Launch of Global Health Watch 2
Alternative
world health report calls for radical change
Global Health
Watch 2: launch 16th October
Civil
society organizations and scientists from around the world are calling for ‘a new development paradigm’ to address the toxic combination of
climate change, growing poverty and inequality and poor health.
The new report, Global Health Watch 2, says
that unfair social and economic policies combined with bad politics are to
blame for the poor state of the health of millions of people in the world. The report makes
stinging criticisms of key global actors, including the World Health
Organization, the World Bank and the Gates Foundation. The report calls on
governments to stop the Bank from meddling in health politics.
Global
Health Watch 2 provides examples of civil society mobilization across the world
for more equitable health care and more health promotion, although more is
needed to bring about significant improvements in health.
The report reveals widespread unease
about the immense but unaccountable power and influence of the Gates
Foundation. It says that although the
Gates Foundation has injected vast sums of money into global health, it
operates in an undemocratic way and reinforces a medical-technical approach.
Among
other issues it highlights is the pressure exerted on the World Health
Organization by powerful and vested interests that would prefer WHO’s activities
and programme to have a more biomedical and less political focus.
Global
Health Watch 2 will be
launched in London
on 16th October, followed by launches in around 20 other countries.
The first edition of Global Health
Watch, published in 2005, was hailed for its ground-breaking analysis and
mobilising call to action.
Marion Birch, director of the
London-based charity, Medact:
“Priorities set by the rich world damage the
health of people thousands of miles away. Funding for water and sanitation is falling while slum-dwellers in Lagos pay up to 40 times as much for water as residents in
downtown New York.
Oil extraction in the Niger
Delta generates billions of dollars of revenue but local communities lack basic
health care.”
Amit Sengupta of the People’s Health
Movement in India:
“The World Bank’s job is to
help transfer resources from richer to poor countries and it should act
accordingly. Its impact on the health systems of poor countries has been
largely negative. Internationally, it
has also contributed to the uncoordinated circus of health sector policy-making
that makes it difficult for Ministries of Health to function”.
Martin Drewry, director of the charity Health Unlimited:
“The
majority world does not want charity – it wants a fairer political and economic
system. It needs fewer billionaires; not more. While it is great that Bill
Gates is willing to donate his money towards improving health in Africa, he would do far better campaigning for more
effective tax systems both nationally and internationally”.
ENDS To order copies, please contact the Zed sales team on 020 7837 4014 or
email sales@zedbooks.net.
Global Health Watch 2 will be
launched on Thursday October 16, 4.45 - 6.15 pm, at the Wilkins Jeremy Bentham Meeting
Room, Main Building UCL, Gower
Street, London WC1E 6BT.
Global Health Watch 2 is a civil society alternative
to the WHO’s World Health Report. It was
coordinated by the People’s Health Movement, the Global Equity Gauge Alliance
and Medact with input from 80 organisations and more than 130 individuals.
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