Title: WHO Essential Drugs Strategy
1 Access to essential drugs as a human right
September 2002
Hans V. Hogerzeil, MD, PhD, FRCP Edin Essential
Drugs and Medicines Policy (EDM) World Health
Organization Tel 41.22.791.3528. Fax
41.22.791.4167
2 Human Rights
- Human rights concern the relation the between
state and the individual they lead to state
obligations and individual entitlements - All human rights are interdependent and
interrelated. Health is a fundamental human right
indispensable for the exercise of other human
rights - Freedom from discrimination underpins all
- Promotion of human rights is one of the principle
purposes of the United Nations. In 1997 the
Secretary-General put human rights at the core of
the UN.
3First expression of the right to healthThe WHO
Constitution (1946)
- The States parties to this Constitution declare,
in conformity with the Charter of the United
Nations, that the following principles are basic
to the happiness, harmonious relations and
security of all peoples. - Health is a state of complete physical, mental
and social well-being and not merely the absence
of disease or infirmity. - The enjoyment of the highest attainable standard
of health is one of the fundamental rights of
every human being without distinction of race,
religion, political belief, economic or social
condition (...)
4Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948)
- Art.25.1
- Everyone has the right to a standard of living
adequate for the health of himself and of his
family, including food, clothing, housing and
medical care and necessary social services
5The right to health is also recognizedin
numerous other instruments
- 1961 European Social Charter
- 1966 International Covenant on Economics, Social
and Cultural Rights (most detailed see Article
12.1 and 12.2) - 1978 Declaration of Alma Ata
- 1981 African Charter on Human and Peoples
Rights - 1988 Additional Protocol to the American
Convention on HRs in the Area of Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights - 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child
6The Cold War Civil and political rights
versuseconomic social and cultural Rights
- In 1966 the implementation of the Universal
Declaration into binding international law lead
to a split in human rights issues, and to two
separate treaties - International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights - International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights
7International Covenant on Economics, Social and
Cultural Rights (ratified by 145 countries)
- Article 12.1
- recognizes the right of everyone to the
enjoyment of the highest attainabrile standard of
physical and mental health - Article 12.2
- illustrates a number of steps to be taken by
States parties to achieve - a. maternal, child and reproductive health
- b. healthy natural and workplace environments
- c. prevention, treatment and control of disease
- d. health facilities, goods and services
8Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
RightsGeneral Comment nr.14 (May 2000)
- Art.12.2.c
- Right to prevention, treatment and control of
diseases includes creation of a system of urgent
medical care in case of accidents, epidemics and
disaster relief and humanitarian assistance - Art 12.2.d
- Right to health facilities, goods and services
includes appropriate treatment of prevalent
diseases, preferably at community level and the
provision of essential drugs
9Right to health (like all human rights)
imposesthree levels of obligations
- Right to respect - refrain from interfering do
not deny or limit equal access to preventive,
curative, palliative care - Right to protect - obligation to ensure equal
access to facilities provided by third parties - Right to fulfil - obligation to facilitate,
provide and promote (e.g. administrative,
budgetary, judiciary and promotional measures)
10International Covenant on Economics, Social and
Cultural Rights, General Comment nr.14 (May
2000) Core obligations
- Minimum essential levels of each of the rights
enunciated in the Covenant, including essential
primary care as described in the Alma Ata
Declaration including - Non-discriminatory access to health facilities,
goods and services, especially for the vulnerable
and marginalized - Essential food housing sanitation
- Essential drugs as defined by WHO Action
Programme ED - Equitable distribution of health services and
goods - A national public health strategy and plan of
action
11Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
RightsGeneral Comment nr.14 (May 2000)Essential
components of fulfillment of right to health
- Availability - includes essential drugs as
defined by the WHO Action Programme on Essential
Drugs - Accessibility - based on non-discrimination,
physical accessibility, affordability and access
to information - Acceptability - respectful of medical ethics and
culturally appropriate and sensitive to gender
and life-cycle - Quality - scientifically and medically
12Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
RightsGeneral Comment nr.14 (May 2000)Party
obligations
- Progressive realization, within limits of
available resources - But some obligations are immediate
- Exercise right without discrimination (art.2.2)
- Take steps toward the full realization of article
12 these steps must be deliberate, concrete and
targeted towards full realization of the right to
health
13International Covenant on Economics, Social and
Cultural Rights, General Comment nr.14 (May
2000) International obligations
- State parties have to respect and protect the
enjoyment of the right to health in other
countries - Facilitate access to essential facilities/services
in other countries and provide necessary aid
when required - As members of international bodies (IMF, World
Bank) refrain from imposing embargoes or similar
measures restricting the supply of another state
with adequate medicines and supplies
14Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
RightsGeneral Comment nr.14 (May 2000)Violations
- Adoption of retrogressive measures, repeal,
suspension - Failure to take all steps to ensure the right to
health e.g. - failure to adopt or implement a national health
policy designed to ensure the right to health for
anyone - insufficient expenditure or misallocation of
public resources - failure to monitor realization of the right to
health in the country - failure to take measures to reduce inequitable
distribution of health facilities, goods and
services
Important distinguish inability from
unwillingness of the State
15Access to essential drugs as a human rightWhere
are we now?
- Health is a human right (Univ.Decl.Hum.Rights).
- The right to health care includes the right to
emergency care and health facilities, goods and
services (Covenant) - The right to facilities, good and services
includes the provision of essential drugs as
defined by WHO (GCom.14) - State parties are under immediate obligation to
guarantee that the right to health care is
exercised without discrimination, and that
concrete steps are taken towards full
realization, with emphasis on vulnerable and
marginal groups
16What could it mean in practice?(1) Components of
the rights-based approach
- Process
- HR as framework for health development
- Assess HR implications of any policy and
programme - Substantive components
- Focus on marginalized and vulnerable groups
- Equity ensure that health systems are accessible
to all - Gender perspective e.g. disaggregated statistics
- Free, meaningful participation by beneficiaries
- Promote right to education and to information
- Transparency, use of indicators and benchmarks
- Safeguards and redress mechanisms
17Access to essential drugs as a human rightWhat
could it mean in practice?(2) Definition of
minimum needs
- A concrete implication of Art.12.2 (d) needs a
list of priority diseases to describe the minimum
essential level of primary care and a
cost-effective treatment for each - This will lead to a core list of essential
medicines - can this be the same as the WHO Model
List of Essential Medicines?
- Question How to define a list of priority
diseases? - Global burden of disease?
- Availability of safe and cost-effective
treatment? - Availability of evidence-based treatment
guideline?
18What could it mean in practice?(3) Verification
of obligations under the International Covenant
- State parties can be asked to report regularly
on - access to essential medicines
- aspects of equity
- progress through Government efforts
- WHO/EDM can support the UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights the new Special UN Rapporteur on
Health by recommending practical indicators for
such monitoring
19National recognition of a Right to Health
20What could it mean in practice?(4) Support to
national NGOs and patient/consumer advocates
- WHO publication of a list of state parties to the
various human rights declarations and treaties -
to be used as a tool for national public pressure
on their own governments - WHO promotion of core List of Essential Medicines
to define government obligations - Promotion of simple monitoring tools for NGOs
(e.g. on access and prices of essential medicines)
21World Health Organisation Department of Essential
Drugs and Medicines Policy 1211 Geneva,
Switzerland Fax 41-22-7914167 Web Site
http//www.who.medicines/ Documentation Centre
darec_at_who.int
WHO