Abstract
ObjectivesThe catastrophic effects of armed conflict, particularly prolonged armed conflict, on individual and public health are well established. The ‘right’ to healthcare during armed conflict and its lack of enforcement despite a range of United Nations mandated requirements regarding health and healthcare provisions is likely to be a significant feature in future conflicts, as zoonotic-induced pandemics become a more common global public health challenge. The issue of enforcement of health rights assurance and its implications for the public health management of global pandemics such as coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in and between countries and regions in conflict is the objective of this Review. Study designA narrative review was conducted. MethodsReferenced to the framework of International humanitarian law (IHL) and International human rights law (IHRL) to explore and discuss the deficits in health rights assurances in conflict settings and illustrate how gaps in protection and lack of enforcement compounds the disease response. Both IHL, and IHRL can be leveraged to ensure human and health rights are assured in conflict settings. There is a distinct lack of international criteria with regard to standards of healthcare coverage, infrastructure and service preservation to the civilian population during times of armed conflict. This has far reaching consequences when confounded by a pandemic or even localised disease outbreak. ResultsWe illustrate how in a pandemic disease emergency, such as COVID-19, all life is threatened; and how leaving the citizen population exposed to this contagion is a human rights breach and an indirect method of warfare. The consequences of failure to effectively address such pandemic infections, (i.e. COVID-19), in a conflict setting are potentially catastrophic as prevention and containment responses are severely constrained by state insecurity, political instability, terrorism, repression, rights abuses, and displacement of citizens. Neglect by State actors potentially constitutes a breach of the universal right to life. States cannot justify their failures to mitigate disease based on claims of lack of resources, even when available resources are minimal. Where discrimination of people with a disease, such as COVID-19, or minority groups at the point of access to health facilities occurs, this further breaches the principle of medical neutrality. ConclusionsThe example of the COVID-19 response may offer a viable route to leverage greater access and coverage of healthcare in conflict and humanitarian settings. A radicalised partnership approach during these times of emergency is warranted, based on an ethical ‘humanitarian intervention’ approach to provide care to all affected by contagious disease in conflict settings.
Highlights
Ian Morris[1] in his recent work on the relationship of war to civilisational change, predicts that the interaction of pandemics with intra-and inter-national conflict will be a defining feature of global history over the 40 years
The fulfilment of that right is further underpinned by State obligations to maintain an operable healthcare system, ensure adequate food and medical supplies, and implement public health measures to protect all from disease.[1]
At the time of writing, ICRC estimates that more than 60 million people residing in conflict zones controlled by non State armed groups are at risk of exclusion from national COVID-19 vaccination programmes despite country sign up to the global COVAX initiative
Summary
Van Hout, MC and Wells, JSG The right to health, public health and COVID-19: a discourse on the importance of the enforcement of humanitarian and human rights law in conflict settings for the future management of zoonotic pandemic diseases. http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/14742/. Van Hout, MC and Wells, JSG The right to health, public health and COVID-19: a discourse on the importance of the enforcement of humanitarian and human rights law in conflict settings for the future management of zoonotic pandemic diseases. Citation (please note it is advisable to refer to the publisher’s version if you intend to cite from this work) Van Hout, MC and Wells, JSG (2021) The right to health, public health and COVID-19: a discourse on the importance of the enforcement of humanitarian and human rights law in conflict settings for the future management of zoonotic pandemic diseases. LJMU has developed LJMU Research Online for users to access the research output of the University more effectively. Users may download and/or print one copy of any article(s) in LJMU Research Online to facilitate their private study or for non-commercial research. Please see the repository URL above for details on accessing the published version and note that access may require a subscription
Published Version
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