Ukraine reported its highest daily number of new confirmed COVID-19 cases on 10 February 2022. In the evolving context of the Russian invasion that commenced on 24 February 2022, Ukraine has reported no daily COVID-19 testing data since 18 February 2022, and no daily new confirmed COVID-19 case data since 3 March 2022.1 However, as the country continues to defend itself against Russian aggression, its battlefront against COVID-19 continues to rage, and is likely to intensify because of the conflict.
COVID-19 IN THE BACKGROUND
War broke out against a background of rising COVID-19 infections in Ukraine responsible for around 250 confirmed daily deaths, and a relatively low population coverage of COVID-19 vaccination (only 36.3% of those eligible had received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine by 27 February 2022).1 This stands atop concerning background rates of non-communicable (especially cardiovascular, respiratory, and diabetes) and communicable diseases (especially HIV, tuberculosis, and viral hepatitis)2 managed in an over-stretched and under reform state-funded health system.3
WORSENED BY CONFLICT
The risk to Ukrainian public health posed by COVID-19 is dramatically emphasised by Russian hostilities. Thousands of Ukrainian residents have spent multiple weeks sheltering in under-ventilated and overcrowded underground spaces with inherent exposure to greatly increased risk of viral transmission. Above ground, the healthcare facilities required to treat those with severe COVID-19 infection are either unsafe to access or no longer standing.4
The mass human migration from cities in the east has generated 8 million internally displaced people within Ukraine (as of 3 May 2022),5 many of whom now reside in temporary evacuee centres fashioned from repurposed schools, nurseries, and gymnasiums. These facilities are grossly overcrowded, house populations with disproportionate burdens of existing disease, and accommodate those with significant risk factors for viral transmission including malnutrition, extremes of age, and uncontrolled chronic disease.6
Similar conditions face a substantial proportion of the 5 million Ukrainian refugees who now reside in temporary facilities in neighbouring European countries.7 Under such conditions, COVID-19 outbreaks are increasingly probable within these vulnerable populations and their hosting communities. Concurrently, the vast scale of migration places immense pressure on existing health services in both Ukraine and receiving countries, thereby raising additional barriers to high-quality health care that subsequently increase COVID-19 morbidity and mortality.
DOUBLE INJUSTICE
The humanitarian crisis sparked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is being compounded by the conflict’s impact on COVID-19. The global public health community must urgently support Ukraine’s pandemic response — including vaccination, testing, and protection of internally displaced people and refugees — and join its battlefront with COVID-19.
- © British Journal of General Practice 2022