Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

A Strategy for WHO. Sustainable Development: Brundtland Legacy n 1987: World Commission on Environment and Development (The “Brundtland Commission”) n.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "A Strategy for WHO. Sustainable Development: Brundtland Legacy n 1987: World Commission on Environment and Development (The “Brundtland Commission”) n."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Strategy for WHO

2 Sustainable Development: Brundtland Legacy n 1987: World Commission on Environment and Development (The “Brundtland Commission”) n “Our Common Future”: Coined the term Sustainable Development: –”Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”

3 Economic Development Trade Finance Investment Technology Transfer Environmental Development Oceans Atmosphere Forests Climate Social Development Health Education Energy Water Food Sustainable Development

4 Sustainable Development: Rio Legacy n 1992: UNCED –Rio Declaration (“ Human beings are at the centre of concerns for sustainable development. They are entitled to a healthy and productive life in harmony with nature” ) –Agenda 21 : Global Programme of Action on Sustainable Development –Global Conventions –CSD and Task Manager system

5 Rio Legacy: The Health Gap n Chapter 6 Agenda 21 –Focus on: n Primary health care n Communicable diseases n Urban health n Pollution and hazards n Vulnerable groups –Inadequate attention to: n Health and poverty alleviation n Health risks and determinants beyond communicable diseases n Health impacts of development policies and practices n Globalisation and health

6 WHO Contribution to the WSSD An unprecedented opportunity to show why health needs to be seen as central to the development process.

7 Four Themes / Messages n Ill-health hampers poverty alleviation and socio-economic development n Environmental degradation, mismanagement of natural resources and unhealthy consumption patterns/lifestyles impact on health n Development policies and practices need to take into account current and future impacts on health n New partnerships and reform measures are needed inside and outside the health sector

8 Key Elements of the WHO Strategy (1) n Assessing the Evidence and Tracking Progress –Thematic reviews –Institutional and policy reviews –UN critical trends report –Report on cross-sectoral policy and intervention strategies

9 Key Elements of the WHO Strategy (2) n Defining the issues and policy positions: Dialogue among key partners n Nov 2001: Health think-tank meeting (Norway) n Jan 2002: Interministerial health meeting (SA) n Feb - June 2002: Intergovernmental prepcom meetings and associated events n May 2002: WHA roundtables n Aug 2002: Implementation conference (SA) n Sep 2002: Johannesburg Summit

10 Key Elements of the WHO Strategy (3) n Advocacy and Awareness-raising: n Development of WSSD Website n Production and dissemination of Fact sheets/Issue/Policy briefs n Production and dissemination of Media briefs n Multistakeholder virtual dialogues n Presentations key target groups: missions, G77 etc

11 Key Outcomes for WHO n Health issues feature centrally in the final conference documentation/declaration n Renewed commitment to implementation of the health aspects of Agenda 21 n Concrete plan of action in place on identified priorities for health and sustainable development n Announcement of major global initiative on health and sustainable development n Agreement on mechanisms to improve intersectoral action, including institutional strengthening for HIA n New partnerships/alliances in place

12 A Strategy for WHO


Download ppt "A Strategy for WHO. Sustainable Development: Brundtland Legacy n 1987: World Commission on Environment and Development (The “Brundtland Commission”) n."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google