» Articles » PMID: 24289096

What Could a Strengthened Right to Health Bring to the Post-2015 Health Development Agenda?: Interrogating the Role of the Minimum Core Concept in Advancing Essential Global Health Needs

Overview
Publisher Biomed Central
Date 2013 Dec 3
PMID 24289096
Citations 14
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Global health institutions increasingly recognize that the right to health should guide the formulation of replacement goals for the Millennium Development Goals, which expire in 2015. However, the right to health's contribution is undercut by the principle of progressive realization, which links provision of health services to available resources, permitting states to deny even basic levels of health coverage domestically and allowing international assistance for health to remain entirely discretionary.

Discussion: To prevent progressive realization from undermining both domestic and international responsibilities towards health, international human rights law institutions developed the idea of non-derogable "minimum core" obligations to provide essential health services. While minimum core obligations have enjoyed some uptake in human rights practice and scholarship, their definition in international law fails to specify which health services should fall within their scope, or to specify wealthy country obligations to assist poorer countries. These definitional gaps undercut the capacity of minimum core obligations to protect essential health needs against inaction, austerity and illegitimate trade-offs in both domestic and global action. If the right to health is to effectively advance essential global health needs in these contexts, weaknesses within the minimum core concept must be resolved through innovative research on social, political and legal conceptualizations of essential health needs.

Summary: We believe that if the minimum core concept is strengthened in these ways, it will produce a more feasible and grounded conception of legally prioritized health needs that could assist in advancing health equity, including by providing a framework rooted in legal obligations to guide the formulation of new health development goals, providing a baseline of essential health services to be protected as a matter of right against governmental claims of scarcity and inadequate international assistance, and empowering civil society to claim fulfillment of their essential health needs from domestic and global decision-makers.

Citing Articles

Towards Legally Mandated Public Health Benchmarks.

Mierau J, Toebes B Int J Health Policy Manag. 2023; 12:7123.

PMID: 37579469 PMC: 10125054. DOI: 10.34172/ijhpm.2022.7123.


How can corporate taxes contribute to sub-Saharan Africa's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)? A case study of Vodafone.

Hannah E, OHare B, Lopez M, Murray S, Etter-Phoya R, Hall S Global Health. 2023; 19(1):17.

PMID: 36935478 PMC: 10024962. DOI: 10.1186/s12992-022-00894-6.


Supporting Indigenous health equity strategic planning: a Queensland perspective.

Toombs M, Curtis C, Brolan C Med J Aust. 2022; 218(1):5-8.

PMID: 36450340 PMC: 10098513. DOI: 10.5694/mja2.51794.


Respecting, protecting and fulfilling the human right to health.

Nampewo Z, Mike J, Wolff J Int J Equity Health. 2022; 21(1):36.

PMID: 35292027 PMC: 8922072. DOI: 10.1186/s12939-022-01634-3.


Toward Human Rights-Consistent Responses to Health Emergencies: What Is the Overlap between Core Right to Health Obligations and Core International Health Regulation Capacities?.

Toebes B, Forman L, Bartolini G Health Hum Rights. 2021; 22(2):99-111.

PMID: 33390700 PMC: 7762896.


References
1.
Hammonds R, Ooms G, Vandenhole W . Under the (legal) radar screen: global health initiatives and international human rights obligations. BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2012; 12:31. PMC: 3534496. DOI: 10.1186/1472-698X-12-31. View

2.
Hogerzeil H, Samson M, Vidal Casanovas J, Rahmani-Ocora L . Is access to essential medicines as part of the fulfilment of the right to health enforceable through the courts?. Lancet. 2006; 368(9532):305-11. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(06)69076-4. View

3.
Lozano R, Wang H, Foreman K, Rajaratnam J, Naghavi M, Marcus J . Progress towards Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 on maternal and child mortality: an updated systematic analysis. Lancet. 2011; 378(9797):1139-65. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61337-8. View

4.
Canfin P, Eide E, Natalegawa M, Ndiaye M, Nkoana-Mashabane M, Patriota A . Our common vision for the positioning and role of health to advance the UN development agenda beyond 2015. Lancet. 2013; 381(9881):1885-6. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(13)60952-6. View

5.
Ooms G, Brolan C, Eggermont N, Eide A, Flores W, Forman L . Universal health coverage anchored in the right to health. Bull World Health Organ. 2013; 91(1):2-2A. PMC: 3537254. DOI: 10.2471/BLT.12.115808. View