From Natural Process to Nightmare: How Gaza’s Women and Girls Cope With Their Periods in a War Zone

Women and young girls in a destroyed displacement camp in Gaza. (UNFPA Palestine / Media Clinic)

“Sometimes I need pads and soap more than I need food,” said Aisha, a young displaced girl in Gaza, revealing a serious burden too often overlooked in crisis settings: menstrual health.

Since March 2, 2025, Israel has imposed a total aid blockade on Gaza that has caused the complete depletion of hygiene supplies, including sanitary pads for menstrual health. Almost 90 percent of water and sanitation infrastructure in Gaza has been either destroyed or partially damaged, and fuel for water pumping and distributions has now run out. 

As nine in 10 households face severe water shortages, women and girls are forced to manage their periods without clean water, soap, supplies or even privacy. Many now describe menstruation as a source of anxiety and isolation. 

“My period started while I was in a crowded shelter. I only had one pad, so I wrapped it with toilet paper to make it last,” said a young girl from Gaza. “I couldn’t wash, and the pain was horrible. I sat in silence crying until the end of the day.”

Every day, I witness women battling menstruation, pregnancy and childbirth in degrading conditions. As a woman myself, I feel this deeply. These should be natural experiences, not sources of distress and pain.

Doctor in Gaza

There are around 700,000 women and girls of menstruating age in Gaza, including thousands experiencing their first period–under bombardment and in filthy, cramped displacement camps with no chance of changing in privacy. 

No Privacy, Pads or Protection

One doctor in Gaza told UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, “Every day, I witness women battling menstruation, pregnancy and childbirth in degrading conditions. As a woman myself, I feel this deeply. These should be natural experiences, not sources of distress and pain.”

More than 10 million sanitary pads are needed each month in Gaza, yet less than a quarter of this number is available. Many women and girls are forced to use old clothes, torn fabric or sponges, often reusing them without proper washing. “I tore my only shirt into pieces so my daughters could use them instead of pads,” said a father of four daughters, displaced from Jabalia in northern Gaza.”

These makeshift solutions are not only painful and undignified, they can cause reproductive, sexually transmitted and urinary tract infections that can lead to long-term gynecological complications. Thousands of women in Gaza are expected to suffer from these conditions, many of them going untreated due to the collapse of the health system. 

In overcrowded shelters, privacy is almost nonexistent. “There’s no privacy. I wait my turn at the bathroom for hours just to change or bathe,” shared one girl. Another said simply, “I use pieces of my clothes instead of pads … and I got an infection.” 

I tore my only shirt into pieces so my daughters could use them instead of pads.

Father of four daughters displaced from Jabalia in northern Gaza

The psychological toll is just as severe. Women and girls speak of deep shame, fear of leaks and constant anxiety. One adolescent girl expressed the deep frustration and helplessness so many feel: “Every time my period comes, I wish I weren’t a girl.”

Ensuring Menstrual Health

UNFPA has remained on the frontlines of the response in Gaza, and as co-lead on coordinating gender-based violence protection is working to ensure menstrual health is fully integrated across humanitarian assistance in Gaza. 

Since Oct. 2023, more than 300,000 women and girls received a two-month supply of disposable menstrual pads, and over 12,000 new mothers were provided with postpartum kits, supporting them through the most vulnerable period following childbirth. 

UNFPA also distributed menstrual hygiene supplies, along with cash and voucher assistance, to help more than 150,000 women and girls meet their basic hygiene needs. Through this flexible support, displaced women were able to purchase what they needed most, from pads and soap to underwear and towels.

In addition, over 6,200 adolescent kits have been distributed across Gaza, providing hygiene items, educational materials, and items such as whistles and torches. UNFPA has supported 16 women and girls’ safe spaces, which have provided essential services to more than 175,000 people through gender-based violence prevention, psychosocial support, risk mitigation and sexual reproductive health and rights awareness. Finally, six mobile maternity units have also been deployed to support health facilities with life-saving supplies, including treatments for urinary and reproductive tract infections.

“Food keeps us alive, but pads, soap and privacy let us live with dignity,” said Maysa, a displaced woman in Khan Younis. “When we receive hygiene kits, it feels like someone finally sees us. They don’t just protect our health, they protect our dignity.” 


This article originally appeared on UNFPA. Names have been changed for privacy and protection.

About

UNFPA is the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency. Their mission is to deliver a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person's potential is fulfilled. UNFPA works with partners in more than 150 countries to provide access to a wide range of sexual and reproductive health services.