<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0124-0064</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Revista de Salud Pública]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Rev. salud pública]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0124-0064</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Instituto de Salud Publica, Facultad de Medicina - Universidad Nacional de Colombia]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0124-00642010000700005</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Health Systems Governance for Health Equity: Critical Reflections]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="es"><![CDATA[Gobernanza de sistemas de salud para logar equidad: reflexiones críticas]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Labonté]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Ronald]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,University of Ottawa Institute of Population Health ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>04</month>
<year>2010</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>04</month>
<year>2010</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>12</volume>
<fpage>62</fpage>
<lpage>76</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0124-00642010000700005&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0124-00642010000700005&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0124-00642010000700005&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This article addresses several issues pertinent to health systems governance for health equity. It argues the importance of health systems using measures of positive health (well-being), discriminating in favour of historically less advantaged groups and weighing the costs of health care against investments in the social determinants of health. It cautions that the concept of governance could weaken the role of government, with disequalizing effects, while emphasizing the importance of two elements of good governance (transparency and participation) in health systems decision-making. It distinguishes between participation as volunteer labour and participation as exercising political rights, and questions the assumption that decentralization in health systems is necessarily empowering. It then identifies five health system roles to address issues of equity (educator/watchdog, resource broker, community developer, partnership developer and advocate/catalyst) and the implications of these roles for practice. Drawing on preliminary findings of a global research project on comprehensive primary health care, it discusses political aspects of progressive health system reform and the implications of equity-focused health system governance on health workers' roles, noting the importance of health workers claiming their identity as citizens. The article concludes with a commentary on the inherently political nature of health reforms based on equity; the necessary confrontation with power relations politics involves; and the health systems governance challenge of managing competing health discourses of efficiency and results-based financing, on the one hand, and equity and citizen empowerment, on the other.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="es"><p><![CDATA[El artículo toca diferentes aspectos relacionados con la gobernanza de sistemas de salud para lograr la equidad. Examina la importancia de los sistemas de salud que utilizan medidas de salud positiva (bienestar) y se concentran a favor de los grupos históricamente en desventaja, ponderando los costos de la atención en salud con respecto a la inversión en los determinantes sociales de la salud. Se advierte que el concepto de gobernanza podría debilitar el papel de gobierno, con efectos distorsionadores, mientras enfatiza la importancia de dos elementos de una buena gobernanza (transparencia y participación) en los sistemas de decisión en salud. Se hace la distinción entre la participación como una labor voluntaria y como un ejercicio de derechos políticos, preguntado sobre el supuesto de que la descentralización de los sistemas de salud necesariamente significa empoderamiento. Se identifican cinco roles de los sistemas de salud que apuntan a temas de equidad (educador, vigilante, gestor de recursos, desarrollo comunitario, desarrollo de asociaciones y abogacía/catalizador) y las implicaciones de estos roles en la práctica. Considerando los hallazgos preliminares de un proyecto de investigación global sobre atención primaria en salud integral, discute los aspectos políticos de la reformas progresivas de los sistemas de salud y las implicaciones de la gobernanza de los sistemas de salud enfocados en la equidad sobre la salud de los trabajadores, haciendo notar la importancia de los reclamos de los trabajadores por su identidad como ciudadanos. El artículo concluye con un comentario sobre la inherente naturaleza política de las reformas basadas en equidad; la necesaria confrontación con las relaciones políticas involucradas; y el desafío que significan para la gobernanza los discursos de la competencia gerenciada de eficiencia y financiamiento basado en resultados, de una parte, y la equidad y el empoderamiento ciudadano, por otra parte.