Despite fewer births in the first half of 2025, 10% of babies were born underweight during this period – around 300 babies a month.
And in July to September, the three months before the fragile ceasefire on October 10, the figure surged to 460 babies a month, Ingram said.
“Low birth weight is generally caused by poor maternal nutrition, increased maternal stress, and limited antenatal care,” she said.
“In Gaza, we witness all three, and the response is not moving fast enough nor at the scale required.”
Ingram said that in October, Unicef treated 8300 pregnant and breastfeeding women for acute malnutrition, noting that there was no discernible malnutrition among this group before October 2023.
Unicef said the number of babies dying on their first day had risen from an average of 27 in 2022 to 47 between July and September this year.
“At least 165 children are reported to have died painful, preventable deaths related to malnutrition during the war,” said Ingram.
Ingram called for more aid to enter Gaza and for the opening of the Rafah crossing from Egypt.
“No child should be scarred by war before they have taken their first breath,” she said.
“So much suffering could have been prevented, if international humanitarian law had been respected.”
-Agence France-Presse