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STORY: For Rabab al-Hajj Youssef - every trip to the bathroom to change her sanitary pad - is a painful one."Sometimes there's no water for a girl to wash and change. There is no water.":: Baalbek, LebanonIsraeli strikes displaced her family from their Lebanon home.:: West Bekaa, LebanonNow - she shares limited water with hundreds of people in this school-turned-shelter."You have to take your underwear and wash it. I wait for my daughter at the bathroom door to wash in freezing water – freezing – so she can change and wear the sanitary pad."Sanitary health is a growing concern for those living in the more than 1,100 shelters in the region.Most of them are at capacity - as 1.2 million have been displaced by Israel's escalating campaign against Hezbollah.Rita Abou Nabhan is with Relief International.She says the biggest fear is the lack of water. The group is providing sanitary pads - but women question how they're going to use them in the first place - without being able to clean themselves.Privacy is also an issue.With no baskets in the shared bathrooms - women must bring disposal bags with them."I’m crying because of the situation that we have reached today, we’ve been humiliated, along with our children. We have been displaced and our homes are gone."More than 11,000 pregnant women are among the newly displaced population in Lebanon, according to U.N. tallies.Many of these women need access to prenatal care, nutrition, clean water and hygiene supplies.The World Health Organization said it had already documented cases of measles, hepatitis A and other infectious diseases among the displaced.It warned this week that a resurgence may be possible as the number of displaced people "in suboptimal shelter conditions" grow.