Jakarta Declaration on Leading Health Promotion into the 21st
Century, 1997
The Fourth International Conference on Health Promotion: New Players
for a New Era -Leading Health Promotion into the 21st Century,
meeting in Jakarta from 21 to 25 July 1997, had come at a critical
moment in the development of international strategies for health. As
noted at the time: “It is almost 20 years since the World Health
Organizations Member States made an ambitious commitment to a global
strategy for Health for All and the principles of primary health
care through the Declaration of Alma-Ata. It is 11 years since the
First International Conference on Health Promotion was held in
Ottawa, Canada. That Conference resulted in proclamation 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 (Adelaide, Australia,
1988), and supportive environments for health (Sundsvall, Sweden,
1991). The Fourth International Conference on Health Promotion is
the first to be held in a developing country, and the first to
involve the private sector in supporting health promotion. It has
provided an opportunity to reflect on what has been learned about
effective health promotion, to re-examine the determinants of
health, and to identify the directions and strategies that must be
adopted to address the challenges of promoting health in the 21st
century. The participants in the Jakarta Conference hereby present
this Declaration on action for health promotion into the next
century.”
Source:
http://www.who.int/healthpromotion/conferences/previous/jakarta/declaration/en/
The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of
Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal, 1992
The Convention was adopted on 22 March 1989 by the Conference of
Plenipotentiaries in Basel, Switzerland, in response to a public
outcry following the discovery, in the 1980s, in Africa and other
parts of the developing world of deposits of toxic wastes imported
from abroad. Awakening environmental awareness and corresponding
tightening of environmental regulations in the industrialized world
in the 1970s and 1980s had led to increasing public resistance to
the disposal of hazardous wastes–in accordance with what became
known as the NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) syndrome–and to an
escalation of disposal costs. This in turn led some operators to
seek cheap disposal options for hazardous wastes in Eastern Europe
and the developing world, where environmental awareness was much
less developed and regulations and enforcement mechanisms were
lacking. It was against this background that the Basel Convention
was negotiated in the late 1980s, and its thrust at the time of its
adoption was to combat the “toxic trade”, as it was termed. The
Convention entered into force in 1992.
Source:
http://www.basel.int/TheConvention/Overview/tabid/1271/Default.aspx
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.basel.int/Portals/4/Basel%20Convention/docs/text/BaselConventionText-e.pdf
Global Call for Action around the 30th Anniversary of the Alma Ata
Declaration, 2000
The People’s Health Movement (PHM) issued the Global Call for Action
around the thirtieth anniversary of the Declaration of Alma-Ata, as
the role of the United Nations’ organizations, including the World
Health Organization, has been increasingly marginalized.
Source:
http://www.phmovement.org/en/node/867
The Doha Declaration on the Trips Agreement and Public Health, 2001
In 2001, WTO Members adopted a special Ministerial Declaration at
the WTO Ministerial Conference in Doha to clarify ambiguities
between the need for governments to apply the principles of public
health and the terms of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). In particular, concerns had
been growing that patent rules might restrict access to affordable
medicines for populations in developing countries in their efforts
to control diseases of public health importance, including HIV,
tuberculosis and malaria. The Declaration responds to the concerns
of developing countries about the obstacles they faced when seeking
to implement measures to promote access to affordable medicines in
the interest of public health in general, without limitation to
certain diseases. While acknowledging the role of intellectual
property protection "for the development of new medicines", the
Declaration specifically recognizes concerns about its effects on
prices. The Doha Declaration affirms that "the TRIPS Agreement does
not and should not prevent Members from taking measures to protect
public health". In this regard, the Doha Declaration enshrines the
principles WHO has publicly advocated and advanced over the years,
namely the re-affirmation of the right of WTO Members to make full
use of the safeguard provisions of the TRIPS Agreement in order to
protect public health and enhance access to medicines for poor
countries. The Doha Declaration refers to several aspects of TRIPS,
including the right to grant compulsory licenses and the freedom to
determine the grounds upon which licences are granted, the right to
determine what constitutes a national emergency and circumstances of
extreme urgency, and the freedom to establish the regime of
exhaustion of intellectual property rights.
