Poverty killing on a grand scale: WHO
GENEVA - A “toxic combination” of poverty and social injustice is killing people on a grand scale, a World Health Organization report said Thursday, urging states to fund healthcare to cut inequalities.
The Commission on the Social Determinants of Health, a report commissioned by the WHO and chaired by Sir Michael Marmot of University College London, said these health inequalities were avoidable but only if concerted efforts were made by governments and civil society.
“Reducing health inequities is an ethical imperative. Social injustice is killing people on a grand scale,” the report said.
Marmot told journalists that a girl born in Zambia can expect to live 43 years, while one born in Japan can expect to live twice as long, to 86 years.
“There is no good biological reason why this should be the case,” he said, instead pointing the finger at social factors that give rise to such a gaping disparity.
“These health inequalities are preventable. They arise from the circumstances in which people are born, grow, live, work and age - the social determinants of health,” he said.
“Taking action to deal with preventable causes of illness means taking social action… a toxic combination of poor social policies, unfair economic arrangements and bad politics is responsible,” he added.
Health care must remain within the public sphere and universally available regardless of people’s ability to pay, he said.
“The Commission considers health care a common good, not a market commodity,” the report said.
“The Commission advocates financing the health-care system through general taxation and/or mandatory universal insurance … the evidence is compellingly in favour of a publicly funded health-care system,” it added.
Marmot said that whilst “virtually all” high-income countries had such a system, there is no reason why it should not be adopted by other countries if governments show the necessary political will and funded healthcare through progressive taxation.
“We are distressed by the reports we see of healthcare simply being unavailable to people because of inability to pay, and we see that throughout lower- and middle-income countries,” he said.
The report said it was “unacceptable” that upwards of 100 million people are pushed into poverty each year through “catastrophic” healthcare costs.
The United States is one of the rare developed countries that does not have such a system but relies chiefly on citizens holding private medical insurance.
Marmot said that while it was “not for me to tell one of the richest countries on Earth how it should organize its health care system,” the fact that around 49 million Americans do not have health insurance suggests this is not the most efficient model.
“It’s not perhaps the best use of money that’s being spent. There are a lot of people who feel that, and would actually like to see coming out of the current (presidential) campaign in the US, proposals for a universal health insurance,” he said. Subscribe=>![]()
English



Hollywood heavyweights Robert De Niro and Al Pacino reunited on the red carpet in New York Wednesday night for the premiere of their new crime thriller “Righteous Kill” — their first film together since making 1995’s “Heat.”
The movie also stars
The Pakistani Army has been given orders to retaliate against any unilateral strike by the Afghanistan-based US troops inside the country.
Army Spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas confirmed the orders in a brief interview with Geo News on late Thursday night.
The
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev says he will not accept military action or new sanctions against Iran over its nuclear activities.
“We should not take any unilateral steps. It is not acceptable to opt for a military scenario. It would be dangerous,”
As the world marks the seventh anniversary of 9/11, some European experts say security improvements in the US have been undercut by fairly basic mistakes. Among the remedies is more trust in America’s laws and allies.
Seven years after the attacks
David Miliband has allegedly come in for a rather undiplomatic tongue-lashing from his Russian counterpart.
The Foreign Secretary was apparently given a furious dressing down by Sergei Lavrov over the telephone.
Mr Miliband’s criticism of Russia’s recent incursion into Georgia is believed
PIETERMARITZBURG, South Africa - A South African judge ruled Friday that prosecutors were wrong to charge ANC President Jacob Zuma with corruption, effectively clearing way for the 66-year-old former freedom fighter to become the country’s next president.
Judge Chris Nicholson’s ruling
Thailand’s political turmoil deepened Friday when the ruling coalition failed to turn up to parliament to reelect leader Samak Sundaravej as prime minister.
Lawmakers from the six-party coalition did not attend an emergency session of parliament called to choose a prime minister, three days after a court stripped Samak of power for accepting payments for hosting