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Are we doing enough to safeguard healthcare services? 

On February 15, three more healthcare facilities in Syria were bombed. With the sound of those explosions still ringing in our ears, we cannot say that we are doing enough. More than 60 per cent of Syria's healthcare facilities have been either damaged or destroyed since the start of the conflict. At this rate, sick and injured people will soon have nowhere left to go, writes Ali Naraghi, Project manager of Health Care in Danger, ICRC.

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A girl receives paediatric care at an ICRC supported mobile health unit in rural Homs, Malaha village 
(image: CC BY-NC-ND/ICRC/P Krzysiek)

In Yemen too, more than 100 medical facilities have been attacked in the 11 months since the conflict began. The United Nations emergency relief co-ordinator, Stephen O'Brien, informed the Security Council on 16 February that nearly 600 healthcare facilities – about 25 per cent of the country's health services – had closed. As a result, there are now 220 fewer places to get treatment for acute malnutrition.

Syria and Yemen are not alone. The Health Care in Danger violent incidents report released in April 2015 indicates that violence against healthcare workers, facilities and vehicles is widespread. Between January 2012 and December 2014, 2,398 such attacks were recorded in just 11 countries affected by armed conflict. That is over two attacks per day.

More needs to be done

Efforts are being made to prevent this violence, including as part of the Health Care in Danger initiative, but more people and resources need to be mobilized. On November 3, 2015, one month following the bombing of the Médecins Sans Frontières hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, 18 professional and humanitarian organisations involved in healthcare – among them the World Medical Association, the International Council of Nurses, the World Health Organization, Médecins Sans Frontières, and the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement – released a joint statement on the protection of healthcare. In it, they urged States, armed groups, international and local humanitarian as well as professional health-care organizations to give urgent attention to the recommendations of the Health Care in Danger initiative.

The 18 organisations expressed their concern about the number and severity of attacks against healthcare workers, facilities and vehicles and raised the alarm, demanding that states take concrete action to: investigate and condemn such attacks, amend domestic legislation to better protect healthcare services, train military personnel, and co-operate with humanitarian and healthcare organisations to make getting health care safer for patients and improve the quality of that care. More joint efforts need to be undertaken so that the issue is at the forefront during upcoming global events such as the World Health Assembly and the World Humanitarian Summit, and is high on the agenda of the United Nations Security Council.

A clear road map to follow

In December 2015, the States party to the Geneva Conventions gathered in Geneva for the 32nd International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent and adopted the resolution Health Care in Danger: Continuing to protect the delivery of health care together. As Alexander Breitegger explains in his article A road map for protecting of health-care services, the resolution constitutes a strong basis for continued cooperation between states, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, the healthcare community and other groups. It can be used to take concrete and practical measures on a country-by-country basis towards preventing violence against the delivery of healthcare and mitigating the effects of such violence.

Joint and co-ordinated efforts are important, but it is also crucial for each state, organisation and military or armed group to make individual contributions to safeguarding health care. Eric de Roodenbeke talks about the pledge that the International Hospital Federation made at the International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent to improve safety in hospitals. His organisation was not alone: 35 pledges related to this topic were made individually or collectively by States, members of the International Red Cross Red Crescent Movement and conference observers.

There is still time to make a pledge (until the end of March 2016), so it is a good opportunity to ask ourselves what more we can do. And we should keep asking ourselves that question until the sound of hospital bombings is silenced.

Ali Naraghi is project manager of Health Care in Danger, ICRC

Further reading: 

Ali Naraghi, 21/03/2016
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