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This new movement needs evidence, not just ideology
By 2020 the World Health Organization and the World
Bank predict that war will be one of the top 10 causes of disability
and death.1 Recent events may well bring this date
forward. "Is there anything that health professionals can do to
prevent this?" was the key question addressed at the first
international "Peace through Health" conference held last month at
McMaster University (www.humanities. mcmaster.ca/peace-health).
Health professionals care for those wounded in war. The Red Cross
was founded in 1864 specifically for this purpose. Other health
agencies, such as the Nobel Prize winning Médecins Sans Frontières,
have been involved in dealing not just with the immediate but also the
long term consequences of war. The cost of war goes beyond the direct
health effects of bombs and bullets. Economic and social systems are
disrupted, famine and epidemics may follow, and resources are diverted
to military rather than health goals The conference organisers have previously described war as a disease
process.4 Like other diseases, war has risk factors. These
can be prevented from developing (primordial prevention) or be modified
(primary prevention), and the effects of war can be treated (secondary
prevention). Once war has caused damage then rehabilitation is required
(tertiary prevention). The conference proposed that healthcare workers,
through health initiatives, could play important parts at every stage
of the process of war as they do in disease.2 But have
there been any successful initiatives to date, or is this an example of
health professionals thinking that they have an answer for every ill?
Evidence supporting secondary prevention comes from a systematic review
of health initiatives in conflicts over the past 15 years.5 This found that ceasefires had been negotiated in
seven countries to allow the delivery of humanitarian aid and
immunisation programmes. The most striking example occurred three times
each year in El Salvador between 1985 and 1992. Unicef, the Roman
Catholic church, and other organisations negotiated such days of
tranquillity and immunised 300 000 children, reducing the incidence of
polio to zero.
An example of tertiary prevention is the peace through health programme
in Bosnia-Herzegovina.6 After the war ended in 1985 the
neglected health system, like many other domains, was divided between
the Bosnian Croats and the Bosnian Serbs. WHO and the UK's Department
for International Development (DFID) worked together on a programme to
unify the staffing, service provision, training, and delivery of health
care. This, they claim, reduced separatist attitudes.
While there are other examples of smaller, locally based
health initiatives,7 none has been adequately evaluated.
Even the WHO-DFID programme used anecdotal comments from field teams to
say that volatility had reduced and social cohesion improved. The
report admits that it could have been the wider peace process and post
war fatigue felt by the population that brought about these changes.
Their survey of 201 ethnically diverse health professionals in
Bosnia-Herzegovina found a significant association between those who
had been involved in interethnic activity and a willingness to
collaborate in a unified health system. However, a cross sectional survey cannot support a causal relation between participation in
interethnic activity and changes in attitudes.
The conference organisers have called for "peace through health" to
become a new discipline that should be taught to health professionals.8 In the next two years they plan to form a
collaborative network to further research. A new assessment tool could
be an important step forward in evaluating the impact of aid on
conflict.9
With few examples of peace through health initiatives, it is ideology
that is driving the movement at present. Importantly, humanitarian aid
has even worsened conflict at times. In Sudan in 1998, for example,
large amounts of grain intended as aid were diverted to the military,
thereby strengthening their capability.10 Peace through
health can also be viewed as a form of political control. For
example, participation in the peace through health programme in
Bosnia-Herzegovina was a prerequisite for the delivery of aid. Health
professionals could lose their status of neutrality and impartiality.
Taking place after military action started in Afghanistan, the
conference had a sense of urgency and immediacy. However, health professionals are more likely to be persuaded that peace through health
works by evidence, not ideology.
BMJ
all of which make war a public
health problem.
2 3
| 1. | Murray C, Lopez A, eds. The global burden of disease: a comprehensive assessment of mortality and disability from diseases, injuries, and risk factors in 1990 and project to 2020. Cambridge, MA: Harvard School of Public Health, 1996. |
| 2. |
MacQueen G, Santa-Barbara J.
Peace building through health initiatives.
BMJ
2000;
321:
293-296 |
| 3. | Levy B, Sidel V. War and public health. Oxford: OUP, 1997. |
| 4. |
Yusef S, Anand S, MacQueen G.
Can medicine prevent war?
BMJ
1998;
317:
1669-1670 |
| 5. | Rodriguez-Garcia R, Sclesser M, Bernstein R. How can health serve as a bridge for peace? Washington, DC: George Washington Center for International Health, 2001. |
| 6. | WHO/DFID Peace through health programme. Copenhagen: WHO, 1999. |
| 7. | Peters M, ed. A health to peace handbook. Hamilton, Ontario: McMaster University, 1997. |
| 8. | MacQueen G, Santa-Barbara J, Neufeld V, Yusuf S, Horton R. Health and peace: time for a new discipline. Lancet 2001; 357: 1460-1461[Medline]. |
| 9. | Bush K. A measure of peace: peace and conflict impact assessment (PICA) of development projects in conflict zones. Ottawa: International Development Research Centre, 1998. |
| 10. | Report on the evaluation of Danish humanitarian assistance to Sudan, 1992-98. , Vol 7. Sudan Copenhagen: Danida, 1999:42. |
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