Poole Danielle N, Andersen Daniel, Raymond Nathaniel A, Parham Jack, Howarth Caitlin, Hathaway Oona A, Khoshnood Kaveh
Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases Department, Yale Humanitarian Research Lab, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America.
Heidelberg Institute of Global Health, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2025 Jan 15;5(1):e0003950. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0003950. eCollection 2025.
Medical facilities are civilian objects specially protected by international humanitarian law. Despite the need for systematic documentation of the effects of war on medical facilities for judiciary accountability, current methods for surveilling damage to protected civilian objects during ongoing armed conflict are insufficient. Satellite imagery damage assessment confers significant possibilities for investigating patterns of war. We leveraged commercially and publicly available satellite imagery and cross-referenced geolocated facility data to conduct a pre-post quasi-experimental study of damage to medical facilities in Mariupol, Ukraine as a result of Russia's invasion. We found that 77% of medical facilities in Mariupol sustained damage during Russia's siege lasting from February 24-May 20, 2022. Facility size was not associated with damage, suggesting that attacks on medical facilities are not random but instead may have been the result of intentional targeting. This is the first cross-referenced pre-post census study of the effects of an ongoing conflict on specially protected medical infrastructure.
医疗设施是受国际人道法特别保护的民用物体。尽管为了司法问责需要对战争对医疗设施的影响进行系统记录,但当前在持续武装冲突期间监测受保护民用物体受损情况的方法并不充分。卫星图像损害评估为调查战争模式提供了重大可能性。我们利用商业和公开可用的卫星图像,并交叉引用地理定位的设施数据,对乌克兰马里乌波尔的医疗设施因俄罗斯入侵而遭受的损害进行了前后对照的准实验研究。我们发现,在2022年2月24日至5月20日俄罗斯的围困期间,马里乌波尔77%的医疗设施遭到破坏。设施规模与损害无关,这表明对医疗设施的攻击并非随机发生,而是可能出于故意瞄准的结果。这是首次对正在进行的冲突对特别保护的医疗基础设施的影响进行交叉引用的前后普查研究。