WHO EMRO | WHO statement on IPC alert: Worst-case scenario for famine unfolding in Gaza

Health


31 July 2025, Jerusalem, Cairo: The worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out in the Gaza Strip, according to the alert published this week by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC).   People are foregoing food for days. Others are dying as their undernourished, weakened bodies succumb to disease or organ failure. The health system, normally a source of sustenance and relief, is also starved of essential medical supplies, fuel, and other necessities to function fully. Humanitarian and health workers are also weak from hunger.  

Dying of starvation is slow and painful. A starving child, among the most vulnerable, might cry constantly from pain until becoming too weak to even do that. If not urgently treated, a child with acute malnutrition will die. 

 To stop the dying and reverse this man-made tragedy will take months, if not years. Recovery for a malnourished person takes specialised medical attention, correct therapeutic feeding and supplementation. In some severe cases, consequences are lifelong, from stunted growth and impaired brain development to other lasting health complications.   

While the IPC partners, including WHO, will conduct further assessments, the gravity of the situation is clear.  

 Food, medicines and other aid must be allowed in immediately, at scale, through all possible routes. United Nations partners have such supplies ready and waiting at the border. WHO calls on Israel to urgently facilitate the United Nations and other humanitarian actors by ensuring safe, rapid and unhindered access to delivery and distribution of aid. As ever, our call is to end the suffering. Our colleague who remains in detention must be released. Hostages must be released. Ultimately and always, our call is for a ceasefire. Peace is the first step to recovery. 

 The IPC is a partnership of 21 organizations, including WHO, who work together to determine the severity and extent of acute and chronic food insecurity and acute malnutrition situations within countries, according to internationally recognised standards. 

 Links 

IPC statement  

WHO Q&A on malnutrition  

WHO statement on malnutrition  





Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *