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Leaving behind his role as a critical care nurse in a major Melbourne hospital, he has joined aid workers on Gaza’s medical front line, risking his safety to help those with nowhere else to turn.

Jean-Philippe Miller said years in emergency care in Melbourne could not prepare him for the devastation he has witnessed in Gaza. Source: Supplied / Jean-Philippe Miller / Red Cross
At times, Miller admittedly wonders why he keeps returning to the war-ravaged Strip.
The Australian Red Cross says 50 Red Cross and Red Crescent volunteers and workers have been killed in the line of duty since the start of 2024, with 18 of those deaths in 2025.

Jean-Philippe Miller is tending to the wounded and sick at the Red Cross Field Hospital in Rafah in southern Gaza. Source: SBS News / Scott Cardwell
At least 1,581 health workers have been killed in Gaza since October 2023, according to the Gaza health ministry.
‘Worst year for humanitarian deaths’
Israel’s subsequent military campaign in Gaza since then has killed more than 62,000 Palestinians, left much of the enclave in ruins and wrought a humanitarian disaster with grave shortages of food, drinking water and safe shelter, according to Palestinian health officials.

Australian Red Cross says food insecurity in Gaza has reached catastrophic levels. Source: Getty / Anadolu
Almost two years later, Miller said food insecurity is rife and not just among civilians. Aid workers are also exhausted and hungry.
The World Food Programme (WFP) says over 320,000 children — the entire population under five in the Gaza Strip — are at risk of acute malnutrition.
“Israel does not operate to hinder access to medical care nor does it prevent the entry of medical supplies into the Gaza Strip, including medications, such as antibiotics.”
Overrun and understaffed, hospitals struggle to cope
“And that’s extremely concerning because we know that adequate nutritional intake is paramount in order to aid recovery.”

The Rafah field hospital in Gaza is struggling to meet rising demand for medical aid. Source: Supplied / Jean-Philippe Miller / Red Cross
The 60-bed field hospital in Rafah was set up by the ICRC in 2024 to address the overwhelming medical needs arising from the ongoing conflict, along with 12 Red Cross and Crescent Societies, including the Australian Red Cross.
“The needs are immense with 143,000 plus people injured, so far. Their rehabilitation requirements are huge and there are so few services operating in Gaza to deal with demand,” he said.
‘Distressing and unsettling’: The faces that haunt
Head of the UN Palestine refugee agency, Philippe Lazzarini, has described the situation as “the latest in the war on children and childhood in Gaza”.

Airstrikes and a lack of medical supplies, food, water and fuel have virtually depleted an already under-resourced health system in Gaza, the World Health Organization says. Source: Getty / Anadolu
Fewer than half of Gaza’s hospitals and under 38 per cent of primary healthcare centres are partially functioning — or are doing so at minimal levels, according to Rik Peeperkorn, the World Health Organisation’s representative for the West Bank and Gaza.
“We continue to have major challenges getting medicines, medical equipment, humanitarian assistance across the borders, into our field hospitals, into the Palestinian Red Crescent Society, which obviously runs a paramedic facility amongst other things,” he said.
On the front line of care and conflict
“Obviously, ICRC takes security very seriously and does everything to mitigate risk, with passive and active security measures.

Medical and humanitarian workers in Gaza say they carry out their duties under constant threat to their lives. Source: Supplied / Australian Red Cross
Eyal Mayroz, a senior lecturer in peace and conflict studies at The University of Sydney, said the Red Cross is in charge of advancing and developing IHL, but despite that, humanitarian workers continue to face a range of risks.
At least 265 aid workers have been killed globally as of 14 August this year, according to provisional data from the Aid Worker Security Database.
Hope in the midst of chaos
“It is about listening to our patients, listening to our colleagues, making sure that they feel heard and showing we understand the trauma that they experience and endure,” he said.

Amid the devastation, Jean-Philippe Miller said he finds hope in small moments with colleagues and patients. Source: Supplied / Jean-Philippe Miller / Red Cross
It’s a sentiment echoed by Prouse.
“It is so important for them to see familiar faces and to know that we haven’t forgotten them. Because they genuinely do fear that the world has forgotten them.”