Transcript Slide 1

THE RIGHT
TO HEALTH
MELBA KATINDI
ADVOCACY OFFICER
OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION
 Introduction
 The Right to Health
 Challenges and Realization of the Right to Health
 The EAC Bill
 Role of Parliamentarians
 Role of CSOs
 Conclusion
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THE RIGHT TO HEALTH
 1946: WHO Constitution adopted the right to health
 "a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being
and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity”
 1966: International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural
Rights (ICESCR) adopted- Kenya ratified the Convention in------
 CEDAW, CRC, CRPD, ACHPR and ACRWC all have clauses that
specifically expound on the right to health for women,
children and persons with disabilities- Kenya has ratified all
these instruments
 In the last decade over 70 countries have incorporated the
right to health into national constitutions including Kenya
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But Health remains out of reach to billions
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CHALLENGES
 Nearly 2 billion people (a third of the world’s population)
lack access to essential medicines.
 The median coverage of health insurance is 35% in Latin
America, 10% in Asia, and less than 8% in Africa. In Kenya
only 1 in 4 working kenyans can afford medical cover
 In low-income / middle-income countries, drugs account
for 20–60% of health-care costs, and 50–90% of these
costs are paid out-of- pocket by patients.
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Challenges cont....
 Globally, about 150 million people suffer financial
catastrophe annually while 100 million are pushed below
the poverty line.
 On average, a Kenyan woman without health insurance
must pay almost $350 USD in order to deliver (normally) in
a private health facility
 The huge burden of health and particularly HIV is on
women, children and older persons.
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Actualizing the right to health
Important steps.
 Map the current state of public health to determine
accessibility by all including the minority, marginalised and
special groups
 Accessibility: Physical facilities, drugs and commodities,
equipment, personnel, comprehensive services.
 consider geographical location, special needs e.g
reproductive health services, HIV services, palliative care…
 Introduce rights approaches in service delivery in the health
sector- people centred approaches, socio- cultural analyses of
environments and issues, accountability, transparency,
allocation of health finances.
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Actualizing the right to health
 The How
 Increased literacy among community people and parliaments on
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the rights of special groups.
Formulation and review of legislation to actualize this right
Investing - financial, physical and human resources
Increased on-budget allocation for health sector
Prioritizing and Maximizing results from ministerial allocations
Commitment towards fighting corruption
Investment in public education and advocacy prevention
strategies
THE DRAFT EAC HIV AND AIDS PREVENTION
AND MANAGEMENT BILL, 2010
Necessary due to the high stigma associated with HIV and the
rampant discrimination that PLHIV faced over the years
Purposes of the Bill
• promote a rights based approach to dealing with all
matters relating to HIV and AIDS;
• extend to every person living with or affected by HIV, the
full protection of the person’s human rights and civil
liberties
• Ensure special investment in women and girls health
• Standardize HIV management in the EA region
Clauses 44 and 35 will greatly impact women, girls and caregivers. Is silent on the older people.
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EAC Bill cont …….
Current status of the bill:
 Bill has just been discussed and approved by the EAC
Sectoral Council on Health (combining health and HIV &
AIDS) in its sitting of March-April '11 in Kigali.
 The Bill awaits to be tabled at the Sectoral Council on
Legal & Judicial Affairs later this year
 Will thereafter be taken to the Council of Ministers, who,
upon approval and with necessary modifications, if any,
will table it before EALA.
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ROLE OF PARLIAMENTARIANS IN REALIZATION OF
THE EAC BILL
 Knowledge, buy-in and support on the EAC Bill
 Prioritize health and hasten implementation of the
policies promoting health rights by raising evidence
based information on failures to deliver on this right.
 Pass effective country-specific policies and regulations
that encompass the HRBA and protection against HIV
related violations - in line with the Bill
 Actively advocate for recognition of the needs of
vulnerable groups and prioritize those in implementation
of country-specific health budgets
 Positively exploit civil society for up to date information,
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representative of reality on the ground
ROLE OF CSO’s
 Familiarize themselves with the mandate of EALA with the aim of
identifying opportunities for engagement
 Information sharing with members of parliament to provide useful
information that would enrich debate on health related bills
 Meaningful engagement in the formulation and review of
legislation touching on matters relating to health
 Collect evidence and facts on good and bad practices and share
with stakeholders including MPs
 Public information and education – More media engagement
 Hold governments accountable in delivery of services
 Continue to advocate for actualization of the highest attainable
standard of health
• Undertake Strategic Litigation: Public interest litigation for special
groups
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Conclusion
The right to health is closely linked to the right to life without
which human rights have no value for any individual.
Through meaningful MPs - CSOs engagement, we can enhance
realization of the needs of vulnerable groups hence
facilitating a more productive and wealthier nation!
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AHSANTE SANA
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