Source:
http://www.who.int/medicines/areas/policy/doha_declaration/en/index.html
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.who.int/medicines/areas/policy/tripshealth.pdf
NASSAU DECLARATION ON HEALTH 2001: The Health of the Region is the
Wealth of the Region
Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community under the Nassau
Declaration 2001 committed to the following:
1. Implement initiatives and targets to achieve an improved health
status of the Caribbean populations within the next five years,
emphasizing leadership, strategic planning, management,
implementation and resource mobilisation in the context of health
sector reform processes that are underway.
2. Build on current regional and sub-regional initiatives and seek
to establish a series of networks, each with specific roles and
responsibilities, in a coordinated regional structure that can
respond to the needs of the ordinary Caribbean citizen and designed
to ensure equity in access to quality preventive and care regimes.
3. Implement the Caribbean Co-operation in Health (CCH) Phase II as
the framework under which all regional and sub-regional, national
and institutional sector plans for health would be considered.
4. Ensure that the CCH II Secretariat, which is to be jointly
administered, by CARICOM and PAHO be made operational by relying on
the regional and sub-regional institutions to lead on several issues
and provide the services required by Member States and to that end
these institutions will be reviewed to determine their adequacy,
competitiveness and strategic advantages for the Region; and
ensuring that the Pan-Caribbean Partnership on HIV/AIDS established
in March 2001 provide a model with its primary mandate to mobilize
resources for the implementation of the Regional Strategic Plan on
HIV/AIDS.
5. Enhance, within the context of the CSME, areas related to the
collective effort by all Caribbean countries for joint
representation to exert a greater influence on decision making in
the international arena which will favour the Region's interests;
6. Support the approaches to promotion and prevention, as a
responsibility, in relation to security of our assets; treatment of
those persons as an investment in the preservation of our human
capital - a cost benefit strategy for sustaining productivity and
services, and a human rights obligation.
7. Give priority to institutional strengthening of the CCH II
Secretariat and recognize that the sustainability of the Community’s
efforts will require attention to the involvement of civil society
and the other specialized stakeholders.
Source:
http://www.caricom.org/jsp/community/chronic_non_communicable_diseases/tenets_nassau_declaration.jsp
Source of Declaration:
http://www.caricom.org/jsp/communications/meetings_statements/nassau_declaration_on_health.jsp
Moscow Declaration on Prison Health as Part of Public Health, 2003
The delegates present at the joint World Health Organization/Russian
Federation International Meeting on Prison Health and Public Health,
held in Moscow on 23 and 24 October 2003, took as the basis of their
discussions the fundamental international standards relating to the
need for a close link between public health and the provision of
health care to those in prison.
Source: http://www.euro.who.int/en/what-we-do/health-topics/health-determinants/prisons-and-health/publications/moscow-declaration-on-prison-health-as-part-of-public-health
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/pdf_file/0007/98971/E94242.pdf
The Cartagena
Protocol on Biosafety, 2003
The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety to the Convention on Biological
Diversity is an international agreement which aims to ensure the
safe handling, transport and use of living modified organisms (LMOs)
resulting from modern biotechnology that may have adverse effects on
biological diversity, taking also into account risks to human
health. It was adopted on 29 January 2000 and entered into force on
11 September 2003.
Source:
http://bch.cbd.int/protocol/background/
See the text of the Cartagena Protocol at:
http://bch.cbd.int/protocol/text/
Commission on Intellectual Property Rights, Innovation and Public
Health (CIPIH), 2003
The Commission was established by the World Health Assembly in 2003:
“…to collect data and proposals from the different actors involved
and produce an analysis of intellectual property rights, innovation,
and public health, including the question of appropriate funding and
incentive mechanisms for the creation of new medicines and other
products against diseases that disproportionately affect developing
countries…” Intellectual property rights are important for
innovation relevant to public health and are one factor in
determining access to medicines. But neither innovation nor access
depend on just intellectual property rights. The work of the
Commission focuses on the intersections between intellectual
property rights, innovation and public health.
