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Press Releases: Archives: Article 6
Health: Activists Want Health on Top of Development
Agenda
SAVAR, Bangladesh, Dec 4 (IPS) - An international
conference organised by health activists, the People's Health Assembly,
started off here Monday, with hundreds of delegates from around the world
vowing to pressure policy makers to put primary health care back on top
of the development agenda.
''We are deeply disturbed at what is happening,'' said Denmark's Hafden
Mahler, who was director general of the World Health Organisation (WHO)
when the United Nations body pledged ''Health for All by 2000'' at an
international conference in Alma Ata, Kazakhstan in 1978.
Mahler lamented that the whole U.N. system had forgotten the struggle
of humanity against injustice, which includes the lack of services and
access to health and growing gaps between countries despite major improvements
in many health indicators in the last 50 years.
''The struggle against injustice is a struggle against forgetfulness,''
he told delegates gathered around him from 92 countries here in this small
town some 40 km from Bangladesh's capital Dhaka.
Qasem Chowdhury of Bangladesh, coordinator of the PHA Secretariat, said
there was a need for people-centred healthcare as opposed to a health
industry increasingly driven by profit-oriented concerns.
India's N H Antia, chair of the inaugural session, said health activsts
and experts were gathered at a time when globalisation has undercut many
health structures and systems around the world, including the aims of
'Health for All.'
Globalisation, liberalisation and privatisation would also be ''the death
knell of the planet if we don't take adequate corrective measures at this
stage,'' he added.
Mahler, who was among hundreds of slogan-shouting delegates who made a
symbolic two-km march Sunday to the 'Jyotir Sriti Soud', Bangladesh's
national monument, said comprehensive primary health care (PHC) as envisioned
at Alma Ata -- an unaccomplished goal -- was the only viable path to health
and health care.
He challenged those who would now abandon the declaration to spell out
an alternative.
Meantime, the participants were not worried that their vigorous show of
solidarity in this obscure town would be lost to the world. ''What matters
is that all this is part of the globalisation of people's movements,''
said Alexis Benos from Greece, representing the International Association
of Health Policy.
Said Edlyn Jimenez, who teaches humanities at the University of the Philippines:
''A struggle like this does not end with this. I expect people in other
countries to be inspired by what we are doing here,'' she said.
''This is a reminder to governments around the world of the importance
of health and that they cannot abdicate the responsibility entrusted to
them by the people,'' said Li Enlin, general secretary of the Amity Foundation,
a volunteer group based in Nanjing, China.
Monday, the first of five days of deliberations toward a 'People's Charter
for Health,' was structured around testimonies and stories from the field
to depict real problems and people-oriented solutions to them.
The draft of the charter says ''inequality, poverty, exploitation, violence
and hunger are at the root of ill health and excess deaths of poor and
marginalised people.''
Public health services are not fulfilling the needs of people not because
of cuts in governments' social budgets, activists here say. Instead, health
services have become less accessible, more unevenly and badly distributed
and more inappropriate while expensive private medical care is available
only to a few, the draft document points out.
To change this, ''powerful interests have to be challenged, political
and economic policies redirected and priorities changed,'' it adds.
Concurrent sessions on Monday examined the PHA's main issue -- the political
economy of the ''assault on health'' led by Mohan Rao of the Jawaharlal
Nehru University (JNU) in New Delhi and Rene Loewenson of the South African
Network on Equity and Health.
One session examined the failures of the pharmaceutical industry, foundations
and governments, the availability of essential drugs and emerging issues
such as the dissemination of misinformation as documented on behalf of
the drug industry over Internet.
''The inclusion of industry representatives in critical WHO policy committees,
especially drug pricing, vaccine production, health care costing and the
selection of essential drugs lists is rightly viewed with suspicion and
the organisations partnership with transnational corporations needs to
be re-examined,'' said Zafrullah Chowdhury, Bangladesh's leading expert
on the subject. (END/IPS/ap-he-wd/rdr/js/00)
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