A displaced mother and her daughter prepare a meal over an open fire inside their tent in Al-Mawasi, Khan Younis. Palestine, 2025. © Motasem Abu Aser/MSF
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Palestine: Dire living conditions in Gaza continue to impact people’s health despite the ceasefire

Diseases caused by poor living conditions account for 70 per cent of outpatient consultations at MSF’s healthcare centres in southern Gaza this year.

More than one million people are still being forced to survive on a tiny patch of land in southern Gaza, where conditions are dire and dangerous to their health.  

Along with the massive destruction of civilian infrastructure and the health system by Israeli forces, this displacement is creating the perfect storm for disease and illness to spread, warns Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). Israeli authorities must immediately allow a massive scale up of humanitarian assistance to flow freely into Gaza. 

Despite the ceasefire, people in Gaza continue to endure extreme suffering, as Israel’s two-year-long genocidal campaign has left them traumatized, injured and dangerously exposed to the elements as winter approaches. Without immediate improvements to water, sanitation, shelter and nutrition, more people will die from preventable causes.

“Malnutrition, inadequate sanitation and poor living conditions are taking a devastating toll on people’s health — they’re especially getting sick because of the conditions they’re forced to live in.”

Adi Nadimpalli, MSF medical coordinator

“In southern Gaza, families who have been forced to flee repeatedly are crammed into a sea of makeshift tents, packed into the few remaining schools or sleeping in the open amid rubble, piles of garbage, animal waste and overflowing sewage,” says Aitor Zabalgogeazkoa, MSF emergency coordinator in Gaza. “It’s utterly unacceptable.” 

As the temperature drops, people’s fragile living conditions will heighten their exposure to extreme weather. This, combined with people’s exhaustion, will further heighten health risks.

Thousands of tents in Al-Mawasi, Khan Younis, where displaced families live in overcrowded conditions without basic necessities for survival. Palestine, 2025. © Motasem Abu Aser/MSF

Outbreaks of disease

MSF medical data from 2025 shows diseases directly linked to poor living conditions, such as skin, eye, respiratory and gastrointestinal infections, as well as generalized aches and pains, account for 70 per cent of all outpatient consultations in our healthcare centres in southern Gaza. 

“Malnutrition, inadequate sanitation and poor living conditions are taking a devastating toll on people’s health — they’re especially getting sick because of the conditions they’re forced to live in,” says Adi Nadimpalli, MSF medical coordinator.

Mothers and children crowd the Attar primary health care centre in Khan Younis, where many displaced pregnant women and infants are treated for malnutrition. Palestine, 2025. © Motasem Abu Aser/MSF
An MSF nurse examines Nour, a seven-month-pregnant patient suffering from malnutrition, at the overcrowded Attar primary health care centre in Khan Younis. Palestine, 2025. © Motasem Abu Aser/MSF

The collapse of the water and sanitation system — a direct result of targeted destruction and the systematic blockages on reconstruction materials imposed by Israeli authorities — has triggered a surge in waterborne diseases, particularly diarrhea illnesses, since the first week of April 2025. Over the past two years, MSF teams have treated more than 78,000 cases of diarrhea, including over 24,000 cases since April of this year. Many families are unable to acquire or safely prepare food, and limited access to clean water is worsening the situation. 

In addition, MSF teams have observed a significant rise in respiratory tract infections — with an even  sharper increase from mid-August — which are typically more common during the winter months. According to the Ministry of Health, acute respiratory infections now account for 67 per cent of total morbidity. 

We have also witnessed an increase in skin diseases, including scabies, lice and other infectious and non-infectious conditions, since mid-August. 

Pregnant women and people living with disabilities are being made vulnerable

From October 2024 to September 2025, MSF teams at Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis, screened pregnant women for malnutrition, with 1,366 being diagnosed. In Gaza, many mothers are struggling to safely feed their babies — some are so malnourished that they are unable to produce enough breast milk, while ready-to-use infant formula is in short supply. Finding clean water and sterile materials to prepare milk is nearly impossible. Boiling water has also become a challenge, with most families lacking access to cooking gas and resorting to burning scarce and expensive wood. 

Recovery from trauma is also compromised by these harsh living conditions. The lack of mobility aids, such as crutches and wheelchairs, makes it extremely difficult for thousands of people with amputations or disabilities to move around tents, access latrines or reach clinics. 

Bassel holds his children, nine-month-old Mohammed and 2.5-year-old Ibrahim, as his wife massages his amputated leg to relieve phantom limb pain. The family lives in a displacement tent in Mawasi, Khan Younis, after fleeing their home in Rafah. Bassel lost his leg after being shot months earlier while trying to access aid at a distribution point.

“We see many people with large open wounds, burns or external fixators who are living in tents without proper hygiene, waste management or climate control,” says Nadimpalli. “Infections that would normally be preventable are now common, leading to worsening health conditions and repeated hospitalizations.” 

Palestinians’ suffering and vulnerability to the elements must be urgently addressed. The Israeli authorities must immediately allow a massive scale-up of unimpeded humanitarian assistance to enter Gaza.