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Governance]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[government]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[primary health-care]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[community participation]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[social conditions]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[poverty]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[public health practice]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[healthcare systems]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[Gobernanza]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[gobierno]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[atención primaria de salud]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[participación comunitaria]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[condiciones sociales]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[pobreza]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[sistemas de salud]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[  <font face="verdana" size="2">      <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p align="center"><b><font size="4">Health Systems Governance for Health Equity:    Critical Reflections</font></b></p>     <p align="center">&nbsp;</p>     <p align="center"><b><font size="3">Gobernanza de sistemas de salud para logar    equidad: reflexiones cr&iacute;ticas</font></b></p>     <p align="center">&nbsp;</p>     <p><b>Ronald Labont&eacute;</b></p>     <p>Institute of Population Health, University of Ottawa. Canada <a href="mailto:rlabonte@uottawa.ca">rlabonte@uottawa.ca</a></p>     <p>Received 15th July 2009/Sent for Modification 23th December 2009/Accepted 18th    January 2010</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p> <hr size="1">     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><b>ABSTRACT</b></p>     <p>This article addresses several issues pertinent to health systems governance    for health equity. It argues the importance of health systems using measures    of positive health (well-being), discriminating in favour of historically less    advantaged groups and weighing the costs of health care against investments    in the social determinants of health. It cautions that the concept of governance    could weaken the role of government, with disequalizing effects, while emphasizing    the importance of two elements of good governance (transparency and participation)    in health systems decision-making. It distinguishes between participation as    volunteer labour and participation as exercising political rights, and questions    the assumption that decentralization in health systems is necessarily empowering.    It then identifies five health system roles to address issues of equity (educator/watchdog,    resource broker, community developer, partnership developer and advocate/catalyst)    and the implications of these roles for practice. Drawing on preliminary findings    of a global research project on comprehensive primary health care, it discusses    political aspects of progressive health system reform and the implications of    equity-focused health system governance on health workers&#039; roles, noting    the importance of health workers claiming their identity as citizens. The article    concludes with a commentary on the inherently political nature of health reforms    based on equity; the necessary confrontation with power relations politics involves;    and the health systems governance challenge of managing competing health discourses    of efficiency and results-based financing, on the one hand, and equity and citizen    empowerment, on the other.</p>     <p><b>Key Words</b>: Governance, government, primary health-care, community participation,    social conditions, poverty, public health practice, healthcare systems (source:    MeSH. NLM).</p> <hr size="1">     <p><b>RESUMEN</b></p>     <p>El art&iacute;culo toca diferentes aspectos relacionados con la gobernanza    de sistemas de salud para lograr la equidad. Examina la importancia de los sistemas    de salud que utilizan medidas de salud positiva (bienestar) y se concentran    a favor de los grupos hist&oacute;ricamente en desventaja, ponderando los costos    de la atenci&oacute;n en salud con respecto a la inversi&oacute;n en los determinantes    sociales de la salud. Se advierte que el concepto de gobernanza podr&iacute;a    debilitar el papel de gobierno, con efectos distorsionadores, mientras enfatiza    la importancia de dos elementos de una buena gobernanza (transparencia y participaci&oacute;n)    en los sistemas de decisi&oacute;n en salud. Se hace la distinci&oacute;n entre    la participaci&oacute;n como una labor voluntaria y como un ejercicio de derechos    pol&iacute;ticos, preguntado sobre el supuesto de que la descentralizaci&oacute;n    de los sistemas de salud necesariamente significa empoderamiento. Se identifican    cinco roles de los sistemas de salud que apuntan a temas de equidad (educador,    vigilante, gestor de recursos, desarrollo comunitario, desarrollo de asociaciones    y abogac&iacute;a/catalizador) y las implicaciones de estos roles en la pr&aacute;ctica.    Considerando los hallazgos preliminares de un proyecto de investigaci&oacute;n    global sobre atenci&oacute;n primaria en salud integral, discute los aspectos    pol&iacute;ticos de la reformas progresivas de los sistemas de salud y las implicaciones    de la gobernanza de los sistemas de salud enfocados en la equidad sobre la salud    de los trabajadores, haciendo notar la importancia de los reclamos de los trabajadores    por su identidad como ciudadanos. El art&iacute;culo concluye con un comentario    sobre la inherente naturaleza pol&iacute;tica de las reformas basadas en equidad;    la necesaria confrontaci&oacute;n con las relaciones pol&iacute;ticas involucradas;    y el desaf&iacute;o que significan para la gobernanza los discursos de la competencia    gerenciada de eficiencia y financiamiento basado en resultados, de una parte,    y la equidad y el empoderamiento ciudadano, por otra parte.