Source:
http://www.who.int/intellectualproperty/en/
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.who.int/intellectualproperty/documents/thereport/ENPublicHealthReport.pdf
Oslo Ministerial Declaration – global health: a pressing foreign
policy issue of our time, 2007
Under their initiative on Global Health and Foreign Policy, launched
in September 2006 in New York, the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of
Brazil, France, Indonesia, Norway, Senegal, South Africa and
Thailand issued the following statement in Oslo on 20 March 2007:
“In today’s era of globalisation and interdependence there is an
urgent need to broaden the scope of foreign policy. Together, we
face a number of pressing challenges that require concerted
responses and collaborative efforts. We must encourage new ideas,
seek and develop new partnerships and mechanisms, and create new
paradigms of cooperation.
We believe that health is one of the most important, yet still
broadly neglected, long-term foreign policy issues of our time. Life
and health are our most precious assets. There is a growing
awareness that investment in health is fundamental to economic
growth and development. It is generally acknowledged that threats to
health may compromise a country’s stability and security.
We believe that health as a foreign policy issue needs a stronger
strategic focus on the international agenda. We have therefore
agreed to make “impact on health” a point of departure and a
defining lens that each of our countries will use to examine key
elements of foreign policy and development strategies, and to engage
in a dialogue on how to deal with policy options from this
perspective”. (See Declaration for more).
Source:
http://www.regjeringen.no/nb/dep/ud/aktuelt/taler_artikler/utenriksministeren/2007/lancet.html?id=466469
The Kampala Declaration and Agenda for Global Action, 2008
The Kampala Declaration and Agenda for Global Action were endorsed
as the first-ever Global Forum on Human Resources for Health held on
2-7 March 2008. The document calls for higher commitment by
governments and development partners to human resources for health,
and for acceleration of negotiations for a global code of practice
for international recruitment of health personnel, providing an
overarching global framework for priority actions relating to the
health workforce.
Source:
http://www.who.int/workforcealliance/knowledge/resources/kampala_declaration/en/
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.who.int/workforcealliance/Kampala%20Declaration%20and%20Agenda%20web%20file.%20FINAL.pdf
UN General Assembly Resolution 63/33 on Global Health and Foreign
Policy, 2009
On 26 November 2009, the General Assembly adopted resolution 63/33
on global health and foreign policy, in which it recognized the
close relationship between and interdependence of foreign policy and
global health; urged Member States to consider health issues in the
formulation of foreign policy; and stressed the importance of
achieving the health-related Millennium Development Goals. The
Assembly requested that the Secretary-General, in close
collaboration with the Director-General of the World Health
Organization and in consultation with Member States, submit to the
Assembly at its sixty-fourth session, in 2009, a comprehensive
report, with recommendations, on challenges, activities and
initiatives related to foreign policy and global health, taking into
account the outcome of the annual ministerial review held by the
Economic and Social Council in 2009.
Source:
http://www.who.int/trade/Foreignpolicyandhealth/en/index.html
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.who.int/trade/events/UNGA_RESOLUTION_GHFP_63_33.pdf
Ministerial Declaration on Global Public Health, 2009
At the 2009 High-level Segment in Geneva, the UN Economic and Social
Council (ECOSOC) adopted its Ministerial Declaration on the theme of
the third Annual Ministerial Review (AMR), "Implementing the
internationally agreed goals and commitments in regard to global
public health". At the time, ECOSOC President Sylvie Lucas said that
the Ministerial Declaration contains concrete measures to advance
the realization of the global public health goals. The Ministerial
Declaration on Global Public Health announced a comprehensive agenda
for governments, UN agencies, and global civil society on global
health, which was later negotiated by UN Member States.
Source: http://www.un.org/en/ecosoc/about/
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.un.org/en/ecosoc/julyhls/pdf09/ministerial_declaration-2009.pdf
From Kampala to Bangkok: Reviewing Progress, Renewing Commitments,
2011
Participants at the Second Global Forum on Human Resources for
Health, held in Bangkok, 27- 29 January 2011, adopted the Outcome
Statement which reiterate the principles of the Kampala Declaration
and the Code as instruments for alignment and accountability at
global, regional, national and local levels, and call upon all
stakeholders to accelerate implementation in a comprehensive manner.
The task set was to take the momentum from Bangkok out into the
wider world: to move together, from commitment into action, to
translate resolution into results, and ensure that every person,
whoever they are and wherever they live, has access to a health
worker.
