Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has spotlighted the long-standing issue of attacks on hospitals, medical personnel, and civilian populations during times of war.

It has been more than 150 years since international law first required that combatants refrain from attacking hospitals, the wounded and sick, and health workers, yet these assaults persist—often without consequences.

Such attacks threaten public health infrastructure, both immediately and for years thereafter. So far, the World Health Organization has verified more than 100 attacks on health care workers and facilities since Russia invaded Ukraine, and experts worry these attacks will continue.

During this hybrid event on Wednesday, April 13, noon–1 p.m. EDT, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health experts Chris Beyrer and Len Rubenstein, along with Sergii Dvoriak, head of the board, founder, and senior scientist of the Ukrainian Institute for Public Health Practice; Mulugeta Gebregziabher, professor of biostatistics and vice chair of the Department of Public Health Sciences at the Medical University of South Carolina; and Ghutai Sadeq Yaqubi, MD, MPH, acting technical director of USAID's Urban Health Initiative Project through Jhpiego in Afghanistan, will provide context for the violence against health care in ongoing conflicts in Ukraine, Myanmar, Tigray, and elsewhere. They will also discuss the threats to the creation of a functioning health system in Afghanistan in the wake of the U.S. withdrawal.

Against this backdrop, the experts will also consider the actions—and inaction—of the international community in addressing this violence against health care and its implications.

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