GENEVA / HEALTH WORKER ATTACKS

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03-Aug-2021 00:03:33
More than 700 health care workers and patients have died since December 2017 and more than 2,000 have been injured in attacks on health facilities, according to a three- year analysis by the UN World Health Organization (WHO), released today. UNTV CH

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STORY: GENEVA / HEALTH WORKER ATTACKS
TRT: 3: 33
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 3 AUGUST 2021, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND


SHOTLIST:

1.Wide shot, exterior United Nations flag flying
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Altaf Musani, Director of the Health Emergencies Interventions, WHO:
“Since 2017, the initial rollout of the system, over 2,700 incidents have been recorded in 17 countries and territories. In particular, 700 healthcare workers and patients have died and more than 200 have been injured. This three-year analysis illustrates that one out of six incidents has led to a patient or healthcare worker's loss of life in 2020. The analysis further demonstrates that healthcare workers are most vulnerable and most affected. Healthcare workers impacted in this study represent two-thirds of all attacks in 2018, 2019 and 50 per cent of all recorded incidents in 2020. And this is compared to some of the other variables of attacks on the systems and this includes the medical supplies, the medical assets and the facility itself. In 2021 to date, 588 incidents of attacks on healthcare have been recorded in 14 countries that are currently impacted by security and emergencies. This too has caused 114 deaths and 278 injuries of healthcare workers and patients.”
3. Wide shot, exterior United Nations flag flying
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Altaf Musani, Director of the Health Emergencies Interventions, WHO:
“The impact of these healthcare attacks goes well beyond claiming lives. The ramification of such attacks, especially in light of COVID-19 response, is significant and alarming. Their impact reverberates on healthcare workers mental health, and willingness to report to work, equally on communities’ willingness to seek healthcare and also drastically reduces resources for responding to a health crisis, amongst others. The ripple effect of a single incident is huge and has a long-lasting impact on the health system at large.”
5. Wide shot, exterior United Nations flag flying
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Altaf Musani, Director of the Health Emergencies Interventions, WHO:
“During the pandemic more than ever, health care workers must be protected, must be respected. Health hospitals and health care facilities, including the transportation of ambulances, should not be used for military purposes as essential conditions for the continued delivery of vital health care must be given the necessary space. Any reduction in this capacity will interrupt services, result in the loss of resources, deprive vulnerable communities of this urgent care as well as undermine health systems and jeopardise long term public health goals.”
7. Wide shot, exterior United Nations flag flying
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Altaf Musani, Director of the Health Emergencies Interventions, WHO:
“WTO calls on all relevant parties in conflicts to ensure the establishment of safe working spaces for the delivery of health care services and equitable, safe access to health care, free from violence, threat or fear. One attack is an attack too many.”

STORYLINE:


More than 700 health care workers and patients have died since December 2017 and more than 2,000 have been injured in attacks on health facilities, according to a three- year analysis by the UN World Health Organization (WHO), released today (03 Aug).

The Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care from 2018 to 2020, recorded data from 17 emergency-affected countries and fragile settings.

These included Ethiopia, Yemen, Syria, Mozambique, Nigeria, Occupied Palestinian Territories, Myanmar, Central African Republic and Somalia.

“We are deeply concerned that hundreds of health facilities have been destroyed or closed, health workers killed and injured, and millions of people denied the healthcare they deserve,” said Altaf Musani, Director of the Health Emergencies Interventions, WHO, at a virtual press briefing hosted by UN Geneva.

The WHO initiative has three main pillars of work: the systematic collection of evidence of attacks, advocacy for the end of such attacks and the promotion of good practices for protecting health care.

Giving details of the report’s findings, Mr. Musani, said that “one out of six incidents have led to a patient or health worker’s loss of life in 2020.”

Health workers were impacted the most, he added, as they represented “two-thirds of all attacks in 2018, 2019 and 50 per cent of all recorded incidents in 2020.”

The report warned that the impact of attacks on health care went well beyond endangering health providers, especially in light of the ongoing COVID-19 response. “Their impact reverberates on health workers’ mental health and willingness to report to work, on the communities’ willingness to seek health care and also drastically reduces resources for responding to health crises, among others,” the WHO official said.

The “ripple effect of a single incident is huge” and has “long-term consequences for the health system as whole”, Mr. Musani insisted, before calling on all parties in conflicts to ensure safe working spaces for the delivery of health care services and safe access to health care, free from violence, threat or fear. “One attack is an attack too many,” he said.
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