Documented attacks on health workers in conflict areas increased dramatically last year, endangering children waiting for polio vaccines and efforts to contain the latest outbreak of Ebola, research showed yesterday.
Last year, 973 attacks were reported on health workers in nearly two dozen conflict-ridden countries, killing 167 workers, according to the Safeguarding Health in Conflict Coalition, a collection of global groups aimed at protecting them.
The violence, from bombings, burnings and armed takeovers of hospitals and clinics, to attacks on ambulances and kidnappings, injured 710 health workers, it said.
The number of documented attacks rose significantly from the 701 reported attacks, also in 23 countries, in 2017, it said.
However, the coalition said that it was unclear if the higher number reflected more attacks or higher reporting, after the WHO implemented a standardized system for collecting data on attacks last year.
Workers administering vaccines were attacked in six countries — Afghanistan, the Central African Republic (CAR), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR Congo), Pakistan, Somalia and Sudan — blocking children from getting polio immunizations, it said.
Six vaccination workers were killed and six were injured, it said.
The nations with the most reported attacks on health workers last year were the occupied Palestinian territories with 308 and Syria with 257, followed by Afghanistan, Yemen, Libya and CAR.
The number of reported incidents rose in Cameroon, Libya, the occupied Palestinian territories and Yemen from 2017 and dropped in Iraq and South Sudan.
Of critical significance were attacks on health workers in northeastern DR Congo that forced many clinics to close temporarily, the coalition said.
The violence poses “a great threat to containing the spread of the Ebola virus” by hindering efforts to trace those coming in contact with the virus and heightening the risk that it spreads, it said.
“The violence is directly connected to the inability to get the epidemic under control,” said Leonard Rubenstein, chairman of the coalition and faculty member at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
“It’s an unrecognized problem,” he said. “Anybody concerned with global health needs to ... recognize what a threat this is to people all around the world and to us as well when epidemics can’t be stopped because of violence.”
The epidemic has moved through northeastern DR Congo, killing 1,117 people since the middle of last year, the WHO said on Tuesday.
In the 23 nations studied, the attackers included government forces, foreign government forces, religious extremists and armed rebel groups, the coalition said.
Violence and threats in Afghanistan forced 140 clinics to close from June 2017 to June last year, leaving about 2 million people without access to healthcare, it found.
In Libya, Yemen and northern Nigeria, more than half of the health facilities are either closed or no longer fully functioning, it added.
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