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Public Health | Jakarta Declaration on Health Promotion | |||||||
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BACKGROUND:
The 4th International conference on Health Promotion - New Players for a New Era: Leading Health Promotion into the 21st Century - comes at a critical moment in the
development of international strategies for health. It is almost 20 years after the World Health Organisation member states made an ambitious commitment to a global
strategy of Health for All, and to the principles of primary health care through the
Alma-Ata Declaration. It is ten years after the 1st International Conference on
Health Promotion was held in Ottawa, Canada. That conference resulted in publication of the
Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion which has been a source of guidance
and inspiration for health promotion since that time. Subsequent international conferences and meetings have further clarified the relevance and meaning of key
strategies in health promotion including healthy public policy (In Adelaide, 1988), and supportive environments for health (in Sundsvall, 1991).
The 4th International Conference on Health promotion in Jakarta is the first to be held in a developing country, and the first to involve the private sector in supporting
health promotion. It provides an opportunity to reflect on what has been learned about effective health promotion, to re-examine determinants of health, and to
identify the directions and strategies which are required to address the challenges of promoting health in the 21st Century.
Health promotion is a valuable investment
Health is a basic human right and essential for social and economic development.
Increasingly, health promotion is being recognised as an essential element of health development.
It is a process of enabling people
to increase control over and to improve their health. Health promotion, through investments and actions, acts on the determinants
of health to create the greatest health gain for people, to contribute significantly to the reduction of inequities in health, to
ensure human rights, and to build social capital. The ultimate goal is to increase health expectancy, and to narrow the gap in health
expectancy between countries and groups.
The Jakarta Declaration on health promotion offers a vision and focus for health promotion into the next century. It reflects the
firm commitment of participants at the 4th International Conference on Health Promotion to draw upon the widest range of
resources to tackle health determinants in the 21st century.
Determinants of health: new challenges
Pre-requisites for health are peace, shelter, education, social security, social relations, food, income, empowerment of women, a
stable eco-system, sustainable resource use, social justice, respect for human rights and equity. Above all, poverty is the greatest
threat to health.
Demographic trends such as urbanization, an increase in the number of older people and the prevalence of chronic diseases pose
new problems in all countries. Other social, behavioural and biological changes such as increased sedentary behaviour, resistance to
antibiotics and other commonly available drugs, increased drug abuse and civil and domestic violence, threaten the health and
well-being of hundreds of millions of people.
New and re-emerging infectious diseases, and greater recognition of mental health problems require an urgent response. It is vital
that health promotion evolve to meet changes in the determinants of health.
Transnational factors also have a significant impact on health. These include the integration of the global economy, financial
markets and trade, access to media and communication technology, as well as environmental degradation due to the irresponsible
use of resources.
These changes shape values, lifestyles throughout the lifespan, and living conditions across the world. Some have great potential
for health, such as the development of communications technology, others such as international trade in tobacco, have a major
negative impact.
Health promotion makes a difference
Research and case studies from around the world provide convincing evidence that health promotion works. Health promotion
strategies can develop and change lifestyles, and the social, economic and environmental conditions which determine health.
Health promotion is a practical approach to achieving greater equity in health.
The five Ottawa Charter strategies are essential for success:
build healthy public policy
create supportive environments
strengthen community action
develop personal skills
re-orient health services.
There is now clear evidence that:
comprehensive approaches to health development are the most effective. Those which use combinations of the five
strategies are more effective than single track approaches
settings offer practical opportunities for the implementation of comprehensive strategies. These include mega-cities, islands,
cities, municipalities, and local communities, their markets, schools, workplace, and health care facilities
participation is essential to sustain efforts. People have to be at the centre of health promotion action and decision-making
processes for it to be effective
health learning fosters participation. Access to education and information is essential to achieving effective participation and the empowerment of people and communities
These strategies are core elements of health promotion and are relevant for all countries.
New responses are needed
To address emerging threats to health, new forms of action are needed. The challenge for the coming years will be to unlock the
potential for health promotion inherent in many sectors of society, among local communities and within families.
