Cross posted from: EQUIDAD@listserv.paho.org
Primary health care and the social determinants of health: essential and complementary approaches for reducing inequities in health
Kumanan Rasanathan1, Eugenio Villar Montesinos1, Don Matheson3, Carissa Etienne2, Tim Evans4
1 Department of Ethics, Equity, Trade and Human Rights, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
2 Health Systems and Services Cluster, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
3 Centre for Public Health Research, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand
4 Information, Evidence and Research Cluster, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
J Epidemiol Community Health doi:10.1136/jech.2009.093914
Website: http://bit.ly/aOiQAT
‘……Increasing focus on health inequities has brought renewed attention to two related policy discourses - primary health care and the social determinants of health.
Both prioritise health equity and also promote a broad view of health, multisectoral action and the participation of empowered communities. Differences arise in the lens each applies to the health sector, with resultant tensions around their mutual ability to reform health systems and address the social determinants.
However, pitting them against each other is unproductive. Health services that do not consciously address social determinants exacerbate health inequities. If a revitalised primary health care is to be the key approach to organise society to minimise health inequities, action on social determinants has to be a major constituent strategy.
Success in reducing health inequities will require ensuring that the broad focus of primary health care and the social determinants is kept foremost in policy - instead of the common historical experience of efforts being limited to a part of the health sector. ….”
--
Ruggiero, Mrs. Ana Lucia (WDC)
mailto:ruglucia@paho.org