Malnutrition’s effects on the body don’t end when food arrives
Inflammation and gut problems can torment survivors. New treatments may repair some damage
Denise Potvin, a nurse currently working in Rafah, a city in the south of Gaza, has been seeing something new recently: Malnutrition among young children. Before the current Israel-Hamas war, “this was not something that would have [been] treated,” Potvin says. “Now we are seeing cases.”
As of May 18, 31 people, including at least 28 children, have died of malnutrition. In southern Gaza, up to 9 percent of children under 5 are malnourished, according to the World Health Organization. In northern Gaza, the fraction is greater — up to a quarter of children are malnourished and up to 4 percent are severely malnourished, an earlier agency report estimated. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification partnership warned in a report in March that famine is imminent in the northern part of Gaza, and the rest of Gaza is also at risk.