| Literature DB >> 36138460 |
Lisa Montel1,2, Naomi Ssenyonga3, Michel P Coleman3,4, Claudia Allemani3.
Abstract
The human right to health is a critical legal tool to achieve health justice, and universal health coverage is included among the Sustainable Development Goals. However, the content and meaning of the right to health may not be used adequately in public health research. We conducted a scoping review of the literature to discover the extent to which the legal principles underlying the right to health are used in public health. We mapped the various attempts to assess implementation of this right since its legal content was clarified in 2000.The first studies emerged in 2006, with an increase and a wider variety of investigations since 2015. We observe that some key principles do form the basis of right-to-health assessments, but some concepts remain unfamiliar. Critically, public health academics may have limited access to human rights research on health, which creates a gap in knowledge between the two disciplines.Entities:
Keywords: Human rights-based approach to health; Indicators; Right to health; Rights-based approach to health; Scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36138460 PMCID: PMC9502920 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-022-01742-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Fig. 1Literature search
Fig. 2Studies by year and area of public health
Fig. 3Studies by category of research and by discipline
Fig. 4Principles of the right to health by discipline
Fig. 5Principles commonly assessed under the right to health
Five most mentioned international instruments by discipline
| Discipline | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human rights (8 studies) | Public health (37 studies) | Both disciplines (8 studies) | Total (53 studies) | |
| International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights | 4 (50%) | 19 (51%) | 5 (63%) | 28 (53%) |
| General Comment 14 | 4 (50%) | 15 (41%) | 5 (63%) | 24 (45%) |
| Universal Declaration of Human Rights | 5 (63%) | 10 (27%) | 3 (38%) | 18 (34%) |
| WHO Constitution | 5 (63%) | 5 (14%) | 3 (38%) | 13 (25%) |
| Declaration of Alma-Ata | 3 (38%) | 5 (14%) | 2 (25%) | 10 (19%) |
| No document mentioned | 2 (25%) | 9 (24%) | 1 (13%) | 12 (23%) |
| We included studies published in English, French, Spanish or Italian between 2000 and July 2021 that: | |
| • Discuss the definition of the right to health and its principles; | |
| • Discuss one or more specific elements of the right to health (e.g., participation) or human rights-based approaches to health, while using narratives of the right to health; | |
| • Construct methodologies for the evaluation of the right to health; | |
| • Construct new indicators for the evaluation of the right to health; | |
| • Use public health indicators for the evaluation of the right to health; | |
| • Discuss public health indicators in the light of human rights principles; | |
| • Evaluate a health policy, programme, health outcomes or a health system, while using narratives of the right to health. |
| We excluded studies: | |
| • on the rights of persons with disabilities; | |
| • on informed consent; | |
| • on the national legal system and health outcomes; | |
| • on the impact of human rights on health; | |
| • framing a health issue in human rights terms; | |
| • on reproductive rights; | |
| • on “client-centred” or “people-centred” approaches; | |
| • on the integration of human rights principles into health policies, programmes and guidelines; | |
| • on human rights indicators; | |
| • on economic and social rights; | |
| • on the links between human rights and health; | |
| • on rights-based approaches to development; | |
| • on gender equality; | |
| • on the social determinants of health; | |
| • on the Sustainable Development Goals when the focus was not the right to health; | |
| • on the judicialisation of the right to health. |
| Extraction fields: | |
| • Year published; | |
| • Discipline: human rights, public health, or both; | |
| • Area of public health; | |
| • Type of research; | |
| • International instruments referred to; | |
| • Principles of the right to health. |