The World Health Organization (WHO) issued a stark warning on Friday, revealing a heartbreaking reality: Gaza is suffering more now than it did during the height of its two-year war with Israel.
Despite the official end of that conflict last October, a “catastrophic” medical shortage has emerged, driven by the new regional war between the U.S., Israel, and Iran. Essential supplies like gauze, needles, and anesthesia have completely run out in many facilities, leaving the enclave’s remaining hospitals on the verge of total collapse.
Hanan Balkhy, WHO’s regional director, noted that while the Kerem Shalom crossing was gradually reopened this week, the volume of aid is a mere fraction of what is required.
“Stocks of essential medicines, trauma supplies, and surgical consumables are critically low,” Balkhy stated. The situation has been exacerbated by the recent closure of all entry points following the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran, which paralyzed humanitarian corridors for several days.

The 200 vs. 600 Truck Crisis
The primary reason for the current spike in suffering is a massive logistical deficit. Before the recent escalation, humanitarian agencies estimated that 600 trucks were needed daily to sustain Gaza’s population. Currently, a maximum of only 200 trucks are entering, and many of those are commercial vehicles that do not provide the free life-saving aid required by the most vulnerable.
Medical Evacuations Frozen
The Rafah crossing remains shut, leaving 18,000 critically ill or injured people, including thousands of children, trapped with no way to seek treatment abroad.
The wider war with Iran has frozen deliveries at the world’s largest humanitarian hub in Dubai, leaving $6 million in medicines intended for Gaza stranded in warehouses.
Fuel shortages are forcing hospitals to ration electricity, meaning ICU beds, ventilators, and dialysis machines are being turned off for hours at a time.
A Fragile Ceasefire Shattered by Regional War
Gaza’s recovery from its two-year war was described as “marginal” even before this week. However, the new conflict has turned a fragile recovery into a second humanitarian disaster. Half of Gaza’s 36 hospitals remain closed from the previous conflict, and those that are open are now overwhelmed by a backlog of untreated chronic conditions and new trauma cases from the regional spillover.
“The situation is difficult, and we will be running out of whatever is remaining,” Balkhy warned. For the people of Gaza, the tragedy is twofold: they are surviving the aftermath of one long war only to be starved of medical care by a new, even larger regional conflagration that has diverted the world’s attention and resources elsewhere.
Environmental and Health Collapse
The suffering extends beyond the hospital walls. Fuel shortages have also crippled municipal services, leading to thousands of tons of waste accumulating in the streets of Gaza City and Khan Younis. This has sparked fears of widespread disease outbreaks, including a potential polio crisis, at a time when the health system is least capable of responding.
With international NGO registrations being revoked and staff evacuations ongoing, Gaza is facing a “perfect storm” of neglect and destruction that exceeds the horrors of the previous 24 months.















