BMJ 1996;312:924-925 (13 April)

Editorials

Health and human rights

Protecting human rights is essential for promoting health

When the World Health Organisation redefined health as "a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being"1 it not only expanded health far beyond medicine, it openly acknowledged the vast accumulated knowledge about the central role of societal determinants of population health. Despite the public's belief to the contrary, medical care is a relatively minor, albeit important, contributor to health,2 far outweighed by societal factors, of which social class has been the most extensively studied.3 4

In 1988, a seminal report by the United States Institute of Medicine defined the mission of public health as "ensuring the conditions in which people can be healthy."4 In turn, this required those working in public health to consider the societal nature of these essential conditions in which people could achieve the highest attainable standard of physical, mental, and social wellbeing. Paradoxically, the discipline of public health . . . [Full text of this article]


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  • Bekker, L.-G., Wood, R. (2006). Blood Safety--At What Cost?. JAMA 295: 557-558 [Full text]  
  • Oppenheimer, G. M., Bayer, R., Colgrove, J. (2002). Health and Human Rights: Old Wine in New Bottles?. J Law Med Ethics 30: 522-532  
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  • Torres, A. M, Sanz, B. (2000). Health care provision for illegal immigrants: should public health be concerned?. J. Epidemiol. Community Health 54: 478-479 [Full text]  
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