Health for All and Primary Health Care, 1978–2018: A Historical Perspective on Policies and Programs Over 40 Years

S. Rifkin
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引用次数: 20

Abstract

In 1978, at an international conference in Kazakhstan, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund put forward a policy proposal entitled “Primary Health Care” (PHC). Adopted by all the World Health Organization member states, the proposal catalyzed ideas and experiences by which governments and people began to change their views about how good health was obtained and sustained. The Declaration of Alma-Ata (as it is known, after the city in which the conference was held) committed member states to take action to achieve the WHO definition of health as “state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.” Arguing that good health was not merely the result of biomedical advances, health-services provision, and professional care, the declaration stated that health was a human right, that the inequality of health status among the world’s populations was unacceptable, and that people had a right and duty to become involved in the planning and implementation of their own healthcare. It proposed that this policy be supported through collaboration with other government sectors to ensure that health was recognized as a key to development planning. Under the banner call “Health for All by the Year 2000,” WHO and the United Nations Children’s Fund set out to turn their vision for improving health into practice. They confronted a number of critical challenges. These included defining PHC and translating PHC into practice, developing frameworks to translate equity into action, experiencing both the potential and the limitations of community participation in helping to achieve the WHO definition of health, and seeking the necessary financing to support the transformation of health systems. These challenges were taken up by global, national, and nongovernmental organization programs in efforts to balance the PHC vision with the realities of health-service delivery. The implementation of these programs had varying degrees of success and failure. In the future, PHC will need to address to critical concerns, the first of which is how to address the pressing health issues of the early 21st century, including climate change, control of noncommunicable diseases, global health emergencies, and the cost and effectiveness of humanitarian aid in the light of increasing violent disturbances and issues around global governance. The second is how PHC will influence policies emerging from the increasing understanding that health interventions should be implemented in the context of complexity rather than as linear, predictable solutions.
全民健康和初级卫生保健,1978-2018:40年来政策和规划的历史视角
1978年,在哈萨克斯坦举行的一次国际会议上,世界卫生组织(卫生组织)和联合国儿童基金会提出了一项题为“初级保健”的政策建议。该建议得到世界卫生组织所有成员国的通过,促进了各国政府和人民开始改变他们对如何获得和维持良好健康的看法的想法和经验。《阿拉木图宣言》(以召开会议的城市阿拉木图命名)要求会员国采取行动,实现世卫组织对健康的定义,即“身体、精神和社会完全健康的状态,而不仅仅是没有疾病或虚弱”。《宣言》认为,良好的健康不仅仅是生物医学进步、保健服务提供和专业护理的结果,并指出健康是一项人权,世界人口中健康状况的不平等是不可接受的,人们有权利和义务参与规划和实施自己的保健。它建议通过与其他政府部门合作来支持这项政策,以确保认识到卫生是发展规划的关键。在“到2000年人人享有健康”的旗帜下,世卫组织和联合国儿童基金会着手将其改善健康的愿景变为实践。他们面临着许多严峻的挑战。其中包括确定初级保健并将初级保健付诸实践,制定框架以将公平转化为行动,体验社区参与帮助实现世卫组织健康定义的潜力和局限性,并寻求必要的资金以支持卫生系统的转变。这些挑战被全球、国家和非政府组织的项目所接受,努力平衡初级保健的愿景与卫生服务提供的现实。这些计划的实施有不同程度的成功和失败。今后,初级卫生保健需要解决一些关键问题,首先是如何解决21世纪初紧迫的卫生问题,包括气候变化、非传染性疾病控制、全球突发卫生事件,以及在暴力骚乱和全球治理问题日益增多的情况下人道主义援助的成本和有效性。第二个问题是初级保健将如何影响政策,因为人们日益认识到,卫生干预措施应该在复杂的背景下实施,而不是作为线性的、可预测的解决办法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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