Source:
http://www.who.int/workforcealliance/knowledge/resources/bkkoutcome/en/index.html
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.who.int/workforcealliance/forum/2011/Outcomestatement.pdf
Beijing Declaration of the BRICS Health Ministers’ Meeting, 2011
The Health Ministers of the Federative Republic of Brazil, the
Russian Federation, the Republic of India, the People’s Republic of
China and the Republic of South Africa (BRICS), met in Beijing,
China, for the First BRICS Health Ministers’ Meeting on 11 July
2011, to discuss and coordinate positions on issues of common
interest as well as to identify areas for cooperation in public
health. The BRICS Ministers of Health issued the related Beijing
Declaration.
Source:
http://www.cfr.org/global-health/brics-health-ministers-meeting----beijing-declaration/p25620
See the text of the BRICS Health Ministers’ Meeting-Beijing
Declaration at:
http://keionline.org/node/1183
Protecting the Right to Health through action on the Social
Determinants of Health - A Declaration by Public Interest Civil
Society Organisations and Social Movements, 2011
This Declaration by public interest Civil Society Organisations and
Social Movements, noted urgently required actions by member states
and the WHO on these key areas:
• Implement equity-based social protection systems and maintain and
develop effective publicly provided and publicly financed health
systems that address the social, economic, environmental and
behavioural determinants of health with a particular focus on
reducing health inequities.
• Use progressive taxation, wealth taxes and the elimination of tax
evasion to finance action on the social determinants of health.
• Recognise explicitly the clout of finance capital, its dominance
of the global economy, and the origins and consequences of its
periodic collapses.
Source:
http://www.phmovement.org/en/node/6243
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.phmovement.org/sites/www.phmovement.org/files/AlternativeCivilSocietyDeclaration20Sep.pdf
Rio Political Declaration on Social Determinants of Health, 2011
The WHO convened a global conference between 19-21 October 2011 in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to build support for the implementation of
action on social determinants of health. The conference brought
together over 1,000 participants representing 125 Member States and
a diverse group of stakeholders. On 21 October, 2011 participating
Member States adopted the Rio Political Declaration on Social
Determinants of Health.
Source:
http://www.who.int/sdhconference/en/
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.who.int/sdhconference/declaration/Rio_political_declaration.pdf
First Global Ministerial Conference on Healthy Lifestyles and
Noncommunicable Disease Control, Moscow, 2011
The conference was a key milestone in the international campaign to
curb the impacts of cancers, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and
chronic lung diseases. It was jointly organized by the Russian
Federation and WHO, and took place on 28-29 April 2011, Moscow, the
Russian Federation. The aim of the conference was to support Member
States develop and strengthen policies and programmes on healthy
lifestyles and NCD prevention. These efforts are based on the Global
strategy for the prevention and control of NCDs and its action plan,
which include multisectoral and innovative approaches in prevention
and care.
Source:
http://www.who.int/nmh/events/moscow_ncds_2011/en/
See PDF of the Moscow Declaration at:
http://www.who.int/nmh/events/moscow_ncds_2011/conference_documents/moscow_declaration_en.pdf
1st Peoples Declaration in response to the UNFCCC COP 17, Global
Climate and Health Summit in Durban, South Africa, 2011
The first Peoples Declaration in response to the UNFCCC COP 17,
“The Protecting Public Health From Climate Change – A Global Call to
Action”, was launched in Durban, South Africa on December 4, 2011.
Having convened at the first Global Climate and Health Summit in
Durban, South Africa, leading healthcare providers, professionals
and organizations, acknowledged that the health impacts of climate
change, such as the spread of vector-borne diseases, and the
consequences of heat waves, droughts and extreme weather events are
already being felt around the world, particularly in sub-Saharan
Africa, where more people die as a consequence of climate change
than anywhere else. They expressed profound concern that as
greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise unabated, dangerous
climate change will magnify existing health crises, deepening and
broadening the global burden of disease. This will in turn raise
health care costs worldwide, while undermining and overwhelming
public health infrastructure everywhere. The overwhelming burden
will fall on the most vulnerable–those living in poor countries, who
have contributed least to greenhouse gas emissions. They asserted
that what is good for the climate is good for health, and that an
equitable resolution to climate change will result in major health
benefits worldwide. Given the gravity and urgency of the
situation—and the opportunity to promote public health by addressing
climate change—they called on colleagues in public health
organizations, health professional associations, hospitals, health
systems and ministries of health around the world to endorse their
Call to Action, and take concerted action.
