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Health for All in Low-Income Settings ECOSOC March 31, 2009. Severe malaria. The 1948 Constitution of the World Health Organization declares the highest attainable standard of health to be a fundamental human right, “without distinction
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Health for All in Low-Income Settings ECOSOC March 31, 2009
The 1948 Constitution of the World Health Organization declares the highest attainable standard of health to be a fundamental human right, “without distinction of race, religion, political belief, economic or social condition.” The Universal Declaration of Human Rights of the same year declares the right to security in the event of sickness. The Alma Ata Declaration of 1978 called for “Health for All by 2000” through access to primary health facilities. The Millennium Development Goals adopted in 2000 call for a reduction of child mortality by two-thirds, maternal mortality by three-fourths, and the control of AIDS, malaria, and other diseases, by 2015 compared with a 1990 baseline.
Decade of Scaling Up, 2000-2010: • Backdrop (failure of Health for All, pandemics, structural adjustment, • aid stagnation) • Commission on Macroeconomics and Health (2000) • Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations (2000) • Millennium Development Goals (2000) • Gates Public-Private Partnerships (2000) • AIDS, TB, Malaria (commitments, initiatives) (2000, 2001) • Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria (2001) • Measles, Polio, NTDs (25+ years) • Non-Communicable Diseases (2000) • Disease Control Priorities in Development Countries (DCPP) • Human Resource for Health (2004) • UN Millennium Project Report (2005) • Millennium Villages (2005) • Community Health Workers (NRHM, Ethiopia, others) • mHealth, RDTs, and other technological advances
The Continuing Health Financing Gap for the Poorest 1 billion: • Roughly $50 billion per year needed ($50 per capita), of which: • $12 billion from low-income countries • $10 billion in existing aid (roughly 0.03 percent of GDP) • Financing Gap: • $28 billion per year from donors (0.07 percent of GDP)
Fundamental Public Health Approach • Epidemiology • Interventions (within and beyond health system) • Systems Design • Management Planning and Implementation • Investment • Training • Community empowerment • Oversight • Monitoring, evaluation, feedback • Financing • Feedback
Epidemiology: Category I: Infection, Nutrition, Safe Childbirth Category II: Non-Communicable Disease Category III: Violence and Accidents
Underlying causes related to: • Tropical Ecology • Unsafe Water • Indoor Air Pollution • Nutritional Deficiencies • Lack of Preventative Health Services • Lack of Clinical Health Services • Lack of Family Planning and Contraception • Lack of Safe Delivery and Neonatal Care • POVERTY IS THE MAIN UNDERLYING CAUSE
Intervention Strategies: • Deploying Scalable, Replicable Proven Interventions • Combining Health Sector and Non-Health Sector Interventions • Combining Prevention and Treatment • Empowering Households • Mass application where feasible (bed nets, vaccines, nutrition) • Application of mHealth strategies for scale up
Success Stories in the Control of Neglected Tropical Disease
Some Recent Expenditure Date (2003): • Public Sector Outlays for Health, per capita • Kenya $8 • Malawi $5 • Mali $9 • Brazil $96 • Mexico $172 • Thailand $47 • Canada $1,866 • United States $2,548
Holistic Approaches to Community-led development through Millennium Villages
Core Interventions: • Agriculture (inputs, diversification, business development) • Health (clinical care, CHWs, nutrition, emergency services) • Education (school facilities, teachers, school meals, ICTs) • Infrastructure (roads, power, connectivity, water and sanitation) • Business development (microfinance, farmer cooperatives, • agricultural financing)
Core Health Interventions in the MVs • Clinical Health Services • Community Health Workers • Routine Prevention (vaccines, de-worming, malaria control) • Mobile Health and ICT services • Emergency Care • Safe Delivery • Family Planning • Additional Services: dental, eye, CVD
Rich countries should devote 0.1 percent of GNP $35 billion per year as of 2006) to health assistance for poor countries in order to close the financing gap of the primary health system
Half of that could effectively be channeled through the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria
Low-income countries would fulfill the Abuja Commitment of allocating at least 15 percent of domestic revenues to the health sector. Total spending (domestic and external funding) should be greater than $50 per person per year in order to ensure basic health services.
The world would adopt a plan for comprehensive malaria control by 2010, with an end of malaria mortality by 2012 (estimated cost $3 billion per year)
The G-8 would fulfill the commitment to universal access to ARVs by 2010
The world would fulfill the Global Plan to Stop TB, including closing the financing gap of $3 billion per year.
The world would fulfill the funding for access to Sexual and Reproductive Health Services, including emergency obstetrical care and contraception, by the year 2015
The Global Fund would establish a window for 7 neglected tropical diseases which can be controlled by mass chemotherapy: hookworm, ascariasis, trichuriasis, onchocerciasis, schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis, and trachoma
The Global Fund would establish a window for health systems, including mass training of community health workers
The world would introduce primary health care (mass prevention and treatment) of non-communicable diseases, including: oral health, eye care, mental health, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic disorders, including measures on lifestyle (smoking, trans-fats, urban design for a healthy environment), surveillance, and clinical care.