Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2014
Health-related data provide the basis of policy in many domains. By using a methodology specifically designed to gather data about any form of violence and its impact, violence affecting health-care personnel, health-care facilities, and the wounded and sick in these facilities can be quantified on an objective basis. The impact of this form of violence and its accompanying insecurity goes beyond those directly affected to the many who are ultimately denied health care. Reliable data about both the violence affecting health-care personnel and facilities and the ‘knock-on’ effects of this violence on the health of many others have a critical role to play in influencing the policies of all stakeholders, including governments, in favour of greater security of effective and impartial health care in armed conflict and other emergencies. The International Committee of the Red Cross has undertaken a study that attempts to understand on a global basis the nature and impact of the many different kinds of violence affecting health care.
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6 The definition of violence adopted by the WHO is ‘the intentional use of physical force or power – threatened or actual – against oneself, another person, or against a group or community that results in or has the likelihood to result in injury or death, psychological harm, maldevelopment or deprivation’. See Violence Prevention Alliance, ‘Definition and typology of violence’, available at: www.who.int/violenceprevention/approach/definition/en/index.html.
7 ICRC, Health Care in Danger: A Sixteen-Country Study, ICRC, Geneva, August 2011, available at: www.icrc.org/eng/resources/documents/report/hcid-report-2011-08-10.htm.
8 Editor's note: this article mainly focuses on the methodology used during the Sixteen-Country Study. Since then, the methodology has evolved and the ICRC, in the context of its monitoring activities, continues to collect data on incidents affecting the delivery of health care, through various sources of information.
9 See Taback-Coupland model, above note 5.
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17 See ICRC, above note 3.
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22 ICRC, Healthcare in Danger: Respecting and Protecting Healthcare in Armed Conflict and Other Situations of Violence, Resolution adopted at the 31st International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, Geneva, 28 November–1 December 2011, available at: www.rcrcconference.org/docs_upl/en/R5_HCiD_EN.pdf.
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26 Talk by Dr. Unni Karunakara, President of MSF International, at the London Symposium, 23 April 2012, available at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBeOgAdxXs0.
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29 See above note 11.
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32 See above note 16.
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