SAFETYLIT WEEKLY UPDATE

We compile citations and summaries of about 400 new articles every week.
RSS Feed

HELP: Tutorials | FAQ
CONTACT US: Contact info

Search Results

Journal Article

Citation

Berhan Y, Assefa B, Tassew A, Mengiste W, Gebreyesus A, Geletu Z, Muluneh K, Asfaw G, Abera S, Negesso A, Abebe S, Abelneh H, Deju E, Mathewos T. Ethiop. J. Health Sci. 2023; 33(5): 869-880.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Research and Publications Office of Jimma University)

DOI

10.4314/ejhs.v33i5.17

PMID

38784511

PMCID

PMC11111203

Abstract

Prior to the intensified civil and armed conflicts in Ethiopia, remarkable progress was made in the health sector, which has persuaded the Ministry of Health to give special focus on building a responsive and resilient health system in the second five-year health sector transformation plan (HSTP II 2021-2025). However, the years-long civil and armed conflicts have been fueling the COVID-19 crisis and have caused multi-sectoral infrastructure damage, human life loss, and economic crisis. In 2021 alone, the conflict causes more than five million internal displacements of persons (IDP) and thousands civilian deaths. Review of reported government data has shown that 3,508 health posts, 750 health centers, and 76 hospitals were partially or completely damaged in four regions. Looting of medical equipment and facilities for amenities was devastating. More than 19 million people were affected by the armed and civil conflicts between 2020 and 2021. Unless peace is ensured across the nation the sooner possible, it is foreseen that the devastation may further worsen, and recovery may be a far-fetched possibility. Therefore, in addition to restoration of the disrupted health services, it is the right time for the Ministry of Health to incorporate the humanitarian-development nexus as a joint strategy with the Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Commission (DPPC) to ensure a resilient health system for similar multifaceted conflict-related health crisis, disasters, and infectious outbreaks.


Language: en

Keywords

*Armed Conflicts; *COVID-19/epidemiology/prevention & control; *Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration; Armed conflict; civil conflict; Ethiopia; Ethiopia/epidemiology; health infrastructure damage; health system disruption; humanitarian-development nexus; Humans; internally displaced persons; SARS-CoV-2

NEW SEARCH


All SafetyLit records are available for automatic download to Zotero & Mendeley
Print