Friday, September 23, 2011

[EQ] Latest news about World Conference on Social Determinants of Health - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 19 - 21 October 2011

World Conference on Social Determinants of Health

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil  19 - 21 October 2011


Website: http://bit.ly/mOELYR


Conference preparations are well underway and there is significant interest within Member States and among stakeholders to actively contribute to the discussions in Rio. As of 23 September, 80 Member States delegations have registered for the conference, 42 of them headed by Ministers of Health.

WHO Discussion Paper -
The WHO Discussion Paper 'Closing the gap: Policy into practice on social determinants of health' is available on the conference website in English. (French, Spanish and Portuguese versions will be available soon.) at http://bit.ly/q67ren

Conference programme
The pre-conference programme and the draft conference programme can be found at http://bit.ly/reByXA
On 18 October and the morning of 19 October will feature 19 stakeholder-led events, organized by ministries of health, NGOs, UN partners and WHO departments.

Other news

Online registration has been extended until Friday, 30 September 2011 and late registration will also be possible at the venue from 18 October 2011.
For more information about the online registration for Member States and other participants, please consult our Guide for Participants
http://bit.ly/iEJvRR

Media registration is open to journalists and communications professionals.
 
All conference sessions, including the five parallel sessions, will be webcast live on the WHO conference web site.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, Spanish and Portuguese.


 

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[EQ] Closing the gap: Policy into practice on social determinants of health

Closing the gap: Policy into practice on social determinants of health
Policy into Practice on Social Determinants of Health


Discussion Paper
Department of Ethics, Equity, Trade and Human Rights - WHO
World Health Organization – September 2011
Available online as PDF [56p.] at:http://bit.ly/q67ren

World Conference on Social Determinants of Health
Rio de Janeiro on 19-21 October 2011 http://bit.ly/mOELYR


Conference Program: http://bit.ly/reByXA


“………..In the time it takes to read this discussion paper, hundreds of people will die needlessly as a result of health inequities – unfair and avoidable or remediable differences in health outcomes between different population groups. Health inequities cause unnecessary suffering and result from adverse social conditions and failing public policies. These inequities are sentinels of the same factors that undermine development, environmental sustainability, the well-being of societies, and societies' capacity to provide fair opportunities for all. Health inequities are a problem for all countries and reflect not only differences in income and wealth, but also differences in opportunity on the basis of factors such as ethnicity and racism, class, gender, education, disability, sexual orientation, and geographical location. These differences have profound consequences and represent the impact of what we know as social determinants of health.

 

Yet health inequities, by definition, are not inevitable. Millions of people need not die of preventable causes each year. in 2008, the WHO commission on social Determinants of Health compiled recommendations to create an extensive prescription of what is required to “close the gap” through action on social determinants across all sectors of society. after considering the commission’s report at the 2009 World Health assembly, Member states resolved to put these recommendations into practice, adopting resolution 62.14, "reducing health inequities through action on the social determinants of health."

 

“…..This discussion paper aims to inform the proceedings and contribute to fulfilling the purpose of the World conference, as mandated by resolution 62.14: to share experiences on how to address the challenges posed by health inequities and to mobilize commitment to the urgent implementation of feasible actions on social determinants in all countries. The paper does not provide a blueprint, but instead lays out the key components that all countries need to integrate in their own context in implementing a social determinants approach.

The discussions at the World conference will further consider these themes and show how, in all contexts, it is possible to put policy into practice on social determinants of health to improve health, reduce health inequities, and promote development. ……….”  Dr Marie-Paule Kieny, assistant Director-General innovation, information, evidence and research WHO

 


Discussion paper - Content:

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

INTRODUCTION

CONCEPTUAL BASIS AND RATIONALE FOR ACTION ON SOCIAL DETERMINANTS

POLITICAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR IMPLEMENTING ACTION ON SOCIAL DETERMINANTS

Progress, obstacles, and the effect of crises

Principles and requisites for action

1. GOVERNANCE TO TACKLE THE ROOT CAUSES OF HEALTH INEQUITIES: IMPLEMENTING ACTION ON SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH

Building good governance for action on social determinants

implementing intersectoral action

2. PROMOTING PARTICIPATION: COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP FOR ACTION ON SOCIAL DETERMINANTS

creating the conditions for participation

Brokering participation and ensuring representativeness

Facilitating the role of civil society

3. THE ROLE OF THE HEALTH SECTOR, INCLUDING PUBLIC HEALTH PROGRAMMES, IN REDUCING HEALTH INEQUITIES

executing the health sector‘s role in governance for social determinants

reorienting health care services and public health programmes to reduce inequities

