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Health & Human Rights
 
Health
goes beyond the physical
health of an individual or a population and includes
the broader societal dimensions. Human rights go beyond the issue of access to
healthcare and involve the legal parallels for protection of physical, mental
and societal well-being. Our approach involves increasing awareness of the
link between health and human rights. We promote collaborative solutions to
health problems which provide the tools to break down barriers that inhibit
vulnerable populations’ access to health.
The Need for a Rights-Based Approach
Huge sums of money are
spent annually to improve the health of vulnerable populations. Yet, many of
these people are unable to access the funded health programs and other health
services because of discrimination, inequality and inadequate
infrastructure. Outright discrimination or inadvertent neglect by doctors,
government clinics, lawyers and policymakers, or even an uninformed media,
prevent vulnerable groups from receiving the information and services they so
desperately need. As a result, their serious physical and mental health problems go
untreated.
Health
as a Human Right
Health is more than healthcare.
It includes the social determinants of health. Under international law,
health is a right. In terms of health care, governments must ensure that
appropriate facilities and services are available to all residents. These terms
are defined as follows:
Accessible: Healthcare must be affordable
for all patients. Distribution of services must be done without discrimination
based upon race, gender, religion, legal status, ethnicity, sexual orientation,
level of education, or insurance status. Services must be accessible in terms of
facilities being located conveniently, and the payment system must be simple and
straight-forward to use.
High quality:
Health services must meet all state and federal quality guidelines and other
quantifiable measurements of care, but they must also include intangible
components of quality such as the doctor-patient relationship and the ability of
healthcare providers to relate to and communicate openly with patients.
Available: There must be sufficient medical personnel and
facilities to treat prevailing health problems.
Appropriate: Health services must meet the physical, educational,
mental, ethnic or cultural standards for the population served.
In addition, the beneficiaries
of health reform plans must have an opportunity to participate in their
design and implementation, have sufficient information about the new
services so that they can take advantage of them, and have access to a remedy
if the access, quality, appropriateness and availability criteria are not met.[1]
Learn More About Our Work in Health and
Human Rights

Health & Human Rights Resources
Uplift International
Health & Human Rights: Conference Proceedings, Jakarta, Indonesia

A Human
Rights Analysis of the Bush Health Plan Proposal

A Human Rights Analysis
of the Massachusetts Universal Health Plan
A Comparison
of Health Inequalities: A Survey of Developing Countries & the United States

Uplift
Op-Ed piece in The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, July 18, 2007
Others
Health & Human Rights: 25 Questions &
Answers 
The Right to Health in the U.S.: What
Does it Mean?
World Health Organization: Health & Human
Rights
World Health Organization:
Human Rights
Universal Declaration of Human
Rights
UN Documents: HIV/AIDS and
Human Rights
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
University of Washington
Global Health and Justice Project
National
Economic & Social Rights Initiative (NESRI)
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