Literature DB >> 20845829

Will we take suffering seriously? Reflections on what applying a human rights framework to health means and why we should care.

Alicia Ely Yamin1.   

Abstract

Since this journal was first published, rights-based approaches to health have prolferated in the health and development communities. At the same time, human rights advocacy organizations, courts, and UN actors have increasingly been engaged in applying rights norms in health contexts. Together with others in this issue, this article is a call not to lose sight of the radical potential of using a human rightsparadigm to promote health--even as we go about the pragmatic work of translating rights frameworks into practice in our research, advocacy, litigation strategies, program planning, and service delivery. Drawing together points made in other pieces in this issue, the article describes certain conceptual and practical implications of a transformative engagement between health and human rights. It argues that an appropriate starting point is to take suffering seriously; in so doing, approaches in both health and rights will necessarily shift. A human rights approach challenges biological individualism in both clinical medicine and public health, and builds on work in social epidemiology by providing frameworks for accountability. At the same time, using rights to advance the health of marginalized peoples around the world requires critiquing and expanding limited approaches to human rights, in theory and practice.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 20845829

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


  8 in total

1.  Ethical Perspective: Five Unacceptable Trade-offs on the Path to Universal Health Coverage.

Authors:  Ole Frithjof Norheim
Journal:  Int J Health Policy Manag       Date:  2015-10-11

2.  The Right to Health: Then, Now and a Call to Arms.

Authors:  Audrey R Chapman
Journal:  Health Hum Rights       Date:  2020-06

3.  Adolescent pregnancies and girls' sexual and reproductive rights in the amazon basin of Ecuador: an analysis of providers' and policy makers' discourses.

Authors:  Isabel Goicolea; Marianne Wulff; Miguel San Sebastian; Ann Ohman
Journal:  BMC Int Health Hum Rights       Date:  2010-06-07

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.  Socio-cultural and service delivery dimensions of maternal mortality in rural central India: a qualitative exploration using a human rights lens.

Authors:  Tej Ram Jat; Prakash R Deo; Isabel Goicolea; Anna-Karin Hurtig; Miguel San Sebastian
Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2015-04-01       Impact factor: 2.640

Review 6.  Advocacy for health equity: a synthesis review.

Authors:  Linden Farrer; Claudia Marinetti; Yoline Kuipers Cavaco; Caroline Costongs
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2015-06       Impact factor: 4.911

7.  TB in Vulnerable Populations: The Case of an Indigenous Community in the Peruvian Amazon.

Authors:  Camila Gianella; César Ugarte-Gil; Godofredo Caro; Rula Aylas; César Castro; Claudia Lema
Journal:  Health Hum Rights       Date:  2016-06

8.  Why is a "Good Abortion Law" Not Enough? The Case of Estonia.

Authors:  Liiri Oja
Journal:  Health Hum Rights       Date:  2017-06
  8 in total

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