key: cord-0009402-frv29cux authors: Gostin, Lawrence O; Meier, Benjamin M; Thomas, Rebekah; Magar, Veronica; Ghebreyesus, Tedros A title: 70 years of human rights in global health: drawing on a contentious past to secure a hopeful future date: 2018-12-09 journal: Lancet DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(18)32997-0 sha: 3c0df01093bae8ce2748b00bb01a628c79149b2c doc_id: 9402 cord_uid: frv29cux nan Introduction 70 years ago, Eleanor Roosevelt grounded human rights "in small places, close to home (...) the places where every man, woman, and child seeks equal justice and dignity". 1 The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), adopted on Dec 10, 1948, established a modern human rights foundation that has become a cornerstone of global health, central to public health policies, programmes, and practices. To commemorate the 70th anniversary of this seminal declaration, we trace the evolution of human rights in global health, linking the past, present, and future of health as a human right (figure 1). This future remains uncertain. As contemporary challenges imperil continuing advance ments, threatening both human rights protections and global health governance, the fu ture will depend, as it has in the past, on sustained po litical engagement to realise human rights in global health. Human rights provide a universal framework for advancing global health with justice, transforming moral imperatives into legal entitlements. 2 Created out of the atrocities of World War II, states in the newly formed UN established human rights under inter national law. The 1945 UN Charter became the first international treaty to recognise human rights, which form the principal founda tion of this new world body. Operating through the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), the UN would "make recom mendations for the purpose of promoting respect for, and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all". 3 With the UN Charter also calling for the establishment of an international health organisation, WHO had the responsibility to operationalise human rights for public health. The 1946 WHO Constitution declared, for the first time, that "the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is one of the fundamental rights of every human being", thereby establishing government responsibilities to ensure "a state of complete physi cal, mental, and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity". 4 In creating a rights based foundation for global health governance, the WHO Constitution repre sented the world's most expansive conceptualisa tion of international responsi bility for health. 5 Figure 1 : The international development of human rights for health (1948-2018) WHO The UN General Assembly then adopted the 1948 UDHR (figure 2), enumerating a broad set of fundamental human rights and proclaiming "a common standard of achieve ment for all peoples and all nations". 6 Drawing from the WHO Constitution, public health became central to the UDHR agenda, with ECOSOC's Com mission on Human Rights highlighting the import ance of both medical care and underlying de terminants of health. 7 Reflecting rising national health systems and theories of social medicine, 8 the right to health would en compass a holistic vision of patient and populationbased health. Through this holistic vision, the UDHR situated health under the right to an adequate standard of living: "Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and wellbeing of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medi cal care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of liveli hood in circumstances beyond his control". 6 The human right to health, thus, encompassed both indivi dual health services and national health systems, with national health systems including social measures for public health. 9 Despite the early promise of human rights in advancing health, the Cold War presented formidable political obstacles. The Cold War superpowers (USA and Soviet Union) held sharply divergent positions on human rights, with the Western states embracing civil and political rights and the Soviet Bloc favouring eco nomic and social rights. 10 The comprehensive vision of the UDHR unravelled along ideological lines, with the UN codifying two separate covenants: the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Inter national Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). This opposition to socioeconomic rights resulted in a narrow definition of the right to health and health determinants under the 1966 ICESCR. States recognised "the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health", but only a limited set of steps were described to progressively realise this right. 11 Yet, even as Western states continued to resist the expansion of a rightsbased approach to health, WHO observed that "people are beginning to ask for health, and to regard it as a right". 12 By the 1970s, WHO recognised the political influence of the right to health in building international support for primary health care. 13 WHO's normative leadership was encapsulated in its Health For All campaign, pressing prosperous nations to assume international obligations for the health of the least powerful people. 14 WHO engaged this rightsbased strategy in economic development debates, joining lowincome and middleincome countries in calling for a New International Economic Order. 15 Exercising its constitutional authority to set international norms for public health, WHO structured global health policy through the 1978 Declaration of AlmaAta. 16 To memorialise the multisectoral policies needed to realise the right to health, WHO and UNICEF brought together governments and civil society at the International Conference on Primary Health Care in AlmaAta in the Soviet Union. The resulting Declaration of AlmaAta re cognised the importance of participatory, broadbased socioeconomic development to build sustainable, compre hensive primary healthcare systems. Viewing health inequalities as a common concern to all countries, the Declaration reaffirmed health as a fundamental human right and worldwide social goal, 17 enumerating rightsbased obligations for primary health care. 18 Although the Declaration of AlmaAta faltered in the early 1980s, 19 with governments unable to promote national health systems amid neoliberal economic policies, the unfolding AIDS pandemic would give rise to the modern health and human rights movement. Reacting to societal stigmatisation of marginalised communities, discriminatory criminalisation of key populations, and public health infringements on in dividual liberty, civil society rose up to demand rights. AIDS activists fiercely challenged policy makers. Rights based campaigns resounded throughout the world: WHO came to embrace an inextricable link between public health and human rights in the AIDS response. 20 WHO's Global Programme on AIDS, launched in 1987 (figure 3), shaped a rightsbased framework for global health. 21 International guidelines recommended risk reduct ion strategies, such as needle exchanges, tran sition ing the AIDS response from punitive measures to health promotion. 22 As scientific breakthroughs ushered in the antiretroviral era, AIDS activists demanded uni versal access to treatment as a human rights im pera tive, giving rise to transformative institutions, from The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief to The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria. 23 With health inequalities rising in a globalising world, human rights advocacy extended beyond AIDS to a wide range of public health threats. 24 As human rights flourished in the postCold War era, the 1993 World Conference on Human Rights formed a new global con sensus that all human rights are universal, indivisible, interdependent, and interrelated. 