Literature DB >> 20845827

Challenging orthodoxies: the road ahead for health and human rights.

Paul Farmer1.   

Abstract

Two decades of work delivering health care in poor communities provide a standpoint from which to challenge conventional doctrines in human rights and public health. These orthodoxies include the priority often assigned to civil and political rights over economic and social rights and a narrow concept of cost-effectiveness in public health policy. An analysis based on economic and social rights underscores, for example, that effectively treating infectious diseases in poor communities requires ensuring that people receive adequate food The challenge of maternal mortality in low-income settings similarly shows the need for an approach to rights that is simultaneously comprehensive and pragmatic. In many settings, paying community health workers for their efforts on behalf of their neighbors can also be seen as a critical strategy to realize right. Across contexts, the yield on the expanded and pragmatic view of health and human rights adumbrated here may be considerable. In forthcoming issues, Health and Human Rights will continue to investigate the conceptual, but above all the practical aspects of such issues, seeking to shift the health and rights agenda in a way that may make sense to the world's poor and marginalized, the chief victims of contemporary human rights violations.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 20845827

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Hum Rights        ISSN: 1079-0969


  11 in total

1.  Making the case for human rights in global health education, research and policy.

Authors:  Lisa Forman
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2011 May-Jun

2.  Identifying the core elements of effective community health worker programs: a research agenda.

Authors:  Sarah R Arvey; Maria E Fernandez
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2012-07-19       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Listening to community health workers: how ethnographic research can inform positive relationships among community health workers, health institutions, and communities.

Authors:  Kenneth Maes; Svea Closser; Ippolytos Kalofonos
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2014-03-13       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Adolescent pregnancies in the Amazon Basin of Ecuador: a rights and gender approach to adolescents' sexual and reproductive health.

Authors:  Isabel Goicolea
Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2010-06-24       Impact factor: 2.640

5.  Becoming and remaining community health workers: perspectives from Ethiopia and Mozambique.

Authors:  Kenneth Maes; Ippolytos Kalofonos
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2013-03-28       Impact factor: 4.634

6.  The right to sutures: social epidemiology, human rights, and social justice.

Authors:  Sridhar Venkatapuram; Ruth Bell; Michael Marmot
Journal:  Health Hum Rights       Date:  2010-12-15

7.  Mental health response in Haiti in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake: a case study for building long-term solutions.

Authors:  Giuseppe Raviola; Eddy Eustache; Catherine Oswald; Gary S Belkin
Journal:  Harv Rev Psychiatry       Date:  2012 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.732

8.  "You cannot eat rights": a qualitative study of views by Zambian HIV-vulnerable women, youth and MSM on human rights as public health tools.

Authors:  Choolwe Muzyamba; Elena Broaddus; Catherine Campbell
Journal:  BMC Int Health Hum Rights       Date:  2015-10-05

9.  Doubling Syndemics: Ethnographic Accounts of the Health Situation of Homeless Romanian Roma in Copenhagen.

Authors:  Camilla Ida Ravnbøl
Journal:  Health Hum Rights       Date:  2017-12

10.  Greater involvement of people living with HIV in health care.

Authors:  Odetoyinbo Morolake; David Stephens; Alice Welbourn
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2009-03-14       Impact factor: 5.396

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.