| Literature DB >> 33883188 |
Rene Loewenson1, Eugenio Villar2, Rama Baru3, Robert Marten4.
Abstract
The way healthy societies are conceptualised shapes efforts to achieve them. This paper explores the features and drivers of frameworks for healthy societies that had wide or sustained policy influence post-1978 at global level and as purposively selected southern regions, in India, Latin America and East and Southern Africa. A thematic analysis of 150 online documents identified paradigms and themes. The findings were discussed with expertise from the regions covered to review and validate the findings.Globally, comprehensive primary healthcare, whole-of-government and rights-based approaches have focused on social determinants and social agency to improve health as a basis for development. Biomedical, selective and disease-focused technology-driven approaches have, however, generally dominated, positioning health improvements as a result of macroeconomic growth. Traditional approaches in the three southern regions previously mentioned integrated reciprocity and harmony with nature. They were suppressed by biomedical, allopathic models during colonialism and by postcolonial neoliberal economic reforms promoting selective, biomedical interventions for highest-burden diseases, with weak investment in public health. In all three regions, holistic, sociocultural models and claims over natural resources re-emerged. In the 2000s, economic, ecological, pandemic crises and social inequality have intensified alliances and demand to address global, commercial processes undermining healthy societies, with widening differences between 'planetary health', integrating ecosystems and collective interests, and the coercive controls and protectionism in technology-driven and biosecurity-driven approaches.The trajectories point to a need for ideas and practice on healthy societies to tackle systemic determinants of inequities within and across countries, including to reclaim suppressed cultures; to build transdisciplinary, reflexive and participatory forms of knowledge that are embedded in and learn from action; and to invest in a more equitable circulation of ideas between regions in framing global ideas. Today's threats raise a critical moment of choice on which ideas dominate, not only for health but also for survival. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: health policy; health systems; public health; review
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33883188 PMCID: PMC8061839 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-005257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Summary of the regions and broad paradigms covered within them.
Timeline of selected major paradigm and policy events post-1978
| Date | Paradigm/policy event |
| 1978 | 1978: Alma Ata Declaration on PHC and goal of ‘Health for All in the Year 2000’ |
| 1979–1990 | 1979: African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, adopted by the OAU: ‘Every individual shall have the right to enjoy the best attainable state of physical and mental health’. 1980: OAU Lagos Plan of Action for the Economic Development of Africa, 1980–2000. Oil crisis, global recession, rising external debt, repeated food crises. Bretton Woods structural adjustment/neoliberal policies. Neoliberal reforms in India, rise of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP,) Hindu nationalism and corporate medical sector. Selective PHC promoted by Rockefeller Foundation, World Bank and others. Postindependent ESA countries’ comprehensive PHC policies, aid support for selective PHC. End of the Cold War. 1987: African health ministers’ adoption of the Bamako Initiative to accelerate PHC practice. 1988: Rights-based constitution and creation of the national health service (SUS) in Brazil. 1980s: Spread of HIV and high levels of AIDS mortality in ESA countries. GFATM, Gates Foundation focus on high mortality HIV, malaria and TB. UN World Commission on Environment and Development and 1992: Earth Summit. 1986: Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion promoting IAH/MAH on social determinants. |
| 1990s | 1992: Negotiations in the Convention on Biological Diversity and the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People. USA CDC, Institute of Medicine point to and set strategy for ‘global infectious disease threats’. 1993: World Bank World Development Report: investing in Health promotes selective cost-effective interventions using DALY analysis in ESA and India. UNICEF promotion of ‘adjustment with a human face’ in ESA countries. Bamako Initiative funding of public healthcare from cost recovery from medicine charges. The Washington consensus neoliberal model applied in Chile. India: eficiency reforms, World Bank soft loans and targeted safety nets for poverty alleviation. Commission on Macroeconomics and Health identifies disease priorities for intervention. 1998, Yach and Bettcher, ‘The Globalisation of Public Health’ on global health determinants. WHO publication of Social Determinants of Health: the Solid Facts. Promotion of BV, SM and ICH by indigenous and social movements and newly elected left governments in selected Latin American countries; creation of Alianza Bolivariana para los Pueblos de Nuestra América (ALBA) left political grouping. |
