Access to essential medicines as a Human Right
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Access to essential medicines as a Human Right
Hans V. Hogerzeil, MD, PhD, FRCP Edin
Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy (EDM)World Health Organization
ICIUM-2, 30 March 2004
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Human Rights
Human rights concern the relation the between state and the individual; they lead to state obligations and individual entitlements
All human rights are interdependent and interrelated. Health is a fundamental human right, indispensable for the exercise of other human rights
Freedom from discrimination underpins all human rights Promotion of human rights is one of the principle purposes of the UN
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First expression of the right to health:The WHO Constitution (1946)
“The States parties to this Constitution declare, in conformity with the Charter of the United Nations, that the following principles are basic to the happiness, harmonious relations and security of all peoples.
Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.The enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is one of the fundamental rights of every human being without distinction of race, religion, political belief, economic or social condition (...)”
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Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948)
Art.25.1 “Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services”
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The right to health is also recognizedin numerous other instruments
1961 European Social Charter
1966 International Covenant on Economics, Social and Cultural Rights (most detailed; Article 12.1 and 12.2)
1978 Declaration of Alma Ata
1981 African Charter on Human and People’s Rights
1988 Additional Protocol to the American Convention on HRs in the Area of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child
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International Covenant on Economics, Social and Cultural Rights (ratified by 147 countries)
Article 12 recognizes the “right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest
attainable standard of physical and mental health”
Article 12.2 illustrates a number of steps to be taken by States parties to achieve:
a. maternal, child and reproductive health b. healthy natural and workplace environments c. prevention, treatment and control of disease d. health facilities, goods and services
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Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural RightsGeneral Comment nr.14 (May 2000)
Art.12.2.c:Right to prevention, treatment and control of diseases includes creation of a system of urgent medical care in case of accidents, epidemics; and disaster relief and humanitarian assistance
Art 12.2.d:Right to health facilities, goods and services includes appropriate treatment of prevalent diseases, preferably at community level;and the provision of essential drugs as defined by the WHO Action Programme on Essential Drugs
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Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural RightsGeneral Comment nr.14 (May 2000)Essential components of fulfilment of Right to Health
Availability - includes “essential drugs as defined by the WHO Action Programme on Essential Drugs”
Accessibility - based on non-discrimination, physical accessibility, affordability and access to information
Acceptability - respectful of medical ethics, culturally appropriate and sensitive to gender and life-cycle
Quality - scientifically and medically
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Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural RightsGeneral Comment nr.14 (May 2000)State Party obligations
Progressive realizationBut: some obligations are immediate: Exercise right without discrimination (art.2.2) Take steps toward the full realization of article 12
these steps must be deliberate, concrete and targeted towards full realization of the right to health (don’t go back!)
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Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural RightsGeneral Comment nr.14 (May 2000)Violations
Adoption of retrogressive measures, repeal, suspension Failure to take all steps to ensure the right to health; e.g.
failure to adopt or implement a national health policy designed to ensure the right to health for anyone
insufficient expenditure or misallocation of public resources failure to monitor realization of the right to health in the country failure to take measures to reduce inequitable distribution of health
facilities, goods and services
Important: distinguish inability from unwillingness of the State
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Access to essential drugs as a Human Right:Where are we now?
Health is a human right (Univ.Decl.Hum.Rights). The right to health care includes the right to emergency
care and health facilities, goods and services (Covenant) The right to facilities, good and services includes the
provision of essential drugs as defined by WHO (GCom.14) State parties are under immediate obligation to guarantee
that the right to health care is exercised without discrimination, and that concrete steps are taken towards full realization, with emphasis on vulnerable and marginal groups
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So what?
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Access to essential medicines as a Human Right:What does it mean in practice?
1. Rights-based approach incorporated in medicines programmes2. Definition of minimum needs of essential medicines3. Verification of state obligations under HR treaties as part of 5-
yearly country reports to HR Commission (WHO access indicators)
4. Support individuals and NGOs in claiming their rights List of State Parties, for public pressure Promote List of Essential Medicines to define State obligations Promote simple monitoring tools for access and pricing Publish successful litigation cases
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National recognition of a Right to Health
193
142
83109
0
50
100
150
200
All ICESCR Regional Const.
Nr.of countries
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Ruling for Accesswith: Melanie Samson, Jaume Vidal Casanova (WHO/EDM interns)
ObjectiveTo identify and analyze court cases from developing countries, in which individuals/groups have sued Governmental institutions, claiming access to essential medicines on the basis of human right treaties signed by the State, and have won their case.
ResultsTwenty cases • 7 supported by NGOs • 13 refer to HIV/AIDS • others to leukemia, renal transplant medicines, multiple sclerosis, diabetes
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Successful litigation on access to essential medicines, as part of the fulfilment of the Right to Health
92 93 94 95 97 98 99 00 01 02 03…Bolivia 1South Africa 1El Salvador 1Venezuela 1, 2 3 4Argentina 1 2, 3Costa Rica 1 2 3 4Colombia 1, 2 3, 4 5 6
Country cases over time
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Main findings in 20 successful cases
Most rulings concerned life-saving medicines (17) International treaties create State obligations towards the
individual (8 cases in 5 countries) Individual cases can create collective rights (7) Right to Health not restricted by limits in social security (6) Government policies can be challenged in court (2) State has special obligations towards poor and disadvantaged (2) Progressive realization is rarely used to restrict access (1)
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Success factors in 20 cases
Constitutional provisions: International treaties enjoy constitutional rank (7/7), Right to Health mentioned (6/7)
Right to Health linked to Right to Life (13/20) Legal, financial and moral support by NGOs (8/20) Acquired rights, non-interruption of treatment when social security rights
are time-limited or exhausted (4/20) Non-discrimination leading to right to equitable availability of medical care
(3/20) Economic discrimination leading to special State obligations to the poor
(2/20)
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Recommendations
Govt’s: Ensure constitutional provisions on the Right to Health, Right to Life, constitutional rank for international treaties
UN: Use constitutional provisions as indicator for Government commitment when reporting on Right to Health
WHO: Make detailed analysis of constitutions; disseminate information on successful litigation; empower NGOs
NGOs: Campaign for constitutional provisions; plan and support targeted litigation cases
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Recommendations
and YOU ?
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Believe in a better worldand
Support good governance
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WHO
World Health OrganisationDepartment of Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy
1211 Geneva, SwitzerlandFax 41-22-7914167
Web Site: http://www.who.medicines/ Documentation Centre: [email protected]