25 This consensus found voice in the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development and the 1995 World Conference on Women, joining civil and political rights with economic and social rights as a foundation for sexual and repro ductive health. 26 In 1997, UN SecretaryGeneral Kofi Annan called on all UN agencies to mainstream human rights in all their activities. WHO enlisted its first human rights advisor to operationalise a rightsbased approach in its programmes and collaborate with the UN human rights system. 27 At the turn of the millennium, the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, charged with overseeing ICESCR implementation, adopted general comment 14, providing an authoritative interpretation of the right to health. 28 The general comment went beyond preventive and curative health care to address underlying determi nants of health beyond the health sector, including food, housing, work, education, nondis crimination, and equality. 29 The UN Special Rapporteurs on the Right to Health and WHO's Commission on Social Determinants of Health thereafter elaborated the multisectoral ob ligations needed to implement healthrelated rights in areas such as mental health, health behaviour, maternal mortality, and access to treatment. As the UN shifted to a new era of implementation in human rights advancement, WHO responded through global health law. 30 The 2003 Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) adopted robust demand and supply reduction strategies while banning tobacco industry participation in policy making. 31 The FCTC gave rise to active civil society engagement, with the Framework Convention Alliance (a network of 500 nongovernmental organisations from 100 countries) pushing governments to implement treaty obligations, promote gender rights, and set indicators for accountability. With the severe acute respiratory syndrome epid emic exposing major gaps in the International Health Regulations (IHR), the principal treaty governing glo bal health security, WHO member states saw human rights as vital for controlling infectious diseases. WHO fundamentally revised the IHR in 2005, with human rights forming one of three major pillars of IHR im plementation. The IHR now requires "full respect for the dignity, human rights and fundamental free doms of persons," 32 mini mising restrictions on individual freedoms and prohibiting discrimination in health measures. Responding to government and civil society criticism that the UN had ignored human rights violations, the UN replaced the Human Rights Commission with the Human Rights Council, providing new human rights mechanisms for public health accountability. In 2008, the UN Human Rights Council launched the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) to monitor national human rights obliga tions. 33 Civil society has had a prominent role in re port ing to the UPR, holding governments accountable for implementing healthrelated human rights. Health featured in nearly a quarter of all recommendations made under the first cycle of the UPR, with particular attention to genderbased violence. 34 Universal health coverage (UHC) has come to the forefront of WHO's efforts to strengthen health systems, serving as an economic framework for health systems 36 UHC is founded upon the notion that health is a human right-an entitlement, not a commodity-and that the progressive realisation of the right to health can be assessed by the expansion of priority services, the inclusion of more people, and the reduction of outof pocket payments. 37 To reach marginalised people, this equityoriented, peoplecentred approach to expanding access to health seeks to protect disadvantaged populations from financial impoverishment, ensuring good quality services for all. 38 Understanding who is being missed, and why, requires disaggregated data, focusing attention on the root causes of exclusion, the social construction of gender, and the development of interventions that benefit impoverished populations. 39 The 2018 Astana Declaration, renewing human rights pledges from the Declaration of AlmaAta, has recommitted governments to primary health care as an essential step towards UHC. 40 "Finding that all roads lead to UHC", 41 WHO views UHC as the "best path to live up to WHO's constitutional commitment to the right to health". 42 As the world celebrates the 70th anniversary of the UDHR, rising challenges are placing at risk hardwon gains for human rights in global health. Financial constraints are undermining advances in public health, including in HIV/ AIDS, since HIV prevention efforts have stalled, incidence is rising among marginalised populations, and in vestments in highimpact interventions focused on those populations most at risk are restricted. Racial and ethnic minorities continue to experience stigma, discrimination, and exclusion, while pervasive gender norms and stereotypes endure, with harmful repercussions on health and wellbeing as well as access to health services. Shrinking civil society space restricts dialogue with those whose experience and voice are vital to reduce health inequities. Attacks on health and human rights stand in direct contradiction to international human rights and humanitarian law. 43 Global threats, such as climate change, armed conflict, and mass migration, are exacerbating divisions within and across nations, in stark contrast to the UDHR's proclamation of common humanity. 44 In 2018, in response to these challenges, WHO revitalised its commitment to a rightsbased approach to health. The 13th General Programme of Work, WHO's 5year strategy, calls for leadership on equity, gender, and human rights to achieve its 3 billion objective: 1 billion more people accessing UHC, 1 billion more people protected from health emergencies, and 1 billion more people enjoying better health and wellbeing. 45 WHO is expanding partner ships with civil society, convening a civil society task team to promote inclusive participation to achieve its goals. WHO has also signed a 5year Memorandum of Understanding with the UN Office of the High Com missioner for Human Rights to bolster technical and political cooperation. Human rights have brought the world together in unprecedented solidarity over the past 70 years, recognising the inherent dignity of every person as an imperative for global health. Dec 10 is Human Rights Day, in commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the UDHR. While we celebrate the enduring legacies of human rights, we must also strive to identify and rectify the constraints on rightsbased governance for public health in a globalis ing world. It is more important than ever for the health and human rights communities to stand together as partners to uphold the values of the UDHR and resist contemporary threats to human rights. The human rights progress of the past, bringing together topdown leadership in global health governance with bottomup civil society advocacy, highlights the importance of sustained politi cal engagement to realise the right to health. Health practitioners have a crucial role in this political engage ment, advancing rightsbased public health policies, pro grammes, and practices that are essential to secure the future of human rights in global health. A new international health order The right to health as a human right: workshop Declaration of AlmaAta. Geneva: World Health Organization International organizations in Europe and the right to health care Priorities and opportunities for international cooperation: experiences in the WHO Western Pacific region Health and human rights History, principles, and practice of health and human rights 23 Government of South Africa. 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