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Children Are Dying As Famine Conditions Deepen In Gaza Strip

Children Are Dying As Famine Conditions Deepen In Gaza Strip

Forbes4 days ago
The worst case scenario of famine is playing out in the Gaza Strip, where food and nutrition indicators have reached their most dire levels since the conflict began. Two out of the three famine thresholds have now been breached in parts of the territory.
Two-year-old Yazan sits on his mother's lap in their tent in the Beach Camp west of Gaza City. His father is physically ill and unable to work, and his mother cannot hold back her tears as she says, 'I search for food every day. I knock on doors, but no one helps us. Our home is empty of food and medicine. Yazan is always screaming from hunger, and I scream: 'People of the world, find us a solution!' But no one listens.'
Thousands of children under 5 in Gaza are suffering from the deadliest form of malnutrition
Relentless conflict, the collapse of essential services and severe limitations on the delivery and distribution of humanitarian assistance have led to catastrophic food security conditions for hundreds of thousands of people across Gaza, according to data shared in the latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Alert.
As of July 2025, more than 320,000 children — Gaza's entire under-5 population — are at risk of acute malnutrition, with thousands suffering from severe acute malnutrition, the deadliest form of undernutrition. Essential nutrition services have collapsed, with infants lacking access to safe water, breastmilk substitutes and therapeutic feeding.
In June, 6,500 children were admitted for treatment for malnutrition, the highest number since the conflict began. July is tracking even higher — 5,000 children were admitted in just the first two weeks. With fewer than 15 percent of essential nutrition treatment services currently functional, the risk of malnutrition-related deaths among infants and young children is higher than ever before.
'Emaciated children and babies are dying from malnutrition in Gaza. We need immediate, safe and unhindered humanitarian access across Gaza to scale up the delivery of lifesaving food, nutrition, water and medicine.' Time is running out to mount a full-scale humanitarian response.
'Emaciated children and babies are dying from malnutrition in Gaza,' said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. 'We need immediate, safe and unhindered humanitarian access across Gaza to scale up the delivery of lifesaving food, nutrition, water and medicine. Without that, mothers and fathers will continue to face a parent's worst nightmare, powerless to save a starving child from a condition we are able to prevent.'
Related: Malnourished Children: How UNICEF Fights Child Hunger
On July 28, 2025 in the State of Palestine, a woman holds a child on her lap as they wait to be seen during a nutrition screening at the Project Hope health and nutrition clinic in Altayara, Deir al Balah, central Gaza. On July 10, 15 people (nine children and four women) were killed by an airstrike that hit directly in front of this site as they stood in line waiting to receive desperately needed UNICEF nutrition assistance and supplies.
Food in Gaza is extremely scarce and unaffordable
Before the war, approximately 500 supply trucks entered Gaza daily. Between May 19 and July 2, after almost 11 weeks of a complete aid blockade, Israel permitted an average of 30 UN trucks per day to offload aid at designated crossings. Despite a partial reopening of crossings, humanitarian aid presently entering Gaza is only a tiny fraction of what a population of over 2 million people needs.
Just to cover basic humanitarian food and nutrition assistance needs in Gaza, more than 62,000 tons of lifesaving aid is required every month. Restarting commercial food imports is also critical to provide dietary diversity with fresh fruits, vegetables, dairy products and proteins such as meat and fish.
'Gaza is now on the brink of a full-scale famine. People are starving not because food is unavailable, but because access is blocked, local agrifood systems have collapsed and families can no longer sustain even the most basic livelihoods.' 'Gaza is now on the brink of a full-scale famine. People are starving not because food is unavailable, but because access is blocked, local agrifood systems have collapsed and families can no longer sustain even the most basic livelihoods,' said Qu Dongyu, Director-General of the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO). 'We urgently need safe and sustained humanitarian access and immediate support to restore local food production and livelihoods — this is the only way to prevent further loss of life. The right to food is a basic human right.'
Related: Desperate Situation for Gaza's 1 Million Children
A UNICEF-supported health worker provides mothers in Gaza with information about their children's nutritional progress. During the ceasefire in February, a total of 105,658 children under the age of 5 were screened for malnutrition across the Gaza Strip and UNICEF delivered essential nutrition supplies to 19,686 children aged 6-23 months.
Two out of three core famine indicators have been reached
The latest IPC update shows that food consumption — the first core famine indicator — has plummeted in Gaza since the previous IPC Update in May 2025. Data shows that more than one in three people (39 percent) are now going days at a time without eating. More than 500,000 people — nearly a quarter of Gaza's population — are enduring famine-like conditions, while the remaining population is facing emergency levels of hunger.
Acute malnutrition — the second core famine indicator — inside Gaza has risen at an unprecedented rate. In Gaza City, malnutrition levels among children under 5 have quadrupled in two months, reaching 16.5 percent. This signals a critical deterioration in nutritional status and a sharp rise in the risk of death from hunger and malnutrition.
Acute malnutrition and reports of starvation-related deaths — the third core famine indicator — are increasingly common but collecting robust data under current circumstances in Gaza remains very difficult as health systems, already decimated by nearly two years of conflict, are collapsing.
Learn more: UNICEF in the State of Palestine Escalation Humanitarian Situation Report No. 40
UNICEF continues to deliver vital nutrition services and supplies but stocks of therapeutic treatment for acute malnutrition are critically low
Evidence has shown that children with poor nutrition are more vulnerable to serious disease like acute diarrhea, while acute and prolonged diarrhea seriously exacerbates poor health and malnutrition in children, putting them at high risk of death. Taken together and left untreated, malnutrition and disease create a deadly cycle. In Gaza, 80 percent of all reported deaths by starvation are children.
With the support of donors like the European Union (ECHO), the Governments of France, the Netherlands and Japan, and flexible humanitarian funding, UNICEF continues to deliver vital nutrition services and supplies but its stocks for preventing malnutrition have run out and supplies for the therapeutic treatment of acute malnutrition are critically low.
Related: Gaza's Malnourished Children Can't Afford to Wait
On July 28, 2025 in the State of Palestine, people wait to be seen during a nutrition screening at the UNICEF-supported Project Hope health and nutrition clinic in Altayara, Deir al Balah, central Gaza. Available stocks of lifesaving Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF), a crucial treatment, are running dangerously low.
An urgent call for an immediate and sustained ceasefire and safe, unimpeded humanitarian access
UN agencies including UNICEF welcome recent new commitments to improve the operating conditions for humanitarian organizations, including the implementation of humanitarian pauses and designated humanitarian corridors, and hope these measures will allow for a surge in urgently needed food and nutrition assistance to reach hungry people without further delays.
UN agencies continue to call for an immediate and sustained ceasefire to stop the killing, allow for the safe release of hostages and further enable lifesaving humanitarian operations. Sustained, safe and unimpeded humanitarian access is urgently needed for the mass influx of assistance via all available crossings and the delivery of food, nutrition supplies, critical water, fuel and medical assistance to reach families in need wherever they are across Gaza.
UNICEF requires $463.8 million to meet urgent humanitarian needs in Gaza and the West Bank, but is only 35 percent funded, leaving a critical funding gap as conditions deteriorate. Help now.
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Defining famine: the complex process behind Gaza's hunger crisis
Defining famine: the complex process behind Gaza's hunger crisis

