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RA Minister Of Health Participated In Who European Ministerial Confe

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  • RA Minister Of Health Participated In Who European Ministerial Confe

    RA MINISTER OF HEALTH PARTICIPATED IN WHO EUROPEAN MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE

    armradio.am
    27.06.2008 10:55

    Over 500 health decision-makers - including ministers of health and
    finance - from 53 countries have set the WHO European Region on course
    to tackle both longstanding and new challenges to health systems,
    at the WHO European Ministerial Conference on Health Systems, which
    is taking place in Tallinn, Estonia.

    The Conference made a public health breakthrough by providing,
    for the first time, a platform for debates on often sensitive and
    politically charged health issues, such as equitable access to health
    care, transparent health financing and accountability for public
    health spending.

    In ministerial panel discussions, ministers of health from Armenia,
    Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia
    and The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, emphasized that a
    good health system is not a luxury for affluent countries alone,
    but a fundamental part of prosperity for all countries.

    Speakers stressed that a health system involves much more than
    simply paying for doctors and hospitals. "It encompasses all parts of
    society and its various institutions that affect health. It includes
    the health ministry's ability to influence other ministries - such
    as transport, environment and education - to follow policies that
    improve the health of the population," said Dr Marc Danzon, WHO
    Regional Director for Europe.

    Nevertheless, participants repeatedly stressed that investing in
    health is not enough; performance matters. "If you call for more,
    not less, spending on health, based on the claim that it creates
    additional health and economic benefits, and at the same time you
    give the health ministry more intrusive powers that allow it to
    affect the policy-making decisions of sister ministries, then you must
    demonstrate the effectiveness of these measures," said Dr Nata Menabde,
    Deputy Regional Director, WHO Regional Office for Europe. This means
    being accountable for where money is spent, choosing the appropriate
    technology and showing that it was the best of the available options
    and properly used.

    Ms Maret Maripuu, Minister of Social Affairs of Estonia, and President
    of the Conference, said, "We need to see health beyond health care. We
    need to realize that health stands on three rails: prevention, cure
    and care, which are all equally important components of an effective
    health system. We need to find a way to measure the performance in
    order to maintain the effectiveness."

    In her keynote address, Ms Mary Robinson, President of Realizing
    Rights: the Ethical Globalization Initiative, stressed that health is
    a fundamental right of all people and has value in itself, and that
    it is in the interest of all governments to be more accountable for
    the performance of their health systems.

    Professor Martin McKee, of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
    Medicine, United Kingdom, emphasized the complex interrelationships
    between health systems, health and wealth. He noted the many
    difficulties in measuring health systems' performance, including
    finding effective indicators for the task, and the lack of systems
    for performance measurement in many WHO Member States.

    The information and perspectives presented at the Conference have
    advanced the debate on health systems, health and wealth. Many
    countries are eager to improve the performance of their health systems,
    although they recognize the need to face challenges in, for example,
    the financing and governance of their systems.
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