| 2000 | UN Millennium Development Goals with three health-related goals on child mortality, maternal mortality, access to reproductive healthcare and HIV, TB and malaria to be met by 2015. |
| 2000–2009 | 2000: People’s Health Movement People’s Health Charter’ affirming comprehensive PHC. 2001: New Partnership for Africa’s Development calls for fairer returns from globalisation. United Progressive Alliance Coalition: India opens space for civil society, rights approaches. 2001 Doha Declaration on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) and public health. 2003 WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. 2005 WHO International Health Regulations binding standards for international health security. 2006 EU HiAP approach promoted by Finnish presidency 2006: Harmonisation for health in Africa led by WHO AFRO to coordinate partner support. 2006: Launch of the BRICS forum. 2008 Report of the WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health. 2008: Japan promotes human security as the core of its health diplomacy. 2008–2009 Ecuador, Bolivia Constitutions integrate BV/ICH. 2009: Sarkozy Commission on Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress. Growing attention to climate and biodiversity losses. 2008: International financial, energy, food crisis, especially in the USA and Europe. |
| 2010–2015 | 2010: Adelaide Statement on HiAP and United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) integration of capability and freedoms. 2010: COP United Nations. United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), WHO adopt 20 global Aichi Biodiversity Targets including ecosystem for health, livelihoods and well-being. 2010: USA Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). 2011 World Conference on Social Determinants of Health in Brazil. 2011: Launch of the ‘One Health’ agenda at the InternationalCongress on Pathogens at the Human-Animal Interface in Ethiopia. 2012 COP Secretariat of the Convention and WHO Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011–2020. 2012: European Policy Framework for Health and Well-being, Bhutan Gross National Happiness. 2013: African Union adoption of 2013: Eighth Global Health Promotion Conference on Health, Helsinki Statement on HiAP and the Whole-of-Government approach. 2014: Global Health Security Alliance launched. 2014: Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in India promoting Hindu nationalism, commodification and civil society controls. 2014: West and Central African Ebola epidemic; concern over rising multidrug-resistant TB. 2015: World Bank, USAID promote performance-based financing, essential service packages. 2015: Report of the Lancet (UK) Commission on Planetary Health. |
| 2015 | UN Sustainable development Goals in General Assembly Resolution A/RES/70/1, |
| 2016–2019 | 2016: Ninth Global Conference on Health Leaders and Shanghai declaration calling for whole of society response and global collective action on commercial forces counteracting health. 2016: UN Commitment on Antimicrobial resistance and promotion of One Health. MERS, SARS and Ebola pandemics. 2017: Pan American Sanitary Conference, PAHO adoption of policy on ethnicity and health. 2017: Lancet Commission on Health in Africa advocating people-centred health systems. 2018: Astana Declaration on PHC, with UHC as the rallying point. Climate and biodiversity crisis stimulating youth climate strikes and extinction rebellions. |
| 2020 | COVID-19 pandemic Costa Rica call for patent pool for distributed production of essential health products. World Health Assembly 2020 resolution on COVID-19 and COVAX on diagnostics, medicines and vaccines. United Nations General Assembly (UNGASS) on COVID-19 call for collective security, global public goods and equitable recovery. Vaccine approvals, vaccine nationalism and COVAX underfunding. |
Authors from Loewenson et al.3
AFRO, Regional Office for Africa; BRICS, Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa; BV, buen vivir; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; COP, Conference of the Parties; DALY, disability-adjusted life year; EHP, essential health product; ESA, East and Southern Africa; EU, European Union; GFATM, Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria; HiAP, Health in All Policies; IAH, intersectoral action for health; ICH, intercultural health; MERS, Middle East respiratory syndrome; OAU, Organisation of African Unity; PAHO, Pan American Health Organisation; PHC, Primary Health Care; SM, social medicine; SUS, Sistema Único de Saúde; TB, tuberculosis; UHC, universal health coverage; USAID, United States Agency for International Development.