The phrase "right to health" is not a familiar one, although the constitution of the World Health Organization and a number of international human rights treaties recognize the right to the "highest attainable standard" of health. Although enunciated in these international documents, the scope and meaning of the "right to health" as a human right is only gradually being clarified.
Approaching health issues through a rights perspective adds an important dimension to consideration of health status, emphasizing the link of health status to issues of dignity, nondiscrimination, justice, and participation, as these aspects are embodied in principles underlying all international human rights.
A rights-based perspective on health can be seen as reflecting the following elements of all rights and applying them to health status issues:
While it is difficult to provide evidence that there should be a right to health, more practical would be the right to the opportunity to achieve good health. But even that is complex—attaining good health requires social, economic, and environmental support, which in turn provide the opportunity for good health. A key factor in realizing the opportunity for health is the right to health care.
JOHN H. BRYANT
(SEE ALSO: Access to Health Services; Equity and Resource Allocation; Ethics of Public Health)
Gostin, L., and Mann, J. (1994). "Towards Development of a Human Rights Impact Assessment for the Formulation and Evaluation of Public Health Policies." Health and Human Rights 1:59.
Leary, V. (1994). "The Right to Health in International Human Rights Law." Health and Human Rights 1:28.