</p>     <p><b>Palabras Clave</b>: Gobernanza, gobierno, atenci&oacute;n primaria de salud,    participaci&oacute;n comunitaria, condiciones sociales, pobreza, sistemas de    salud (fuente: DeCS, BIREME).</p> <hr size="1">     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"></font></p>     <p> In examining governance for health equity, several questions immediately arise.    What do we mean by health? How do we define equity? What constitutes governance?    Beneath these questions is a more challenging one: What role does community    participation play in governance? And at a more fundamental level: How can health    systems respond to unequally allocated determinants of health? What role does    comprehensive primary health care play in such a response? How do politics and    ideology shape health systems reform? What are the implications for health workers?    This article offers some personal reflections on these questions. It draws,    in part, on thirty years experience in public and community health in many parts    of the world; and findings-to-date from a recent research program studying how    comprehensive primary health care can better promote health equity (1). </p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><b><font size="3">The Question of Health</font></b></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Health systems are dominated by measures of death, disease and disability.    This is due partly to positive health experiences being difficult to measure,    but there is a paradox: people with a disability or a disease (especially when    chronic) often report feeling healthy. This paradox has underpinned numerous    efforts to define &#039;positive&#039; health in terms of peoples&#039; capabilities,    from the World Health Organization&#039;s operationally troublesome: &#039;state    of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence    of disease and infirmity&#039; (2); to the Ottawa Charter&#039;s utilitarian:    &#039;resource for everyday life&#039; (3) to the Bangkok Charter&#039;s subordinating    qualification: &#039;a determinant of quality of life...encompassing mental    and spiritual well-being&#039; (4). Biomedical constructs of positive health    which emphasise normal physical functioning do not offer much improvement: How    are deviations from the norm defined? </p>     <p>Despite these definitional difficulties and on the assumption that what is    measured is what gets noticed, some routine diagnosis of how &#039;well&#039;    a population is doing becomes as important to track as how long, disease-free    and minimally disabled (or disability-enabled) people are able to live. Population    surveys frequently use &#039;self-rated health&#039; as a proxy measure for    well-being, but other dimensions of health are also worth assessing. Some years    ago, based on a review of the literature, I created a simple model of the key    domains of positive health. By chance (not design) these mapped conveniently    against the WHO&#039;s triad of physical, mental and social well-being (<a href="#fig1">Figure    1</a>).</p>     <p align="center">   <img src="img/revistas/rsap/v12s1/v12s1a05fig1.jpg"><a name="fig1"></a> </p>     <p>There is an evidence-informed argument around this model: to be healthy, one    needs a sense of meaning or purpose in life, connection to others in community    and physical vitality or energy. One also needs some control over one&#039;s    life and living conditions, a function of both community connectedness (social    solidarity enhancing the means of control) and personal meaning (knowing what    is important to control). The hedonistic aspect of health, the ability to do    things one enjoys, intersects between personal meaning (what one finds pleasurable)    and physical vitality (the ability to participate). Finally, capacity for good    social relationships requires a base upon which to draw (community connectedness)    and energy (physical vitality) with which to engage (5).</p>     <p>The implication of this model (which makes no claim to universalism but some    claim to heuristic usefulness) is that health systems, the workers within them    and the services and programs they offer have an obligation to account for how    they assist people to flourish across a range of dimensions. The model also    infers two other health system responses: participation in the creation of alternative    social indices of well-being that counter the well-known limitations of the    narrowly economic measures comprising the GDP (see for example the new &#039;Canadian    Index of Well-Being&#039; (6); and attention to the quality of the relationships    that occur between health care workers and patients, and more broadly between    health systems and the communities they serve. Disrespectful relationships and    poor services, often an effect of under-resourced public health systems, are    two of the most frequent reasons why even poor people will choose a private    provider over a public facility despite the cost (1,7).