Surveillance data indicate that reported Guillain–Barré Syndrome (GBS) cases in Gaza remain within expected baseline levels, with no evidence of an unusual increase. However, more than half of reported cases require specialized rehabilitation following acute treatment. This places additional pressure on rehabilitation services that are already heavily burdened by conflict-related trauma cases. Limited rehabilitation bed capacity, shortages of assistive products, and constrained diagnostic support services remain key operational challenges. Strengthening rehabilitation capacity and ensuring availability of assistive devices remains critical to improving recovery outcomes for affected patients.