Source:
http://www.psychology.org.au/
See PDF of the 1st Peoples Declaration at:
http://www.psychology.org.au/Assets/Files/Durban_Global_Climate_and_Health_Call_to_Action_Final%202011.pdf
2nd Peoples Declaration in response to the UNFCCC COP 17, Global
Climate and Health Summit in Durban, South Africa, 2011
The second Peoples Declaration in response to the UNFCCC COP 17,
the “Declaration of the Indigenous Peoples of the World to the
UNFCCC COP 17 – 2011”, issued on December 7, was a product of the
International Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on Climate Change, Durban,
South Africa, December 2, 2011. The Indigenous Peoples of the world,
united in the face of the climate crisis and the lack of political
will of the States, especially the biggest emitters of greenhouse
gases, demanded the immediate adoption of legally binding agreements
with shared but differentiated responsibilities, to halt global
warming and to define alternative models of development in harmony
with Mother Earth. For decades, Indigenous Peoples have warned that
climate change confirms that the harmonic relationship between
humans and Mother Earth has been ruptured, endangering the future of
humanity in its entirety. The whole model of civilization that began
500 years ago with the pillaging of the natural resources for profit
and the accumulation of capital, is in crisis. The alternative is to
change the system, not the climate, based on a new paradigm for
civilization, Living Well with harmony between the peoples and
Mother Earth.
Source:
http://www.forestpeoples.org
and see PDF of the 2nd Peoples Declaration at:
http://www.forestpeoples.org/topics/un-framework-convention-climate-change-unfccc/publication/2011/declaration-indigenous-peoples
Nightingale
Declaration for A Healthy World -
The Declaration is a cornerstone under an emerging longer-term
global campaign for "Mobilizing Public Opinion for the Health of
Nations” that is required to achieve our eventual goal of "achieving
a healthy World by 2020”, the Bicentennial of Nightingale's birth.
This global public awareness campaign is becoming
multi-faceted—involving the United Nations and UN Member States, the
worldwide media, in all of its forms as well as global civil
society—including "nurses and concerned citizens.” This “Nightingale
Declaration for a Healthy World” is a key component of this growing
global campaign. The Nightingale Declaration has so far been signed
by signatories from 106 countries.
Source:
http://www.nightingaledeclaration.net/the-declaration
The World Federation of Public Health Associations (WFPHA), Addis
Ababa Declaration, 2012
At the conclusion of the 13th World Congress on Public Health, held
22 – 27 April 2012 in Addis Abeba (Ethiopia), the WFPHA issued the:
Addis Ababa Declaration, a call on Global Health Equity, a call to
act on closing some of the critical gaps in global health and
well-being…
“…….This includes working across sectors and disciplines and in true
partnership with communities to:
1. Promote and attain social justice and equity in health by acting
through a ‘Social Determinants of Health’ approach;
2. Accelerate the attainment of national and international
development goals by building and redistributing resources to
strengthen international, national and local capacity and leadership
in public health;
3. Ensure that better context-specific, comprehensive and equitable
targets covering universal health coverage and health for all are
integrated into and made more visible within the MDGs as soon as
possible;
4. Enhance and strengthen, both numerically and in capability, the
public health workforce, in addition to developing new and effective
strategies to retain qualified health professionals;
5. Combat fraud and corruption, as these are major determinants of
health that affect all, but especially the poor and vulnerable;
6. Recognize physical and mental disabilities and injury prevention
as critical components of a public health approach to health equity;
and,
7. Fulfill their financial pledges in respect of the MDGs and to, in
addition, fulfill their pledges with respect to the Paris
Declaration and to the political declarations on Non-Communicable
Diseases and the Social Determinants of Health……”
Source: http://www.wfpha.org/
See PDF of the document at:
http://www.wfpha.org/tl_files/doc/about/Addis_Declaration.pdf
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