Echeverry-López María Esperanza, Marín-Uribe Alejandra, Garcés-Palacio Isabel C, Borrero-Ramírez Yadira, Hernández-Holguin Dora María, Pacheco-Sánchez Carlos Iván, Haar Rohini J
Health Management and Policies Research Group, School of Public Health, Universidad de Antioquia UdeA, Medellín, Colombia.
Epidemiology Group, School of Public Health, Universidad de Antioquia UdeA, Medellín, Colombia.
Confl Health. 2024 Apr 3;18(1):25. doi: 10.1186/s13031-024-00582-9.
This study explores the impacts of attacks perpetrated in the context of armed conflict, to female health workers in three Colombian territories.
We conducted a document review of the reports and databases of the Colombian Truth Commission, 17 in-depth semi-structured interviews with experts on the national and regional armed conflict and the medical mission, and 26 female health workers who were victims of attacks.
Experts and female health workers reported attacks to health activities, facilities, equipment, and personnel, including attacks to traditional doctors belonging to indigenous communities. The most frequent attacks were threats and retention of health personnel; theft of supplies and medicines; damage and use of infrastructure and means of transport for purposes other than health care; and hinderance of health service provision. The attacks occurred in a framework of structural violence that intersects with poverty, racism, and gender bias. The impacts of these attacks include gender-based violence, significant disruption of the lives of health workers, and physical, emotional, psychological, social, and economic effects on the victims and their families. The government response to protect victims and populations has been absent or insufficient.
Attacks to health care were reported in all the studied territories obstructing adequate health care. Impacts of these attacks affect negatively the professional and personal life of the workers and are aggravated by structural violence and absent or little institutional response.
本研究探讨了武装冲突背景下的袭击对哥伦比亚三个地区女性卫生工作者健康的影响。
我们对哥伦比亚真相委员会的报告和数据库进行了文献回顾,对17名国家和地区武装冲突及医疗任务专家进行了深入的半结构化访谈,并对26名遭受袭击的女性卫生工作者进行了访谈。
专家和女性卫生工作者报告了对卫生活动、设施、设备和人员的袭击,包括对属于土著社区的传统医生的袭击。最常见的袭击包括威胁和扣留卫生人员;盗窃物资和药品;破坏和将基础设施及运输工具用于医疗保健以外的目的;以及阻碍卫生服务的提供。这些袭击发生在与贫困、种族主义和性别偏见交织的结构性暴力框架内。这些袭击的影响包括基于性别的暴力、卫生工作者生活的严重扰乱,以及对受害者及其家庭的身体、情感、心理、社会和经济影响。政府在保护受害者和民众方面的反应缺失或不足。
在所研究的所有地区都报告了对医疗保健的袭击,阻碍了充分的医疗服务。这些袭击的影响对卫生工作者的职业和个人生活产生了负面影响,并且由于结构性暴力以及机构反应缺失或微弱而加剧。