</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><b><font size="3">The Question of Equity</font></b></p>     <p>Equity is a normative judgement of what is fair. Applied to health, it is an    assessment of whether inequalities between individuals or population groups    in measures of health are significant in size and number of people affected,    preventable through policy or other intervention and not an effect of freely-chosen    risk. Health inequities almost invariably reside in social inequities (8) that    reflect systems of social stratification: class, gender, ethnoracial background,    geography and various forms of discrimination or &#039;social exclusion&#039;.    Underpinning the concept of equity is social justice, which is argued to be    a universal concern since all social arrangements, to be legitimate and to function,    must give some attention to social equality (9). There are two principle theories    of social justice: </p>     <p>The first, and politically dominant, theory holds to the importance of ensuring    that everyone &#039;plays by the same rules&#039; - there is no discrimination.    Fairness is judged by equality in process. The second, and politically challenging,    theory holds to the importance of ensuring that rules work to minimize preventable    differences in outcomes between the players (10).</p>     <p> Equal opportunity (the first theory) for unequal people, however, will only    result in unequal outcomes. To be just, equal opportunity requires a disproportionate    provision of public goods and capability resources for those whom history&#039;s    conquests and today&#039;s political institutions place in highly unequal initial    conditions. In effect, opportunity must be more than equal; it must discriminate    positively in favour of those groups who start the &#039;game&#039; of social    and economic life with fewer resources:</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>A better understanding of the importance of inequality of opportunity in the    determination of inequality of outcomes may change attitudes towards redistribution.    People dislike and consider unfair inequalities associated with differences    in circumstances, which many argue should be compensated for by society (11).      There are at least four equity implications for health systems. First, it is    well known that better-off urban groups often benefit disproportionately in    access to public health services, especially given their already lower burden    of disease (12). Health systems need to &#039;pay the equity premium&#039; (13)    to benefit more those in greater need. Second, this cost must be weighed against    investments to make more equitable access to other social determinants of health    (e.g. water and sanitation, housing, employment, education, early childhood    development, transportation, safety/security, social protection) (8,14). Third,    equity in access to both health systems and social determinants of health can    be improved through single-payer, progressively funded public programs that    minimize out of pocket expenditures by the poor and redistribute more fairly    opportunities for health (15). In advanced economies, social democratic states    that invest heavily in public programs, including but not restricted to health    services, generally experience lower rates of poverty, and better and fairer    population health outcomes (16,17). Fourth, improving primary health care (PHC),    which favours poorer, sicker populations, is more health-equitable than improving    tertiary care, which favours wealthier, healthier populations (1,7,18).</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><b><font size="3">The Question of Governance</font></b></p>     <p>How health systems might be reformed or strengthened to improve health equity    raises the matter of governance, a term of recent coinage and mixed implications.  </p>     <p>To critics, the idea of governance risks undermining the role of government    in policy and program activity by passively or actively promoting decision-making    by a polycentric blend of &#039;stakeholders&#039;, often dominated by powerful    individual and corporate actors. This model of governance derives from new public    management theory, and is consistent with the neoliberal principle that states    should &#039;steer &#039; but not &#039;row&#039; (direct but not do) (19).    The implied danger is that the 30 percent or so of overall global economic product    that is presently generated through government services provision will become    increasingly contracted to private, for-profit companies (20,21). While (perhaps)    temporarily set-back by the global recession and renewed contractual protectionism    (e.g.: &#039;Buy America&#039;) (22) for the past two decades there has been    a concerted effort to open all government procurement contracts to unfettered    global competition. Such competition under skewed capacities in the private    services market is likely to lead to &#039;disequalizing&#039; economic (and    hence related health) effects within and between nations (23).</p>     <p>To proponents of the concept, however, governance is broader than its neoliberal    imputation, with an empowering community/citizen potential insofar as it refers    to all forms of organized decision-making towards shared social goals, and not    merely to acts of government. This, in turn, demands an opening of government    processes to greater and more real-time forms of public input (24). The key    attributes against which &#039;good&#039; governance is generally appraised    are: transparency, participation, representation, accountability and resource    mobilization (25). Each has implications for how decisions in health systems    are made, although only the first two are considered in this brief article.