67th
World Health Assembly adopts historic resolution "Strengthening the
role of the health system in addressing violence, in particular against
women and girls, and against Children"
On
24 May 2014, the 67th World Health Assembly (WHA) adopted a historic
resolution entitled "Strengthening the role of the health system in
addressing violence, in particular against women and girls, and against
children". The resolution, which was co-sponsored by the Governments of
Albania, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Croatia, Guatemala, India, Italy,
Kenya, Latvia, Mexico, Moldova, Namibia, Netherlands, Norway, Paraguay,
Portugal, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkey, Ukraine, United States, Uruguay
and Zambia, is the result of passionate negotiation that ended in the
early hours of the morning prior to the closure of the WHA.
Among other tasks, the resolution
calls on WHO to prepare its first ever global plan of action on
strengthening the role of the health system in addressing interpersonal
violence, in particular against women and girls, and against children,
which WHO is invited to present through the Executive Board to the 69th
WHA in 2016.
The
new resolution notes that interpersonal violence, in particular against
women and girls, and against children, persists in every country of the
world as a major challenge to public health. It raises further concerns
that violence has health-related consequences including death,
disability and physical injuries, mental health impacts and sexual and
reproductive health consequences, as well as social consequences. It
recognizes that health systems are not adequately addressing the problem
of violence, yet affirms the health system's role in preventing,
responding, and advocating for interventions to combat the social
acceptability and tolerance of interpersonal violence.
In
addition to the global plan of action, WHO is requested to continue to
strengthen efforts to develop the scientific evidence on magnitude,
trends, health consequences, and risk and protective factors for
violence; support Member States by providing technical assistance; and
finalize its global status report in 2014. WHO should also report
regularly on progress in implementing this resolution.
Member
States are urged to ensure that all people affected by violence have
timely, effective and affordable access to health services; improve the
collection and dissemination of data on violence; and enhance capacities
to prevent and respond to violence.
The resolution also urges Member States to ensure health sector
engagement with other sectors, in order to promote and develop an
effective, comprehensive, multisectoral response, by addressing violence
in health and development plans; establishing and adequately financing
national multisectoral strategies; and promoting inclusive participation
of relevant stakeholders.
Across
the world, each year, nearly 1.4 million people lose their lives to
violence. For every person who dies as a result of violence, many more
are injured and suffer from a range of health problems. One in three
women experience violence by an intimate partner at least once in their
life. Violence places a massive burden on national economies, costing
countries billions of US dollars each year in health care, law
enforcement and lost productivity. The resolution follows previous WHA
resolutions from 1996 and 1997 recognizing violence as a public health
problem, and a WHA resolution from 2003 urging Member States to
implement the recommendations of the landmark World report on violence and health. This new resolution seeks to scale up work on this important public health problem.
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