122 research outputs found
Beyond the numbers: using rights-based perspectives to enhance antiretroviral treatment scale-up.
Human rights analyses, concepts, and in particular rhetoric have played a consistent role in the global response to HIV for over two decades. Despite the longstanding recognition of human rights as essential to an effective response, recent global guidance, particularly with respect to the implementation of antiretroviral treatment (ART) scale-up efforts, falls short of meaningfully incorporating human rights norms and concepts. Applying human rights to ART scale-up draws attention to who is gaining access to ART, how they are gaining access, and over what period of time, not just how many people gain access. Deliberate consideration of the human rights principles of the interdependence of rights (including attention to the legal and policy environment), participation, non-discrimination, accountability, and key aspects of the right to health can help to identify and overcome some of the challenges to increasing and sustaining access to treatment and needed services, as well as to promote accountability and transparency for what is done and how it is done. Whereas a need remains to document evidence of the ways in which a lack of attention to human rights negatively influences the long-term outcomes of scale-up programmes, this paper focuses on the positive role human rights can play in ART scale-up efforts, and offers suggestions for research and action moving forward
Applying Human Rights-Based Approaches to Public Health: Lessons Learned from Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Programs
The application of human rights norms at the national policy level is largely codified, but rigorous research on the field-level application of a human rights based approach (HRBA) to health programs is still in its infancy. The paper identifies human rights norms from international law and standards that are relevant to maternal, newborn and child health (MNCH) programs, and presents an example of how a HRBA has been previously applied in an MNCH project. It introduces a HRBA framework recently developed by Concern Worldwide and partners, and conducts a document analysis of a previous Concern Worldwide project in Malawi. Discussion focuses on where and how the project could have benefited from incorporation of a HRBA in project design, implementation and evaluation. The authors conclude by discussing how such inclusion could have impacted project outcomes, and how such analysis can help inform future efforts to implement a HRBA to health
Human rights in health systems frameworks: what is there, what is missing and why does it matter?
Global initiatives and recent G8 commitments to health systems strengthening have brought increased attention to factors affecting health system performance. While equity concerns and human rights language appear often in the global health discourse, their inclusion in health systems efforts beyond rhetorical pronouncements is limited. Building on recent work assessing the extent to which features compatible with the right to health are incorporated into national health systems, we examine how health systems frameworks have thus far integrated human rights concepts and human rights-based approaches to health in their conceptualisation. Findings point to the potential value of the inclusion of human rights in these articulations to increase the participation or involvement of clients in health systems, to broaden the concept of equity, to bring attention to laws and policies beyond regulation and to strengthen accountability mechanisms
Is the right to health compatible with sustainability?
Daniel Reidpath - ORCID: 0000-0002-8796-0420 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8796-0420http://jogha.org/documents/issue201501/jogh-05-010301.pdf5pubpub
Leaving No One Behind: Human Rights and Gender as Critical Frameworks for U=U
Experience has shown the need to explicitly address human rights and gender-related barriers in the rollout of HIV-related biomedical innovations, including “undetectable equals untransmittable” (U=U). This paper brings to light rights and gender considerations relevant to supporting U=U, recognizing a range of barriers that remain to be addressed for all people to benefit equally from U=U. We conducted a literature review to ascertain how human rights and gender were addressed in relevant publications, including peer-reviewed articles published between 2006 and 2020, relevant nongovernmental and global organizations’ publications, and abstracts presented at the 2019 International AIDS Conference, that explicitly addressed U=U or “treatment as prevention.” Despite evidence to illustrate the importance of attention to human rights and gender within U=U policies and interventions, there remains a lack of explicit attention to human rights and gender considerations in research and programming, particularly with regard to the rights principles of participation and accountability. Explicitly engaging all of these dimensions is key to informing interventions and improving people’s lives, health, and well-being
Advancing sexual health through human rights : the role of the law
In order to ensure accountability for the rights and health of their populations, states have an obligation to bring their laws into line with international, regional and national human rights standards. It is vital that people in the health sector understand how health, human rights and law interact, and their relevance to both individual and public health. The paper presents examples of legal changes and new standards related to non-discrimination, criminalization and access to sexual health and human rights information and services, and points governments towards shaping a legal environment that will meet their human rights obligations and improve sexual health
How are gender equality and human rights interventions included in sexual and reproductive health programmes and policies: a systematic review of existing research foci and gaps
The importance of promoting gender equality and human rights in sexual and reproductive
health (SRH) programmes and policies has been affirmed in numerous international
and regional agreements, most recently the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Given the critical role of research to determine what works, we aimed to identify research
gaps as part of a broader priority setting exercise on integrating gender equality and
human rights approaches in SRH programmes and policies. A systematic literature
review of reviews was conducted to examine the question: what do we know about how
research in the context of SRH programmes and policies has addressed gender equality
and human rights and what are the current gaps in research. We searched three databases
for reviews that addressed the research question, were published between 1994±
2014, and met methodological standards for systematic reviews, qualitative meta-syntheses
and other reviews of relevance to the research question. Additional grey literature
was identified based on expert input. Articles were appraised by the primary author and
examined by an expert panel. An abstraction and thematic analysis process was used to
synthesize findings. Of the 3,073 abstracts identified, 56 articles were reviewed in full and
23 were included along with 10 from the grey literature. The majority focused on interventions
addressing gender inequalities; very few reviews explicitly included human rights
based interventions. Across both topics, weak study designs and use of intermediate outcome
measures limited evidence quality. Further, there was limited evidence on interventions
that addressed marginalized groups. Better quality studies, longer-term indicators,
and measurement of unintended consequences are needed to better understand the
impact of these types of interventions on SRH outcomes. Further efforts are needed to cover research on gender equality and human rights issues as they pertain to a broader
set of SRH topics and populations.IS
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