Attacks on healthcare are increasing globally, often with impunity and limited accountability with profound impacts on healthcare workers, the populations they serve and the wider health system, with effects that last well beyond the end of hostilities. Healthcare workers face impacts both on their personal and professional lives, with additional strains on their families which can lead them to emigrate, even where they may hold idealistic resolve to remain. This exodus (as well as the killing or detention) of their colleagues, places strains on the remaining healthcare workers and health system at a time when needs are at their highest. The cessation of such attacks, the naming of perpetrators and enforcing legal accountability are essential. To mitigate the long-term impacts on the health system, policies which build resilience into the production, distribution, retention, and demand components of health labour market (HLM) dynamics must be implemented in ways which are contextualised and dynamic.
Abbara et al. (Tue,) studied this question.