</p>     <p>Transparency: There are three levels at which transparency in health systems    decision-making is critical for health equity. At the local level, there must    be access to information about health (negative or positive) and its key social    determinants. In many poorer countries such information is not available simply    because it is not routinely gathered; witness the large number of births that    continue to go unrecorded (7). In other instances the information may be available    but inaccessible, either to local level health services or to the community    members they serve. Or, when accessible, the information is presented in a technical    manner that is alien to community members and retains power amongst professionals/experts    who then interpret it (26). At a national level, there is access to the deliberations    surrounding health system policies, and to documentation of the policies themselves.    More elusive, and linking the national to the global, are the constraints placed    on many developing countries through aid, multilateral financing for health    and global financial markets. Decisions by donors and global health initiatives    are rarely fully transparent and their disbursements do not necessarily correspond    with the needs or interests of recipient governments (27). There is a long history    of conditional or recommended health system reforms associated with loans or    grants from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund; and an even longer    history of poor transparency and unequal decision-making power within these    institutions (24,25). A neglected influence on health system reform is the role    of global financial markets (including bond-rating agencies) which assess the    credit-worthiness of nations that, in turn, affects their cost of borrowing.    Countries developing policies seen as insufficiently market-friendly (such as    increasing public health and social protection spending, or progressivity in    taxation) may be given a poor rating, in some instances prompting them to abandon    such policies (23). </p>     <p>Participation: Lack of transparency is associated with poor processes of participation    that inhibit citizens&#039; efforts to hold health systems accountable. Community    participation is an oft-cited component of effective PHC, including sustaining    demand for equitable service access and program activities, especially after    short-term (often external) funding ceases (1). It is also associated with improved    health outcomes, although the quality of such evidence remains poor (1). Moreover,    in any consideration of improved participatory mechanisms, three issues immediately    arise. </p>     <p>First: participation in what? While an active citizenship is seen as healthier    (participation as an end in itself) (28), participation is always in relation    to some task or purpose. In Canada and the United States, community participation    in primary health care often arose in response to inadequate access to services,    or to specific threats to community health (1); it was an expression of political    rights or entitlements. In many poorer countries subject to international aid    or loans for health system reform, participation often meant (and sometimes    still means) voluntary labour to build or maintain facilities, assist in basic    care provision or share in the cost of the service; that is, it is promoted    to fill gaps in financing rather than to exercise the right to influence policy-making    (1) In wealthier nations, citizen participation in established services often    became little more than encouraging people to attend specific health education    or health promotion programs developed by health authorities with little or    no input from local residents (26). Health system governance should not prejudice    one form of participation over the other (political activism vs. volunteer labour,    program decision-maker vs. recipient) but to ensure multiple means that allow    people to choose what, and how, they engage with their health systems. </p>     <p> Second: participation by whom? This question concerns who is meant by &#039;community.&#039;    Community has several dimensions: geographic (the most commonly invoked), affinity    (self-defined group membership) and idealized (locally inclusive solidarity)    (10,26). But there is rarely an inclusive geographic community and, instead,    multiple affinity communities within any given area that often stretch beyond    local boundaries. Community for health systems often is little more than the    catchment area of a given service, whose borders may change with political whim    and bear little or no relationship to how people consider their sense of identity    (26). Or community is constructed by reference to &#039;target groups&#039;    whose targeting is defined by health authorities on the basis of statistical    risk and not by citizen sensibility. There is a need, then, for health systems    to consider carefully the implications of &#039;community,&#039; the most precise    meaning of which is simply that of a group of people for whom membership forms    part of their identity. Apart from very small villages, some triage is required    in selecting which groups community health workers seek to organize or support    for their participation, whether in programs, services or political actions.    