Gaza is facing mass starvation under an ongoing siege.
- A deepening humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in Gaza, with aid workers and civilians alike facing starvation, displacement and violence under Israel's ongoing siege.
- Nearly two million Palestinians have been forcibly displaced, and over 875 have been killed while seeking food.
- Humanitarian access is being deliberately blocked, despite warehouses full of supplies.
Warning: This content shares detailed accounts and images of suffering that viewers may find distressing.
What is the current humanitarian situation in Gaza?
The situation in Gaza is catastrophic. Children are literally starving. Markets are empty, food is unavailable, and malnutrition is widespread — not only among children, but also among pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers, and the broader adult population.
As our Gaza Humanitarian Director, Rachael Cummings, described to journalist Jonathan Karl on ABC News’ This Week on Sunday, July 27:
“Every child in the health center today was malnourished, but also every adult was extremely thin, gaunt-looking, exhausted. The situation is absolutely terrible here.”
Save the Children teams are seeing a sharp rise in malnourished children at our clinics — and the numbers continue to grow.
Despite these incredibly challenging conditions, our teams are working tirelessly to deliver critical aid to children and families. We're reaching 26 communities daily with clean drinking water, screening and treating children for acute malnutrition, and supporting mothers with nutritional care — even as access remains dangerously restricted.
What is the “tactical pause,” and why isn’t it enough?
The "tactical pause" announced by Israel is a short-term measure intended to allow some humanitarian aid into Gaza. While this may offer a glimmer of hope—it is not a solution. A drip-feed of aid is not a response to the urgent, life-threatening conditions facing the over 2 million people in Gaza. What children in Gaza need is a permanent, unconditional ceasefire and a surge of humanitarian and commercial aid supplies via existing land crossings. All forms of life-saving aid—not just food—must be allowed into Gaza immediately with full humanitarian access so that it reaches everyone in need—especially children, who are particularly vulnerable to acute malnutrition and other illnesses.
In the meantime, our teams will continue to deliver services to children and families as it is safe and possible to do so. But our supplies inside Gaza are dwindling. We have materials waiting at the borders, but it must be allowed in.
Why is Save the Children saying a ceasefire is critical?
Only a definitive ceasefire can allow aid to reach children consistently and safely. A pause that can be lifted at any moment risks reimposing siege conditions that make starvation worse.
“So long as it is not definitive, any pause offers the people of Gaza a glimmer of hope just to replace it with further horrors.” – Ahmad Alhendawi
We have life-saving supplies ready in Jordan, the West Bank, and Egypt. But without guarantees of safety and access, we cannot reach the families who need them most.
Until then, we are doing everything in our power to reach families inside Gaza with services at our health clinics, malnutrition screening and treatment, and water trucking.
Can malnutrition in children in Gaza really be reversed?
Malnutrition is preventable, and it is treatable. We know how to save children’s lives. But that requires sustained access to:
- Nutritious food
- Medical care
- Specialized supplements
Unfortunately, severe acute malnutrition is a life-threatening condition, in which children’s bodies are so malnourished they are experiencing wasting. With timely intervention, children’s bodies can stabilize. This requires medical care and fortified foods. Without quick and sufficient treatment, severe acute malnutrition can result in permanent developmental harm to a child and even death.
A few days of aid cannot undo months of starvation for 1 million children. They need sustained support at scale to recover and survive.
Our two primary health care centers in Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis are providing critical maternal, newborn, and child care — screening children and mothers for malnutrition, offering nutritional support, and delivering essential medical services every day.
What is Save the Children doing to help children in Gaza?
Here’s what we’re actively doing on the ground:
WATER, SHELTER, AND ESSENTIAL ITEMS
- Providing clean drinking water in 26 communities daily
HEALTH & NUTRITION
- Operating two primary healthcare centers
- Treating malnutrition and supporting mothers and newborns
- Running mother/baby areas for nutritional support
EDUCATION
- Running temporary learning spaces for children aged 3–12
- Supporting children who can no longer access formal schooling
"We will do everything we can to ensure the aid entering reaches and saves the lives of children and families. But a temporary pause is simply not enough.”
What is the scale of suffering for children and families in Gaza right now?
The scale of suffering is staggering. According to Rachael Cummings:
“Mothers went from eating three meals a day to two, to one. Now, they’re not having a meal a day. And this is very, very concerning. And this is at scale.”
This isn’t a future threat — it’s the current reality for hundreds of thousands of families. Children are losing hope. One aid worker shared:
"Children tell their parents they want to go to heaven, because at least heaven has food."
How can I help children in crisis in Gaza?
Your support can save lives. Donations help us:
- Deliver food and medical care to malnourished children
- Keep our clinics open and staff on the ground
- Mobilize emergency supplies already staged near Gaza
- Continue advocating for a permanent ceasefire and safe humanitarian access
Our Response in Gaza
Save the Children has been providing essential services and support to Palestinian children and Palestinian civilians impacted by the ongoing conflict since 1953 and have had a permanent presence in the occupied Palestinian territory since 1973. As of June 2025, Save the Children and its partners have reached more than 1.5 million people across the West Bank and Gaza.
Humanitarian access is being deliberately blocked, despite warehouses full of supplies; over 100 organizations are urging governments to demand an immediate ceasefire, open all land crossings, and restore a fully functioning, UN-led aid system.
Save the Children is actively working to support children in Gaza, providing psychosocial support amid escalating trauma and calling for unfettered humanitarian access and an end to the siege to protect children from starvation and psychological despair.
Alongside local partners, we’ve delivered the following lifesaving programs:
- Delivered essential items, like tents, bedding, warm clothes and basic cooking items, to families who’ve lost everything
- Provided fuel and water infrastructure for hospitals and distributing water storage tanks
- Delivered mental health and psychosocial support services for children and caregivers, including setting up Child-Friendly Spaces
- Set up temporary learning spaces and repairing damaged schools
- Identified the most at-risk children for child protection services
Donate to Help Children in Gaza and Around the World
Millions of children around the world are going hungry, their time running out. Save the Children continues to deliver humanitarian services to children and families around the world in these overwhelming conditions.
In Gaza, our teams deliver lifesaving water, run child-friendly spaces that offer safe places for children to play and receive psychosocial support, and set up temporary learning centers to help children continue their education during the crisis.
Please give today to help secure a brighter future for all children around the world.
Updated: July 28, 2025