There is a clear need to break through traditional boundaries within government sectors, between government and non-government
organisations, and between the public and private sector. Co-operation is essential. Specifically, this requires the creation of new
partnerships for health on equal ground between the different sectors at all levels of governance in societies.
PRIORITIES FOR HEALTH PROMOTION IN THE 21st
CENTURY
1. Promote social responsibility for health
Decision makers must be firmly committed to social responsibility. Both the public and private sectors should promote health by
pursuing policies and practices that:
avoid harming the health of other individuals
protect the environment and ensure sustainable use of resources
restrict production and trade in inherently harmful goods and substances such as tobacco and armaments, as well as
unhealthy marketing practices
safeguard both the citizen in the marketplace and the individual in the workplace
include equity-focussed health impact assessments as an integral part of policy development
2. Increase investments for health development
In many countries, current investment in health is inadequate and often ineffective. Increasing investment for health development
requires a truly multi-sectoral approach, including additional resources to education, housing as well as the health sector. Greater
investment for health, and re-orientation of existing investments - both within and between countries - has the potential to
significantly advance human development, health and quality of life.
Investments in health should reflect the needs of certain groups such as women, children, older people, indigenous, poor and
marginalised populations.
3. Consolidate and expand partnerships for health
Health promotion requires partnerships for health and social development between the different sectors at all levels of governance
and society. Existing partnerships need to be strengthened and the potential for new partnerships must be explored.
Partnerships offer mutual benefit for health through the sharing of expertise, skills, and resources. Each partnership must be
transparent and accountable and be based on agreed ethical principles, mutual understanding and respect. WHO guidelines should be
adhered to.
4. Increase community capacity and empower the individual
Health promotion is carried out by and with people, not on or to people. It improves both the ability of individuals to take action,
and the capacity of groups, organisations or communities to influence the determinants of health.
Improving the capacity of communities for health promotion requires practical education, leadership training, and access to
resources. Empowering individuals demands more consistent, reliable access to the decision making process and the skills and
knowledge essential to effect change.
Both traditional communication and the new information media support this process. Social, cultural and spiritual resources need to
be harnessed in innovative ways.
5. Secure an infrastructure for health promotion
To secure an infrastructure for health promotion, new mechanisms of funding it locally, nationally and globally must be found.
Incentives should be developed to influence the actions of governments, nongovernmental organizations, educational institutions
and the private sector to make sure that resource mobilization for health promotion is maximised.
"Settings for health" represent the organisational base of the infrastructure required for health promotion. New health challenges
mean that new and diverse networks need to be created to achieve intersectoral collaboration. Such networks should provide
mutual assistance within and between countries and facilitate exchange of information on which strategies are effective in which
settings.
Training and practice of local leadership skills should be encouraged to support health promotion activities. Documentation of
experiences in health promotion through research and project reporting should be enhanced to improve planning, implementation
and evaluation.
All countries should develop the appropriate political, legal, educational, social and economic environments required to support
health promotion.
CALL FOR ACTION
Participants are committed to sharing the key messages of the Declaration with their governments, institutions and communities, to
put into practice the actions proposed, and report back to the 5th International Conference on Health Promotion.
In order to speed progress towards global health promotion, participants endorse the formation of a global health promotion
alliance. The goal of this alliance is to advance the action priorities for health promotion expressed in this declaration.
Priorities for the alliance include:
raising awareness about the changing determinants of health
supporting the development of collaboration and networks for health development
mobilisation of resources for health promotion
accumulating knowledge on best practice
enabling shared learning
promoting solidarity in action
fostering transparency and public accoutability in health promotion
National governments are called to take initiative in fostering and sponsoring networks for health promotion both within and
between their countries.
Participants in Jakarta '97 called on WHO to take the lead in building a global health promotion alliance and enabling its member
states to implement the results of the Jakarta Conference. A key part of this role is for WHO to engage governments,
nongovernmental organisations, development banks, UN agencies, interregional bodies, bilateral agencies, the labour movement
and co-operatives, as well as the private sector in advancing the action priorities for health promotion.
Copyright © by World Health Organization,
Division of Health Promotion, Education and Communication,
CH-1211 Geneva 27
Switzerland
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