Welcome to Our Project

The current Israel-Gaza war, which began on 7 October 2023, has had an immense humanitarian impact. As of 31 May 2024, at least 36,284 Palestinians were killed and 82,057 were injured in Gaza, according to MoH in Gaza. In Israel the conflict has resulted in the deaths of over 1,500 people and 8,730 injured, while 124 hostages still remain in Gaza. Approximately 85% of the 2.2 million Palestinians are displaced, and most reside in overcrowded shelters with limited access to water, sanitation and food. The provision of health care in Gaza is extremely limited.

For our first report (published on 19 February 2024), our group developed models to project excess deaths, both direct (trauma-related) and indirect that may occur in Gaza over the six-month period from 7 February 2024 to 6 August 2024. Alternative projections have been developed for each of three scenarios: 1) ceasefire, 2) continuation of conditions experienced between 7 October 2023 to 15 January 2024, termed “status quo,”; and 3) further escalation of the war, termed “escalation”. The projections are stratified by sub- period, age and category of proximal causes of death, including traumatic injuries, infectious diseases, maternal and neonatal causes (i.e. infants less than 28 days old) and non-communicable diseases.

For our second report (published on 5 June 2024), our group developed a scenario- based model to provide a plausible projection of the number of traumatic injury deaths that could occur in the Rafah governorate over the coming 90 days (20 May - 17 August 2024) so that policymakers and humanitarians can make sound, evidence-based decisions.

Crisis in Gaza: Scenario-based Health Impact Projections

Crisis in Gaza: Projected Deaths due to Traumatic Injuries in the Rafah Governorate

Wartime food availability in the Gaza Strip, October 2023 to August 2024: a retrospective analysis

Evolution of child acute malnutrition during war in the Gaza Strip, 2023-2024: retrospective estimates and scenario-based projections

Note: this paper is solely authored by London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine researchers.

About this Project

The project is an independent academic collaboration between researchers from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and the Johns Hopkins Center for Humanitarian Health at the Johns Hopkins University and is funded by the UK Humanitarian Innovation Hub. It aims to inform decision- makers by generating scientific estimates of likely health consequences based on different trajectories of the war.

We report mortality as the most downstream indicator of health impact, while recognising that the crisis in Gaza has multi-dimensional effects.

We are committed to transparent and reproducible reporting of our project. To this end, we have prepared the following resources:

GitHub Repository

A Repository of data and software code used to generate our results

Methods Annex

The methods annex technical document detailing the methodology used

Previous Report

War in the Gaza Strip: PUBLIC HEALTH SITUATION ANALYSIS

Disclaimers

  • The findings do not necessarily represent the views of the funder, the Johns Hopkins University, or the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.
  • The funder had no role in shaping the analyses, this report or other scientific outputs of the project. The authors are solely responsible for the analysis and interpretation.
  • This publication is partly based on third party-generated data herein analysed and interpreted, and it is not intended to question or challenge such data.
  • Any geographical entities or references to armed conflict events are only for the purpose of the analysis / report, and do not imply acknowledgement or endorsement of facts relating to these geographical entities or events.

FAQ

Crisis in Gaza: Scenario-based Health Impact Projections

Crisis in Gaza: Projected Deaths due to Traumatic Injuries in the Rafah Governorate