affected by violence and displacement
  • Increasing capacity at hospitals including Halhoul, Thabet Thabet, Al-Mohtaseb, Jenin, and Khalil Suleiman
  • Training medical staff at Al-Mohtaseb, Halhoul, Dura, and Yatta hospitals in the Hebron area. 
  • Providing mental health care 
  • Expanding health promotion activities.

MSF does not currently run medical programs in Israel but offered its support to Israeli hospitals treating large numbers of casualties following the Hamas attacks on October 7. We focus on filling the greatest gaps in health care, and Israel has strong emergency and health systems. 

MSF provides medical care to anyone who needs it, regardless of race, religion, or political affiliation. As an organization, we focus on filling the greatest gaps in health care.  

To facilitate our humanitarian and medical work, we speak to all parties to the conflict to request safe, rapid, and unimpeded access to civilians who require medical care and to ensure the safety and security of our staff. Our independence and impartiality are essential to our work in all the places we operate across the globe. We also believe that the principles of impartiality and neutrality are not synonymous with silence. When the world turns its back on crises, we are duty-bound to raise our voices and speak out on behalf of our patients. Our decision to do so is always guided by our mission to do no harm, preserve respect and dignity, and protect life and health.   

Read more frequently asked questions about our work in Gaza >> 

 

7,500

surgical interventions

27,500

patients treated for physical violence

14,465+

inpatients admitted for care

What MSF is calling for in Gaza

For a year, Israel's government, Hamas, and world leaders have catastrophically failed to agree and impose a sustained ceasefire in Gaza. MSF calls for the end of killings and suffering of Palestinians in Gaza, which is only possible with an immediate and sustained ceasefire and an end to the blockade on Gaza. Despite the passage of ceasefire resolutions by the UN Security Council on March 25 and June 10, neither have been implemented. Israeli forces continue to carry out widespread attacks that disproportionately impact civilians, including in areas designated as humanitarian zones and gathering sites for displaced people formally registered as 'deconflicted.' Without an immediate and sustained ceasefire and the sufficient flow of humanitarian assistance, we will continue to see more Palestinians die. 

We call on Israel to uphold its responsibility as the occupying power to ensure humanitarian aid reaches people in need unimpeded. We also call on Israel's allies, including the United States, to stop their unconditional support for Israel's war at all costs. 

The dismantling of Gaza’s health system by Israeli forces has left people without access to care. Over the past year, Israeli forces have routinely surrounded facilities; issued evacuation orders under extremely dangerous conditions for patients and caretakers; fired upon facilities, patients, and medical staff, many of whom have been killed; raided facilities; and subjected medical staff to arbitrary arrests. Both Israel and Hamas have routinely conducted battles near medical facilities, endangering patients, medical staff, and caretakers. The very few hospitals and medical facilities that remain operational cannot cope with the vast medical needs. 

Israel’s blockade and continued obstruction of aid delivery have made it close to impossible for Palestinians in Gaza to access vital supplies such as fuel, food, water, and medicines. This is not a logistical problem but a political one.

As the occupying power, Israeli authorities are responsible for ensuring rapid, unimpeded, and safe access to humanitarian aid at a level sufficient to meet people’s needs. MSF calls for all parties to ensure safe routes to move humanitarian assistance inside the Gaza Strip, which requires opening vital land borders including the Rafah border crossing with Egypt.  

Among the nearly 100,000 wounded are thousands of patients requiring complex and sustained medical care that is not available in Gaza. MSF calls on Israeli authorities to protect the remaining health system in Gaza, as well as to ensure medical evacuations for people in need of lifesaving care and their caregivers. All medical referrals, patients, and their caregivers must be guaranteed safe, voluntary, and dignified return to Gaza. 

News & stories

December 03 11:19 AM

What it’s like in northern Gaza right now

MSF staff share accounts of the desperate situation in northern Gaza as Israeli forces’ intense siege continues, with winter approaching.

Read More
Body bags in northern Gaza.

November 29 12:08 PM

Gaza: Catastrophe deepens as medicine and vital supplies are blocked

A massive and secure flow of aid is imperative to begin meeting the needs of people in Gaza.

Read More
A white MSF vehicle is pictured driving down a street of destroyed buildings in Jenin, Gaza.

November 25 09:53 AM

Conditions in Gaza are causing severe health issues for Palestinian children and babies

From June to October, MSF saw overwhelming numbers of young patients with illnesses like acute diarrhea, meningitis, and respiratory infections.

Read More
A toddler looks at the camera in Gaza.

November 21 10:39 AM

Israel’s campaign of destruction in Gaza must end

“Atrocity is piling on to atrocity at a level unlike anything we have seen.”

Read More
Destruction in northern Gaza

November 11 08:59 AM

How a year of war has devastated Gaza’s civilian infrastructure

The destruction of hospitals and other vital infrastructure is compounding the health crisis.

Read More
Flooded streets and wreckage in Gaza.

MSF response in Gaza

By the numbers

27,500 people treated for physical violence

7,500 surgical interventions

14,400 inpatients admitted

19,500 prenatal consultations

18,300 mental health consultations

28,000 non-communicable disease consultations

34,600 diarrhea cases treated 

624,000 liters of desalinated water distributed per day at over 40 water distribution points

Latrines built for over 30,000 people across six camps in Al-Mawasi

Distributed hygiene kits to 2,400 families

Provided clean drinking water to 25,000 people per day

400 people with disabilities provided with accessible latrines and showers in a camp

636 tons of logistic and medical equipment delivered to Gaza 

A Palestinian woman carries water to her tent after an MSF distribution in the coastal area of Mawasi Rafah, in the south of the Gaza Strip.
Wounded and displaced Palestinians in Gaza sit in front of a blue wall

Voices from Gaza: “We never imagined this war would be different”

A year of war in Gaza, as told through the voices of MSF staff and patients.

Read More

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