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Using the right to health and to promote universal health coverage: A better tool for protecting non-nationals' access to affordable health care?

Using the right to health and to promote universal health coverage: A better tool for protecting non-nationals' access to affordable health care?
Using the right to health and to promote universal health coverage: A better tool for protecting non-nationals' access to affordable health care?
Five years ago, the World Health Assembly adopted a resolution on universal health coverage, followed a year later by a resolution from the United Nations General Assembly. In these resolutions, states promised to deliver affordable health care for everyone, referring to notions of equity and human rights law, particularly a human right to health. However, the explosion of migration coupled with the post-2008 bleak economic climate have led societies worldwide to restrict, or at least challenge, the affordability of access to national health systems for non-nationals. It is in this light that the claims of universality made by universal health coverage should be challenged. This article, therefore, will question the effectiveness of this global health policy in guaranteeing access to affordable health care for non-nationals and will ask whether and how legal avenues such as the right to health should be used to address potential weaknesses.
1079-0969
35-47
Lougarre, Claire
74b808d2-6b74-4793-a927-3b84da3a3ae4
Lougarre, Claire
74b808d2-6b74-4793-a927-3b84da3a3ae4

Lougarre, Claire (2016) Using the right to health and to promote universal health coverage: A better tool for protecting non-nationals' access to affordable health care? Health and Human Rights, 18 (2), 35-47.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Five years ago, the World Health Assembly adopted a resolution on universal health coverage, followed a year later by a resolution from the United Nations General Assembly. In these resolutions, states promised to deliver affordable health care for everyone, referring to notions of equity and human rights law, particularly a human right to health. However, the explosion of migration coupled with the post-2008 bleak economic climate have led societies worldwide to restrict, or at least challenge, the affordability of access to national health systems for non-nationals. It is in this light that the claims of universality made by universal health coverage should be challenged. This article, therefore, will question the effectiveness of this global health policy in guaranteeing access to affordable health care for non-nationals and will ask whether and how legal avenues such as the right to health should be used to address potential weaknesses.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 24 October 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 December 2016
Published date: December 2016
Organisations: Law A

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 410853
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/410853
ISSN: 1079-0969
PURE UUID: 37553da0-7072-479e-9561-085331d1c588

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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2017 09:46
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 12:26

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Contributors

Author: Claire Lougarre

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