Toward Human Rights-Consistent Responses to Health Emergencies: What Is the Overlap Between Core Right to Health Obligations and Core International Health Regulation Capacities?
Overview
Public Health
Social Sciences
Authors
Affiliations
COVID-19 has highlighted the responsibilities of states under the International Health Regulations (IHR), as well as state accountability in case of a breach. These approaches and dimensions are valuable, as many COVID responses have breached human rights. We should also look beyond this crisis and address country preparedness for effective and equitable responses to future infectious disease outbreaks. This paper assesses countries' international legal obligations to be prepared to respond to this and future public health emergencies. It does so from the perspective of the right to health, in interaction with the IHR. We analyze the functional relationship between the right to health and the IHR, focusing in particular on "core obligations" under the right to health and "core capacities" under the IHR. We find considerable parallels between the two regimes and argue in favor of more cross-fertilization between them. This regime interaction may enrich both frameworks from a normative perspective while also enhancing accountability and public health and human rights outcomes.
How Did Human Rights Fare in Amendments to the International Health Regulations?.
Forman L, de Mesquita J, Filho L, Meier B, Sirleaf M J Law Med Ethics. 2025; 52(4):907-921.
PMID: 39885739 PMC: 11788665. DOI: 10.1017/jme.2024.172.
Victral D, Heller L Util Policy. 2023; 82:101548.
PMID: 37021116 PMC: 10043969. DOI: 10.1016/j.jup.2023.101548.
Reconceptualizing successful pandemic preparedness and response: A feminist perspective.
Smith J, Davies S, Grepin K, Harman S, Herten-Crabb A, Murage A Soc Sci Med. 2022; 315:115511.
PMID: 36371930 PMC: 9639384. DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115511.