150 research outputs found
The human right to a healthy environmentâtime for the public health community to take urgent action
With growing recognition of the extent to which human activities are imperilling planetary health, it is critical to understand how international law can uphold a healthy environment. Drawing from 50 years of dedicated diplomacy, the United Nations General Assembly has recognised the right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment under international law.1 The July 2022 resolution responds to the urgent dangers posed by climate change, environmental degradation, and bio-diversity loss. The public health community should seize the opportunity to implement this new right to promote planetary health
The bit in the middle: a synthesis of global health literature on policy formulation and adoption
Policy formulation and adoption are poorly understood phases of the health policy process. We conducted a narrative synthesis of 28 articles on health policy in low- and middle-income countries to provide insight on what kinds of activities take place in these phases, the actors crafting policies and the institutions in which policy making occurs. The narrative synthesis involved an inductive process to identify relevant articles, extract relevant data from text and reach new understandings. We find that actors exercising decision-making power include not just various governmental entities, but also civil society, commissioners, nongovernmental organizations and even clergy. We also find that most articles identified two or more distinct institutions in which policy formulation and adoption occurred. Finally, we identify seven distinct activities inherent in policy formulation and adoption: generation of policy alternatives, deliberation and/or consultation, advocacy of specific policy alternatives, lobbying for specific alternatives, negotiation of policy decisions, drafting or enacting policy and guidance/influence on implementation development. Health policy researchers can draw on these categories to deepen their understanding of how policy formulation and adoption unfold
Advancing the Right to Health Through Global Organizations: The Potential Role of a Framework Convention on Global Health
Organizations, partnerships, and alliances form the building blocks of global governance. Global health organizations thus have the potential to play a formative role in determining the extent to which people are able to realize their right to health.
This article examines how major global health organizations, such as WHO, the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, UNAIDS, and GAVI approach human rights concerns, including equality, accountability, and inclusive participation. We argue that organizational support for the right to health must transition from ad hoc and partial to permanent and comprehensive.
Drawing on the literature and our knowledge of global health organizations, we offer good practices that point to ways in which such agencies can advance the right to health, covering nine areas: 1) participation and representation in governance processes; 2) leadership and organizational ethos; 3) internal policies; 4) norm-setting and promotion; 5) organizational leadership through advocacy and communication; 6) monitoring and accountability; 7) capacity building; 8) funding policies; and 9) partnerships and engagement. In each of these areas, we offer elements of a proposed Framework Convention on Global Health (FCGH), which would commit state parties to support these standards through their board membership and other interactions with these agencies. We also explain how the FCGH could incorporate these organizations into its overall financing framework, initiate a new forum where they collaborate with each other, as well as organizations in other regimes, to advance the right to health, and ensure sufficient funding for right to health capacity building.
We urge major global health organizations to follow the leadership of the UN Secretary-General and UNAIDS to champion the FCGH. It is only through a rights-based approach, enshrined in a new Convention, that we can expect to achieve health for all in our lifetimes
Searching for the Right to Health in the Sustainable Development Agenda Comment on âRights Language in the Sustainable Development Agenda: Has Right to Health Discourse and Norms Shaped Health Goals?â
The United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Agenda offers an opportunity to realise the right to health
for all. The Agendaâs âinterlinked and integratedâ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) provide the prospect of
focusing attention and mobilising resources not just for the provision of health services through universal health
coverage (UHC), but also for addressing the underlying social, structural, and political determinants of illness and
health inequity. However, achieving the goalsâ promises will require new mechanisms for inter-sectoral coordination
and action, enhanced instruments for rational priority-setting that involve affected population groups, and new
approaches to ensuring accountability. Rights-based approaches can inform developments in each of these areas.
In this commentary, we build upon a paper by Forman et al and propose that the significance of the SDGs lies
in their ability to move beyond a biomedical approach to health and healthcare, and to seize the opportunity
for the realization of the right to health in its fullest, widest, most fundamental sense: the right to a healthpromoting
and health protecting environment for each and every one of us. We argue that realizing the right
to health inherent in the SDG Agenda is possible but demands that we seize on a range of commitments,
not least those outlined in other goals, and pursue complementary openings in the Agenda â from inclusive
policy-making, to novel partnerships, to monitoring and review. It is critical that we do not risk losing the right
to health in the rhetoric of the SDGs and ensure that we make good on the promise of leaving no one behind
Protecting and promoting the rights of the âreserve army of labourâ: a policy analysis of structural determinants of migrant worker health in Pakistan and Qatar
Labour migrants who travel overseas for employment can face deep health inequities driven in large part by upstream social and structural determinants of health. We sought to study the âlabour migrant health ecosystemâ between one sending country (Pakistan) and one host country (Qatar), with a focus on how the ecosystem realizes the rights of labour migrants when addressing the social and structural determinants (e.g. housing, employment law, etc.) of health. Study objectives were to (1) undertake an in-depth review of policies addressing the structural and social determinants of the health of labour migrants in both Pakistan and Qatar, analysing the extent to which these policies align with global guidance, are equity-focused and have clear accountability mechanisms in place, and (2) explore national stakeholder perspectives on priority setting for labour migrant health. We used a mixed methods approach, combining policy content analysis and interviews with stakeholders in both countries. We found a wide range of guidance from the multilateral system on addressing structural determinants of the health of labour migrants. However, policy responses in Pakistan and Qatar contained a limited number of these recommended interventions and had low implementation potential and minimal reference to gender, equity and rights. Key national stakeholders had few political incentives to act and lacked inter-country coordination mechanisms required for an effective and cohesive response to labour migrant health issues. Effectively addressing such determinants to achieve health equity for labour migrants will depend on a shift in governmentsâ attitudes towards migrantsâfrom a reserve army of transient, replaceable economic resources to rights-holding members of society deserving of equality, dignity and respect
The human right to a healthy environmentâtime for the public health community to take urgent action
The public health community should urgently leverage the human right to a healthy environment to protect planetary health, argue Kent Buse and colleagues
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