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Defining famine: the complex process behind Gaza's hunger crisis

Despite mounting international concern over widespread hunger in Gaza, no official famine has been declared in the territory – highlighting the complexities of determining a country's famine status. The World Food Programme (WFP), Unicef and the Food and Agriculture Organisation warned this week that time is running out, with Gaza "on the brink of a full-scale famine". "We need to flood Gaza with large-scale food aid, immediately and without obstruction, and keep it flowing each and every day to prevent mass starvation," WFP executive director Cindy McCain said in a joint statement from the agencies. Images of severely undernourished children have prompted outrage. According to data from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), one in five children under the age of five in Gaza City is now malnourished. The Hamas-controlled Gaza Ministry of Health has reported 147 deaths from hunger, including 88 children, since the Israel-Hamas conflict erupted following the 7 October 2023 terror attack. However, there has been no official determination or declaration of famine, leading to questions over whether one exists. Determining a famine The United Nations uses a tool called the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) to measure hunger. Created in 2004, the IPC is used by 21 agencies, including the WFP and Unicef. It sets out five levels of food insecurity, with Phase 5 meaning famine or catastrophe. Three things must happen at the same time for famine to be declared: At least 2 people per 10,000 (or 4 per 10,000 children) die daily of starvation, disease and malnutrition At least 20 percent of households face extreme food shortages At least 30 percent of children suffer from acute malnutrition Even if those thresholds appear to be met, an independent review committee must confirm it. This panel includes experts in nutrition, health and food security. Only then can a formal declaration be made – usually by the government of the affected area or the UN. "It's a very high bar and the nature of the process is that if the data aren't there, you say it's not a famine," Alex de Waal, executive director of the World Peace Foundation at Tufts University, told the ABC. "It has no legal force. The word 'famine' has no meaning in law." As of June 2025, Sudan is the only country currently experiencing famine, according to the IPC. First confirmed in North Darfur's Zamzam camp for displaced people in August, 2024, famine has since spread to 10 areas of the country, with another 17 at risk. More than 110 aid and human rights groups denounce Gaza 'mass starvation' Data collection challenges The IPC puts Gaza at Phase 4 (emergency) across the territory, with half a million people projected to reach Phase 5 by September. Earlier this month, the IPC issued an alert warning that the "worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out," though this falls short of an official classification. Collecting the necessary data to determine whether a country is officially suffering from famine requires the systematic surveying of populations to measure malnutrition rates and mortality. Israel's partial blockade on delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza has not only contributed to the risk of famine, the conflict and restrictions on international media have made gathering data near-impossible, aid agencies say. "Our colleagues in Gaza right now are trying to work under bombardment with no guarantee of safety," Scott Paul, director of peace and security at Oxfam America, told the ABC. "Aid workers conducting assessments face the same dire conditions as the general population, including food shortages and restricted movement." Sudan government rejects UN-backed famine declaration Politics has also affected how famine is assessed. Doctors Without Borders has accused Israel of using 'deliberate starvation' as a weapon of war. Israeli officials have pushed back on that, questioning the accuracy of the figures and suggesting the viral images of emaciated children are misleading. "In most cases, their extreme malnutrition is due to underlying medical conditions rather than food scarcity alone," a spokesperson for the Israeli army told Le Point magazine. Israel also argues that previous IPC warnings proved inaccurate, noting that predictions of imminent famine in March 2024, and then again in March of this year, failed to materialise. By June, the World Health Organization had recorded 32 hunger-related deaths – far below projections. Even so, many aid groups say action should not be delayed just because a formal famine has not been declared. In Somalia in 2012, around half of the 250,000 famine deaths happened before the official announcement was made. "The importance of taking action before famine is declared cannot be overstated," Paul said, adding that severely malnourished individuals may be harmed by certain foods if distribution is not carefully managed.

