Human rights and NCDs – integrated and indivisible
13th July 2017
13th July 2017
“Ensuring the ‘right to health’ in the context of NCDs means ensuring the rights to education, income, housing, food, information and work. All must be provided without discrimination.”
‘Human rights’ were first formalised after the Second World War – as the response of an appalled world to the atrocities of the previous decade. Out of the initial, succinct Universal Declaration of Human Rights (adopted by the newly formed United Nations in 1948) have grown many international treaties:
Human rights must be applied without discrimination – which means in practice that realising rights will require a focus on the most vulnerable in society, who are less likely to have their rights upheld. We must all be able to participate in and claim our rights. And governments cannot cherry-pick which to uphold: human rights are integrated and indivisible.
Crucially, governments are held to account. Some countries have agreed to allow citizens to bring complaints to an international committee when they feel that their government has breached a treaty. But all governments in countries that have ratified the treaties must regularly report on progress (or lack of it), and are given country-specific, time-bound recommendations in response.
The right to health is contained in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and is also enshrined in all the specific and regional treaties. It does not – and, of course, cannot – imply a right to be healthy. Instead, it is the right to the ‘highest attainable standard of physical and mental health’. The treaties acknowledge that not all countries can offer this immediately to all – but the maximum available resources must be offered without discrimination. The right to health is also subject to ‘progressive realisation’ (governments cannot ratchet back on their provision of the right).
The UN Interagency Task Force on NCDs is currently unpicking the complex links between human rights and NCDs, to provide guidance and a common set of messages across the UN system and to review the global NCD accountability framework through a human-rights lens.
This is not only about the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of treatment; in addition, the prevention of NCDs is inextricably bound up with other social determinants.
Ensuring the ‘right to health’ in the context of NCDs means ensuring the rights to education, income, housing, food, information and work. All must be provided without discrimination.
The impact of the private sector is also important: while companies do not have formal human rights obligations under the international treaties (the primary obligation is on governments), they are called upon to respect human rights.
In addition to informing all our thinking about how best to reach the most vulnerable in society, there are many specific points at which international human rights intersect with NCD prevention and control, for example:
Non-discrimination (ICCPR and ICESCR, Article 2)
Right not to be subject to inhuman or degrading treatment (ICCPR, Article 7)
Right to information (ICCPR, Article 19)
Right to food (ICESCR, Article 11)
Right to play (CRC, Article 31)
Human rights appear in all the NCD treaties, but the way in which human rights are put into practice nationally varies wildly around the world. While human rights are very much part of the legal framework of many countries in South America and Africa, the swing to the right in countries including the United States and in Europe has meant that they are increasingly misunderstood, misinterpreted, and regarded with suspicion.
However, the fundamental principle of human rights – to create a life of dignity for all – speaks to a very deep understanding of what it is to be human.
When civil society fails to use human-rights thinking to strengthen our efforts on NCDs, we ignore an important weapon in our armoury.
Katy Cooper (@healthkaty) has worked on the prevention of NCDs since 2005 – until recently as assistant director at C3 Collaborating for Health and now as an independent consultant and writer – and has particular interests in the intersection of NCD prevention with environmental and human rights issues. She holds an MSc in Human Rights from the London School of Economics and Political Science.
A short video on NCDs and Human Rights by David Patterson, of IDLO.