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Your generous donation can provide children and families affected by the war in Gaza with life-saving essentials like food, water and crucial mental health support.

The situation in Gaza has never been more desperate.

Months of unrelenting fighting and deprivation in Gaza have left thousands of children dead, while those who survive face continued war, siege, hunger and unimaginable loss.

It's hard to believe the living nightmare children have endured for ten months could get worse. But right now, that's what's unfolding.

Our teams are working around the clock to get vital supplies to children in Gaza, as well preparing to rebuild children's futures once the fighting stops.

But they need your support. Please make a donation to Save the Children today.

What we're doing to help children in Gaza

Since 7 October we've reached more than 764,000 people in Gaza.

Health

  • We’re distributing medical supplies to health facilities in Gaza
  • Working with local partners, we’ve distributed hygiene products
  • Our Emergency Health Unit is running a primary health clinic in Deir al Balah which is treating diseases, providing sexual and reproductive health services, ante-natal care and management of urgent deliveries, basic trauma care and wound dressing
  • The Emergency Health Unit is also working in a partner field hospital to provide maternal and newborn care in the maternity unit and paediatric inpatient and outpatient services
  • We’ve issued 1,000 copies of our paediatric blast injuries manual, which helps surgeons to treat these injuries in children
  • In Egypt, we’re supporting hospitals and ambulances receiving medical evacuees from Gaza, including assistance for premature babies.

Nutrition

  • We’re distributing food parcels and drinking water
  • We’ve trained community volunteers on screening of children under five for malnutrition, infant and young child feeding practices in emergency and how to identify children with danger signs and to refer them to the nearest medical center or health facility
  • We’ve delivered breastfeeding support kits and breast milk substitute kits

Shelter

  • We’ve distributed shelter kits, including mattresses, plastic mats and bedding sets

Mental health support

  • We're providing mental health and psychosocial support to children and their families and we’re delivering cash to families to help them to buy essentials
  • We've set up five child-friendly spaces with our partners
  • In Egypt, we’re training frontline staff on child safeguarding as well as mental health and psychosocial support.

We're also responding to growing needs in the West Bank and Lebanon, and gearing up our teams across the region to prepare for any rise in children's needs as the situation evolves.

We can do more and we are ready to scale up our response as soon as more access is possible.

This response will include:

  • distributing more essential supplies, such as water, food, toiletries, cooking utensils, and other household essentials
  • delivering further Mental Health and Psychosocial Support services for children and caregivers
  • setting up child friendly spaces so children have a safe space to play and recover
  • distributing warm clothes and blankets, as well as more cash and vouchers so families can buy food, medicines and any other essentials.
  • providing fuel and water infrastructure for hospitals and distributing water storage tanks
  • ensuring children continue to have access to education, by setting up temporary learning spaces and repairing damaged schools
  • identifying the most at-risk children for referrals to protection related services

But we can’t do it without your help. Donate to our Emergency Fund today and help us reach children caught up in disasters around the world.

Meet Baby Lana

Lana, the first baby born at our Emergency Health Unit in Gaza

When Tima* found out she was pregnant in July 2023, she was excited to be having her second child and started to think about how she would spoil her new baby.

Then in October 2023, the war in Gaza started and everything changed. Tima and her family were displaced multiple times as fighting expanded across the Gaza strip. They now live in a tent in central Gaza.

Tima was very worried about where she would give birth safely, given the continuous attacks on healthcare facilities during the war.

Save the Children’s Emergency Health Unit have set up a maternity unit in the Gaza Strip. Baby Lana* arrived on 26 April 2024 and was the first baby to be born at the new maternity unit.

Although baby Lana was healthy when she left the hospital, after three days she became unwell. Tima was quick to bring her daughter back to the hospital where she was admitted. Lana had contracted sepsis due to the tough living conditions, including very limited access to clean water and washing facilities.

If left untreated, sepsis can easily kill a baby. However, thanks to Tima’s quick actions, a course of antibiotics and close monitoring in the inpatient facility, baby Lana has made a full recovery.

* Names changed to protect their identity

The situation in Gaza and Israel

The conditions needed to scale-up humanitarian assistance in Gaza are currently not being met and humanitarian aid is being used as a weapon of war. An adequate humanitarian response is not possible without an immediate and definitive ceasefire.

Children are terrified, have been forced from their homes, and are cut off from an education. Civilians can never be targeted and there are no circumstances under international humanitarian law in which this can be ignored. The killing and maiming of children, along with attacks on schools and hospitals, is a grave violation, and those responsible should be held to account for their actions. 

All children captured must be released immediately and unconditionally. Civilians, and infrastructure essential for their lives, such as hospitals and schools, must be spared from the violence.  

The only way to truly protect children’s lives is to halt this violence. 

Find out more about the conflict:

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