institutionalizing equity in health systems governance

4. GLOBAL ACTION ON SOCIAL DETERMINANTS: ALIGNING PRIORITIES AND STAKEHOLDERS

aligning global stakeholders

aligning global priorities

5. MONITORING PROGRESS: MEASUREMENT AND ANALYSIS TO INFORM POLICIES AND BUILD ACCOUNTABILITY ON SOCIAL DETERMINANTS

identifying sources and collecting data

Disaggregating data

selecting indicators and targets

Moving forward despite unavailability of systematic data

Disseminating information on health inequities and social determinants to inform action

integrating data into policy processes

assessing the health and equity impacts of different policy options

CONCLUSION: URGENT STEPS

GLOSSARY

REFERENCES

Closing the gap: policy into practice on social determinants of health: Discussion paper for the World conference on social Determinants of Health was produced under the overall direction of rüdiger Krech (Director). The principal writer and editor was Kumanan rasanathan. Funding to assist in the preparation and production of this discussion paper was received from the Government of Brazil.

Significant contributions in the form of text, fi gures, and boxes were provided by carmen amela Heras, ilona Kickbusch, Bernardo Kliksberg, Taru Koivisto, Jennifer Lee, rene Loewenson, Belinda Loring, Miranda MacPherson, Michael Marmot, Don Matheson, Lorena ruano, Victoria saint, Jeanette Vega, and David Woodward.

Key inputs and peer review for drafts of the discussion paper were provided by the advisory Group, the organizing committee and WHo regional Focal Points for the World conference on social Determinants of Health. The members of these groups included silvio albuquerque, carmen amela Heras, Mohammed assai, eduardo Barbosa, anjana Bhushan, Jane Billings, Paulo Buss, nils Daulaire, Maria Luisa escorel, Kira Fortune, Luiz a. c. Galvão, suvajee Good, ilona Kickbusch, Bernardo Kliksberg, Taru Koivisto, rüdiger Krech, Michael Marmot, alvaro Matida, Malebona Precious Matsoso, abdi Momin, Davison Munodawafa, Jai narain, Luiz odorico, rômulo Paes de sousa, alberto Pellegrini, Felix rigoli, carlos santos-Burgoa, Tone Torgersen, agis Tsouros, eugenio Villar Montesinos, susan Watts, and erio Ziglio. Valuable comments, suggestions, criticisms, and assistance were also received from Daniel albrecht, Francisco armada, alanna armitage, Jim Ball, Leopold Blanc, ashley Bloomfi eld, Ludo Bok, Josiane Bonnefoy, Matthias Braubach, Danny Broderick, chris Brown, Kevin Buckett, andrew cassels, Genevieve chedeville-Murray, Maggie Davies, Barbara de Zalduondo, Marama ellis, sharon Friel, Michelle Funk, Peter Goldblatt, Volker Hann, Patrick Kadama, rania Kawar, Meri Koivusalo, Theodora Koller, Jacob Kumaresan, ronald Labonté, eero Lahtinen, Pierre Legoff, Michael Lennon, Margot Lettner, Bridget Lloyd, Knut Lönnroth, Brian Lutz, Peter Mamacos, nanoot Mathurapote, Hooman Momen, Davide Mosca, carles Muntaner, Benjamin nganda, Monireh obbadi, eeva ollila, Jeffrey o'Malley, cyril Pervilhac, Maravand Pinto, sandy Pitcher, amit Prasad, Mario raviglione, Marilyn rice, Katja rohrer,
Ana Lucia Ruggiero, Xenia scheil-adlung, Gerard schmets, Ted schrecker, Claudio schuftan, Hani serag, alaka singh, anand sivasankara Kurup, Zsofi a szilagyi, Martin Tobias, Peter Tugwell, nicole Valentine, Vivian Welch, Deborah Wildgoose, carmel Williams, Holly Wong, ilcheong Yi, and Hongwen Zhao.

 

 

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 *      *     *
This message from the Pan American Health Organization, PAHO/WHO, is part of an effort to disseminate
information Related to: Equity; Health inequality; Socioeconomic inequality in health; Socioeconomic
health differentials; Gender; Violence; Poverty; Health Economics; Health Legislation; Ethnicity; Ethics;
Information Technology - Virtual libraries; Research & Science issues.  [DD/ KMC Area]
Washington DC USA

“Materials provided in this electronic list are provided "as is". Unless expressly stated otherwise, the findings
and interpretations included in the Materials are those of the authors and not necessarily of The Pan American
Health Organization PAHO/WHO or its country members”.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PAHO/WHO Website
Equity List - Archives - Join/remove: http://listserv.paho.org/Archives/equidad.html
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IMPORTANT: This transmission is for use by the intended
recipient and it may contain privileged, proprietary or
confidential information. If you are not the intended
recipient or a person responsible for delivering this
transmission to the intended recipient, you may not
disclose, copy or distribute this transmission or take
any action in reliance on it. If you received this transmission
in error, please dispose of and delete this transmission.

Thank you.