Babies in Gaza at Risk of Disease and Death as Winter Approaches
Israel´s ongoing war on Gaza has forcibly displaced over 1.9 million people, leaving families to endure winter in fragile, makeshift tents with minimal protection from the cold. Children are especially vulnerable to various health risks as temperatures are dropping, and families continue to lack proper access to essential items such as water, food, and warm shelter.
On 25 December, three babies, all under one month of age were brought dead on arrival at Nasser Hospital, in Khan Younis, Gaza. They died because of cold temperatures, according to the Ministry of Health. These children were living in tents in Al Mawasi, Southern Gaza, where thousands of Palestinians have been forcibly displaced by the Israeli forces and live in overcrowded, unsanitary conditions. With winter setting in on worn-out tents, conditions in the area have become unbearable. Families are living in fragile tents that barely isolate the winter rain. Most families cannot afford the means to stay warm, including firewood, gas, or even warm blankets, which can cost up to $200, even when available in local Gazan markets.
At the MSF-supported paediatric department of Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, the impact of the humanitarian catastrophe on children’s health is evident. MSF teams in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) are treating children with respiratory infections, dehydration, and premature newborns with complications – conditions that can be life threatening to newborns and premature babies. From October 2024 to December 2024, the MSF supported neonatal intensive care unit has had 325 admissions.
“The exceptional conditions we have gone through in the past 14 months, as well as now the drop in temperatures further deteriorating the living conditions in the worn-out tents have made these kids more prone to hypothermia”, says Dr. Mohammad Abu Tayyem, MSF paediatrician at Nasser Hospital.
The health needs of children are so high that the paediatric department, including the NICU have been operating beyond its bed capacity since July with around 25 beds, all full. Over a quarter of the patients in the department are admitted for respiratory distress syndrome, a condition that can present in premature infants, making them even more vulnerable in dire living conditions many face in Gaza.