Monday, May 5, 2025

Wars threaten health of 600m women, children worldwide – Report

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Rayyan Alhassan
Rayyan Alhassanhttps://dailynigerian.com/author/rayyan/
Rayyan Alhassan is a graduate of Journalism and Mass Communication at Sikkim Manipal University, Ghana. He is the acting Managing Editor at the Daily Nigerian newspaper, a position he has held for the past 3 years. He can be reached via rayyanalhassan@dailynigerian.com, or www.facebook.com/RayyanAlhassan, or @Rayyan88 on Twitter.
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Protracted and messy wars mean more than 600 million women and children worldwide cannot receive essential healthcare, according to estimates published in The Lancet medical journal.

By 2019, the authors wrote, there were 54 “state-based armed conflicts” in 35 countries – wars that had lasted an average of two decades and presented a “growing threat to humanitarian access and the delivery of essential health services, affecting at least 630 million women and children.”

The research team, from nine institutions, including Stanford University and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, estimated that by 2017, 10 per cent of the world’s women and 6 per cent of children “were either forcibly displaced or living dangerously close to conflict zones.”

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From 2009 to 2017, the number of women and children displaced by fighting jumped from around 30 million to more than 50 million, with factors such as “population growth, more conflicts, increasing use of explosive and chemical weapons in urban areas” driving the rise.

Wars, the researchers said, are increasingly characterized by “a lack of respect for International Humanitarian Law” and tarnished by “the systematic use of explosive and chemical weapons in cities and pervasive sexual violence against women and girls” – in turn bringing “new challenges to humanitarian access, the delivery of health services, and the protection of humanitarian workers and health facilities from attack.”

“It is clear that the indirect effects of armed conflict on women and children are far greater than the effects of actual fighting,” said co-author Dr Hala Ghattas of the American University of Beirut.

dpa/NAN

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