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What COVID-19 revealed about health, human rights, and the WHO
20
Citations
47
References
2020
Year
Global Health LawWorld Health OrganizationHealth PoliticsCovid-19 EpidemiologyPandemic ManagementCovid-19Preventive MedicinePublic HealthJuly 2020Global Health CrisisCovid-19 PandemicHuman RightsDisease SurveillancePublic Health PolicyEpidemiologyVaccinationEpidemic IntelligenceEmerging Infectious DiseasesGlobal HealthInternational HealthMedicineGlobal Health EpidemiologySocial Distancing
As of July 2020, COVID-19 has caused over 600,000 deaths, with 17 million confirmed cases, and counting. The World Health Organization (WHO), the global governance organization charged with providing health for all, declared a pandemic of on March 11, signaling the beginning of the global response to the disease. Despite a commitment to human rights and health, the WHO and others have been virtually silent on how rights and pandemic management go together, and have largely relied on techniques that date back to the 1918 flu epidemic. COVID-19 has made painfully obvious the tension between the protection of public health and the protection of human rights. The "rights-based approach" to health espoused by the WHO needs to be reexamined in light of how public health and human rights may, in times of crisis, work at cross-purposes. We show this through an analysis of the WHO's COVID-19-related publications.
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