How is starvation treated?
How is starvation treated?

NBC News

time15 hours ago

  • NBC News

How is starvation treated?

As deaths from starvation in the Gaza Strip continue to rise, experts say there's no easy way out of the crisis due to the medical complexity of treating severe malnutrition. More than 160 people — at least 90 of them children — have died of malnutrition since the war began, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. The world's leading body on hunger, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), says that nearly all of Gaza is suffering a food security crisis or worse, and more than half of the population is in the 'emergency' or 'catastrophe' phase of starvation — which means recovering isn't as simple as giving starving people food. Rather, giving food to people experiencing such an extreme degree of starvation could kill them, experts say. 'If you do what the body wants to do, which is to just drink and eat as much as possible the minute you see food, you can actually create these permanent imbalances that can cause things like heart failure or organ damage, because the body had to adapt to get to that starvation mode,' NBC News medical contributor Dr. Kavita Patel, an internal medicine doctor, said. At the most severe stages of starvation, even giving a person water can push their body into failure, Patel said. What happens to the body when it's starving? Humans can generally go without any food or water for several days because the body finds a way to adapt in order to survive. First by feeding off of so-called glycogen stores — a starchy substance from carbohydrates that's stored in the liver and muscles. The body stores about 1,700 to 2,200 calories' worth of energy as glycogen. 'That's the first thing your body goes for that can get you through without eating or any water for about several days, in some cases, maybe a little longer,' Patel said. Once those glycogen stores are depleted, the body starts to break down fat for energy, but when that's gone, it turns to muscle. This is what causes the body to shrink and the starving person to assume a gaunt, hollow-cheeked the brain doesn't have the energy it needs to function, leading to irritability, mood swings and trouble concentrating. 'It's very hard to even just make sound judgments,' Patel said. 'You can see people have psychotic illusions. You can see people hearing things. All of that is basically the body's way of surviving.' Most starving people die from infections as their immune system shuts down. Eventually, the heart will be affected, causing a person's blood pressure and pulse to drop. If they don't die from infection, the heart will shut down, doctors said. The more vulnerable parts of the population are likely to suffer the most. 'Children — specifically infants — pregnant women, the elderly and people with certain kinds of chronic illness are the risk groups that we need to pay special attention to,' said Dr. Irwin Redlener, a clinical professor of pediatrics at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City. How is starvation treated? Patel said a good analogy to giving food to a starving person is a downpour after a drought. The land desperately needs water, but because it's so dry it repels water instead of absorbing it, leading to flash flooding. 'Refeeding' after starvation needs to be managed clinically and by medical professionals. 'When a person has reached a state of starvation, the body undergoes extreme metabolic changes,' she said. 'Giving too much food — or the wrong kind — too quickly can trigger a dangerous shift in fluids and electrolytes known as refeeding syndrome, which can be fatal if not carefully managed.' 'A bag of flour — some of the only food aid that has gotten in recently — won't save anyone because it has none of the essential nutrients,' said Dr. Nour Alamassi, a doctor and the medical team lead for Project HOPE, an international nongovernmental organization focused on global health and humanitarian aid. 'Too many carbs can actually be life-threatening for anyone with Severe Acute Malnourishment (SAM), and even for the average person in Gaza who has not had a regular diet in many months, it is very difficult to digest,' Alamassi, who is caring for children and pregnant women in Gaza, wrote in an email. Ideally, doctors told NBC News, there would be enough medical staff to monitor the refeeding process for each person for a period stretching from weeks to even months. Children would be stabilized with fortified milks, which contain the nutrients that a malnourished child needs, and something called ready-to-use therapeutic foods (RUTF), which are energy-dense, easy to digest and carefully balanced in the nutrients children need to start to recover. Doctors would draw blood to monitor sodium and potassium levels — if these electrolytes are too low or too high, it can be deadly. But the situation on the ground in Gaza is far from ideal. There are not enough doctors, not enough supplies and not the right supplies, experts say. 'The aid blockade has prevented us from accessing the medications and nutrition supplies that are necessary to treat these people,' Alamassi said. 'We recently ran out of High Energy Biscuits (HEB) in our clinics, which really limits our ability to help patients. We hope to get more in the coming days, but each day without these supplies can make a major difference for a patient's outcome.' What are the long-term effects of starvation? Even if refeeding is successful, people who survive starvation can experience physical and psychological effects for the rest of their lives, experts said. The damage, especially for young and very old victims, is permanent. In children, malnutrition can cause delays in both physical and cognitive development. Physically, they're more likely to have weakened immune systems, leading to a harder time recovering from infections. Malnourished children are also more likely to experience stunted growth, which can affect their height, muscle mass and bone density and even delay puberty, experts said. Cognitively, children can suffer from permanent brain damage due to iron and zinc deficiencies, affecting their ability to learn and problem solve. 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U.S. envoy visits distribution site in Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens
U.S. envoy visits distribution site in Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens

