NYSNA Board of Directors Endorses NNU Statement on the Crisis in the Middle East
The NYSNA Board of Directors endorses the following statement from our national affiliate, National Nurses United, on the crisis in the Middle East.
National Nurses United Statement on the Crisis in the Middle East
As nurses, our patients trust us to help and heal them when they sustain harm due to conditions in their everyday lives. To honor that sacred trust, it is our duty to speak up for every human being's right to a life free from violence and the traumas of war.
As patient advocates, we are horrified by the mass killing and brutal violence that has happened in Israel and Palestine. We condemn the atrocities perpetrated by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, which led to the deaths and kidnapping of more than a thousand Israeli civilians. We continue to call for the immediate release of all civilians still being held hostage. We condemn the massive attacks from the Israeli military that have killed more than 41,000 civilians in Gaza. These ongoing attacks have devastated the health care system, displaced millions of people—some multiple times—and broken down infrastructure that keeps people healthy and alive. We grieve all the lives lost in these indefensible tragedies and all the patients who have been sickened and injured.
Nurses believe that our patients and their families have the right to health care and to the necessities required to sustain life and health. The siege imposed by the Israeli army has prevented civilians in Gaza from accessing necessities including food, water, electricity, fuel, and life-saving medical supplies, while also preventing the safe movement of civilians currently trapped in Gaza. The resulting humanitarian crisis endangers the health and wellbeing of millions of civilians. Patients in Gaza have been at high risk of famine, with more than 96 percent of the population being food insecure. Further, critical health care infrastructure in Gaza—and health care workers themselves—have been purposely targeted, a violation of international law. As a result, according to the United Nations, more than 500 health care workers in Gaza have been killed and more than 300 have been arbitrarily detained. Without health care infrastructure and workers to vaccinate babies and children, we have seen the first outbreak of polio in Gaza in 25 years.
Nurses are no strangers to caring for patients in traumatic situations. But we know that we cannot provide the care we are educated and called to provide for people who entrust their lives to us when we do not have even the most basic supplies and infrastructure, and when we don’t know whether our patients and we nurses ourselves are safe at work. We stand in solidarity with the nurses and health care workers in Palestine and in Israel as they work to provide care in a time of crisis, under conditions that do not support health and healing.
National Nurses United calls for an immediate and permanent ceasefire and suspension of military aid to ensure delivery of humanitarian aid, release of all hostages, and an end to this violence. We urge all parties to protect human life and the health and wellbeing of civilians in both Israel and Palestine.