facilities including 22 hospitals have been damaged since the war began on 7 October,
and only a handful are now still operational.
Here is what the BBC knows about the situation at the main facilities in northern Gaza.
Al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza City
The WHO said on Sunday that Al-Shifa in Gaza City - the territory's
largest with 700 beds - had ceased to function and that the situation inside was
"dire and perilous".
The surrounding streets are engulfed by fighting between Hamas and Israeli forces.
Critical infrastructure has been damaged, according to the UN.
Israel says Hamas fighters operate in tunnels underneath the hospital -
a claim which Hamas denies.
Staff inside say it is impossible to leave without risking injury or death.
The WHO Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said on X that
"constant gunfire and bombings in the area" had "exacerbated the already critical circumstances".
Multiple reports from inside say there are no food and no fuel to run generators.
Solar energy is being used to power a few critical systems.
There have been communication blackouts - the Doctors Without Borders charity was unable to
contact its members inside Gaza over the weekend. Attempts by the BBC to contact workers have
often been unsuccessful.
The Hamas-run health ministry has said there are at least 2,300 people still inside the hospital -
up to 650 patients, 200-500 staff and around 1,500 people seeking shelter.
This number includes newborn babies being kept in a surgical theatre at the site.
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