Universal Health Coverage and the Right to Health: From Legal Principle to Post-2015 Indicators.

Devi Sridhar, Martin McKee, Gorik Ooms, Claudia Beiersmann, Eric Friedman, Hebe Gouda, Peter Hill, Albrecht Jahn
Author Information
  1. Devi Sridhar: Edinburgh Medical School, University of Edinburgh, Teviot Place, Edinburgh, UK devi.sridhar@ed.ac.uk.
  2. Martin McKee: European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, England.
  3. Gorik Ooms: Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium.
  4. Claudia Beiersmann: Institute for Public Health, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany.
  5. Eric Friedman: O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, Georgetown University, Washington DC.
  6. Hebe Gouda: School of Population Health, University of Queensland, Queensland, Australia.
  7. Peter Hill: School of Population Health, University of Queensland, Queensland, Australia.
  8. Albrecht Jahn: Institute for Public Health, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany.

Abstract

Universal Health Coverage (UHC) is widely considered one of the key components for the post-2015 health goal. The idea of UHC is rooted in the right to health, set out in the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights. Based on the Covenant and the General Comment of the Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, which is responsible for interpreting and monitoring the Covenant, we identify 6 key legal principles that should underpin UHC based on the right to health: minimum core obligation, progressive realization, cost-effectiveness, shared responsibility, participatory decision making, and prioritizing vulnerable or marginalized groups. Yet, although these principles are widely accepted, they are criticized for not being specific enough to operationalize as post-2015 indicators for reaching the target of UHC. In this article, we propose measurable and achievable indicators for UHC based on the right to health that can be used to inform the ongoing negotiations on Sustainable Development Goals. However, we identify 3 major challenges that face any exercise in setting indicators post-2015: data availability as an essential criterion, the universality of targets, and the adaptation of global goals to local populations.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Human Rights
Humans
Quality Indicators, Health Care
Universal Health Insurance

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0healthUHCrightCovenantindicatorsUniversalHealthCoveragewidelypost-2015EconomicSocialCulturalRightsidentifyprinciplesbasedglobalconsideredonekeycomponentsgoalidearootedsetInternationalBasedGeneralCommentCommitteeresponsibleinterpretingmonitoring6 keylegalunderpinhealth:minimumcoreobligationprogressiverealizationcost-effectivenesssharedresponsibilityparticipatorydecisionmakingprioritizingvulnerablemarginalizedgroupsYetalthoughacceptedcriticizedspecificenoughoperationalizereachingtargetarticleproposemeasurableachievablecanusedinformongoingnegotiationsSustainableDevelopmentGoalsHowever3majorchallengesfaceexercisesettingpost-2015:dataavailabilityessentialcriterionuniversalitytargetsadaptationgoalslocalpopulationsRightHealth:LegalPrinciplePost-2015Indicatorslawuniversalcoverage

Similar Articles

Cited By