Los Angeles Times

timea day ago

  • Los Angeles Times

U.S. envoy visits distribution site in Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens

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The remaining 12 were killed in airstrikes, the officials said. Israel's military did not immediately comment. International organizations have said Gaza has been on the brink of famine for the past two years. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, the leading international authority on food crises, said recent developments, including a complete blockade on aid for 2 1/2 months, mean the 'worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out in Gaza.' Though the flow of aid has resumed, including via airdrops, the amount getting into Gaza remains far lower than what aid organizations say is needed. A security breakdown in the territory has made it nearly impossible to safely deliver food to starving Palestinians, much of the limited aid entering is hoarded and later sold at exorbitant prices. At a Friday press conference in Gaza City, representatives of the territory's influential tribes accused Israel of empowering factions that loot aid sites and implored Witkoff to stay several hours in Gaza to witness life firsthand. 'We want the American envoy to come and live among us in these tents where there is no water, no food and no light,' they said. 'Our children are hungry in the streets.' In a report issued Friday, Human Rights Watch called the current setup 'a flawed, militarized aid distribution system that has turned aid distributions into regular bloodbaths.' 'It would be near impossible for Palestinians to follow the instructions issued by GHF, stay safe, and receive aid, particularly in the context of ongoing military operations, Israeli military sanctioned curfews, and frequent GHF messages saying that people should not travel to the sites before the distribution window opens,' the report said. It cited doctors, aid seekers and at least one security contractor. 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Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs showed an aid convoy driving past a border crossing as gunfire ricocheted off the ground near where crowds congregated. 'We were met on the road by tens of thousands of hungry and desperate people who directly offloaded everything from the backs of our trucks,' said Olga Cherevko, an OCHA staff member. Some of Israel's traditional allies have moved toward recognizing Palestinian statehood hoping to revive prospects of a two-state solution. Germany has thus far refrained from doing so. On a tour in the occupied West Bank, the country's Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, Germany's foreign minister called on Israel to be open to making peace and said Hamas militants should lay down their weapons and release the hostages. Speaking in the Christian-majority village of Taybeh, Wadephul called Israeli settlements in the West Bank a key obstacle to a two-state solution. He condemned settler violence and destruction, and criticized the Israeli military for failing to do more to prevent the attacks. The frequency of settler attacks in the West Bank have increased since the war between Israel and Hamas began, according to the United Nations. The conflict erupted on Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas attacked southern Israel, killing around 1,200 people and abducting 251 others. They still hold 50 hostages, including around 20 believed to be alive. Most of the others have been released in ceasefires or other deals. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Its count doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians. The ministry operates under the Hamas government. The U.N. and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties. Shurafa, Metz and Frankel write for the Associated Press. Metz reported from Jerusalem and Frankel from Tel Aviv.

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