Sri Lanka’s Health Unit Program: A Model of “Selective” Primary Health Care

S. Hewa
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

hirty years ago vigorous debates on primary health care articulated at least two main approaches to health promotion in developing countries. The Alma-Ata Declaration of the World Health Organization (WHO) kicked off the debate in 1978 by urging all nations to promote health through primary health care. Reaffirming the 1946 WHO charter that recognized health as a “state of complete physical, mental and social well-being,” the Declaration recommended a comprehensive primary health care program, which included at least the following key sectors: “education to inform prevailing health problems and measures to control them, food security and improved nutrition, supply of clean water and sanitary services, maternal and child care services including family planning, immunization against communicable diseases, the control of locally endemic disease, and the supply of essential drugs for critical health problems.” In allocating resources to these key sectors of the primary health care, the Declaration recommended, countries must ensure “equality,” “affordability” and “community participation.” An alternative to this approach was promoted mainly by the representatives of the United States Agency for International Development, the Rockefeller Foundation and the World Bank who argued that comprehensive primary health care would be prohibitively costly to implement for most nations. One of the
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斯里兰卡保健单位方案:"选择性"初级保健模式
30年前,关于初级卫生保健的激烈辩论阐明了发展中国家促进健康的至少两种主要方法。1978年,世界卫生组织(世卫组织)的《阿拉木图宣言》敦促所有国家通过初级卫生保健促进健康,从而开启了这场辩论。《宣言》重申了1946年世卫组织宪章,承认健康是一种“身体、精神和社会完全健康的状态”,建议制定一项全面的初级卫生保健规划,其中至少包括以下关键部门:"开展教育,使人们了解普遍存在的健康问题和控制这些问题的措施、粮食安全和改善营养、提供清洁饮水和卫生服务、包括计划生育在内的妇幼保健服务、预防传染病的免疫接种、控制地方地方病,以及供应解决重大健康问题的基本药物。"《宣言》建议,在向初级保健的这些关键部门分配资源时,各国必须确保“平等”、“负担得起”和“社区参与”。美国国际开发署、洛克菲勒基金会和世界银行的代表主要提出了一种替代办法,他们认为,对大多数国家来说,实施全面初级保健的费用过高。其中之一
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