After eight years of conflict, health systems in parts of the Middle East are collapsing under the weight of displacement, disease, and dwindling resources. For families, the impact is devastating. Hospitals once able to serve entire governorates are now struggling to keep basic medicines in stock, while rural health posts face long delays and empty shelves.
“Conflict and displacement have left deep scars on people’s minds,” says Ali Daoudi, Communications and Advocacy Director for ADRA Yemen. “The armed conflict did not only destroy buildings—it shattered the sense of safety and belonging that holds communities together.”
Children bear the heaviest burden. Nearly half a million urgently require treatment for life-threatening wasting. In some districts, the consequences of stock-outs have already been fatal.
“Two children died last week waiting for medication that was promised to them,” reported ADRA Yemen colleagues in August. “It’s a heartbreaking reminder that every delay in aid costs lives.”
Such cases highlight a growing concern across the country: when medicines don’t reach communities on time, preventable deaths occur quietly and uncounted. The loss of key funding has not only cut access to health services for an estimated 170,000 people per month—it has also limited reporting capacity, making it harder to track the full impact.

“Many mothers walk for hours under the burning sun to reach the nearest health facility, carrying weak and undernourished children in their arms, hoping for a chance to save them,” says Daoudi. “And imagine the disappointment when they arrive to find that there is no medicine at the health facility.”
Yet, there is hope. With modest support, ADRA’s teams have shown they can keep clinics open, supplies moving, and lives saved. Just weeks ago, a bridge grant of $10,000 made it possible to deliver essential medicines to nine health facilities in Lahj and Abyan. That small but timely intervention prevented stock-outs, safeguarded treatment for hundreds of patients, and averted the loss of medicines at risk of expiring in warehouses.
Field visits with ADRA’s partners confirmed the need is urgent. At Al Milah Hospital and Khanfar MCH, patients are traveling nearly four hours to Aden for care, incurring heavy costs and delays. Health workers—many of whom have gone unpaid for years—continue serving their neighbors with unwavering dedication.
“Hospitals struggle to stay open,” Daoudi says. “With no salaries, few medicines, and dwindling fuel, health staff continue to serve out of sheer compassion and duty.”

In 2024, ADRA reached more than 1.4 million people across the region with health, nutrition, and protection services. This year, however, funding interruptions have forced cutbacks, leaving hundreds of thousands without care. ADRA continues to manage over $700,000 in medical stock and works closely with local health authorities to ensure safe, transparent distribution. With adequate resources, these supplies can be moved quickly into hospitals and clinics, protecting families from preventable illness and loss.
“Some children arrive too late,” Daoudi shares quietly. “You can see the pain in the health workers’ eyes as they try to fight what hunger has already stolen. But every time a child’s weight improves, even slightly, it brings a spark of hope back into the room. That small victory keeps our teams going.”
The campaign Life-Saving Medical Aid in the Middle East is a reminder of what is at stake: children’s lives, the dignity of communities, and the resilience of health systems under strain. It is also a testament to what is possible when action is taken. Every medicine delivered, every health worker supported, and every life saved brings hope to families who refuse to give up, even in the most difficult circumstances.
Together, we can keep clinics open, medicines flowing, and hope alive for families in need. Join ADRA’s life-saving mission