| Literature DB >> 30008558 |
Aquiles Ignacio Arrieta-Gómez1.
Abstract
Colombia has made significant progress in the recognition and protection of the right to health. Using litigation-a structural element of the democratic Colombian design-many people have had to fight in order to enjoy effective access to health care. Such litigation has proven a pacific and democratic way to protect a constitutional principle: health as a fundamental and justiciable right. In 2008, in the wake of thousands of individual rulings on the right to health, Colombia's Constitutional Court issued a structural decision, T-760 of 2008, ordering government entities to identify flaws that made the country's health system outdated and inequitable and to take correctional measures. In the years following this decision, Congress and the executive branch have increasingly included a rights-oriented perspective in public policies. The Colombian case reveals judicial intervention as a legitimate way to extend pressure on the government to act according to constitutional boundaries. Although there is still a long road ahead, public institutions responsible for health care are now on a constitutionally acceptable track.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30008558 PMCID: PMC6039729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Hum Rights ISSN: 1079-0969
Figure 2.Percentage of users in the subsidized and contributory regimes
Ten years after T-760
| 2008 | 2018 |
|---|---|
| Unclear spectrum of services covered by the benefits plan; plan outdated since its creation (1994) | Four updates to the benefits plan since the T-760 ruling (2009, 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2017) |
| No internal procedure for authorizing services (other than medicines) not included in the benefits plan | An internal procedure for authorizing services not included in the benefits plan has been created |
| Increasingly high numbers of tutelas regarding health care (more than 40% of all tutelas) | The growing tendency of health care tutelas stopped for a while (23.74% in 2014); now there is a “new wave” with different triggers |
| The benefits plans of the contributory and subsidized regimes were not equitable | The benefits plans are the same for both regimes (for children since 2009, for everybody since 2012) |
| Substantial information asymmetry; little knowledge about benefits, rights, and the performance of the health care providers | Creation of a “patients’ bill of rights” and a “performance chart for health care providers” (2009) Progress in the creation of a ranking of health care providers |
| In 2008, 83.26% of the Colombian population was affiliated with a health care provider | In 2016, 95.6% of the Colombian population was affiliated with a health care provider |