This demands greater reflexivity and transparency for how health systems make    such a determination; and touches on the need to examine the representativeness    of community participants themselves. Given primary health care&#039;s concerns    with equity, it also means removing financial or other barriers to participation,    and special efforts to elicit the voices of the most marginalized people or    groups. </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Third: participation where? Just as community is often idealized, so, too,    it is often seen as the best locus for health system decision-making. The closer    to the daily lives of people, the more responsive to local needs are programs    or services; therein lays the defence for health system de-centralization. While    tightly centralized systems can choke local innovation, there is actually little    empirical evidence that de-centralized health systems perform better on most    metrics of health outcomes (29). There is also a risk that de-centralization    becomes a means of offloading financial responsibility for services to local    levels, in the guise of increasing community authority (30). Without careful    disbursements by need, wealthier areas (better organized and politically positioned    or connected) may capture more of the de-centralized resources; or in the case    of community insurance schemes entrench or multi-tiered levels of care stratified    by geographic wealth. Equitable local participation in health systems thus requires    conduits to central levels of political decision-making, if potentially inequitable    constraints of decisions made at that level are to be avoided, or at least challenged    (26). </p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><b><font size="3"> The Question of Health System Responsiveness</font></b></p>     <p>How health systems go about supporting a more politicized form of participation    addressing not only health care access, but improved equity in the social determinants    of health, raises the issue of responsiveness. <a href="#box1">Box 1</a>, based    on a study of population health capacity in Canada, summarizes five health system    roles and some of the practice implications associated with them.</p>     <p align="center"><img src="img/revistas/rsap/v12s1/v12s1a05box1.jpg"><a name="box1"></a></p>     <p>The final point in this Box, concerning the issue of politics in health systems&#039;    efforts to promote more equitable health-determining conditions, was highlighted    by evidence of comprehensive primary health care experiences, notably in South    Asia and in Latin America. The narrative review of scientific and grey literature    sought evidence for health systems&#039; responsiveness to a range of outcomes    that were based on the cumulative experiences of over a dozen senior PHC researchers    representing every region of the world (<a href="#box2">Box 2</a>). </p>     <p align="center"><img src="img/revistas/rsap/v12s1/v12s1a05box2.jpg"><a name="box2"></a></p>     <p>A review of South Asian grey literature found that programs fell into three    types: those that primarily emphasized community involvement in health care    services; those that saw PHC as including income generation, agriculture and    other service sectors; and those that saw PHC as a means to engage communities    in a more far-reaching empowerment project (1). Programs sponsored by non-governmental    organizations were more likely to align with the last two approaches and less    likely than government programs to prioritize only basic care provision. Both    gave some attention to the social determinants of health, although country wide    government programs less so. In sum, non-governmental programs were generally    more responsive to the political claims of citizens than were governmental programs.  </p>     <p>Similar experiences were recounted in North America, where community health    centres that were born in struggles for access and empowerment sometimes settled    into more service delivery and less community mobilization with increased public    funding and government oversight (1). This is not an insuperable problem, since    explicit health system mandates for community empowerment and health advocacy,    together with protected funding for such activities, can retain a vibrant health    activism in keeping with the outcomes listed in Box 2 (26). But such mandates    are politically neutral. The Latin American component of our study found that    comprehensive PHC was more likely (and more effective) &#039;in countries that    included political commitments to equity, a legal or constitutional right to    health guaranteed by the state, and where policy clearly identified primary    care, community participation and intersectoral action as PHC components&#039;    (1). Such commitments are associated more with social democratic than with conservative    political parties. Efforts to make PHC more comprehensive have sometimes become    sites of political struggle and repression, as was the case in some Central    American countries during the 1980s and 1990s, occasionally leading to dangerous    working environments for those committed to a comprehensive vision of PHC (1).  </p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><b><font size="3">The Question of Health Worker Role</font></b></p>     <p>The experience of community health workers committed to outcomes of equity    under periods of political repression begs comment on the implications of a    comprehensive PHC for practice. Box 1 in broad strokes identifies a number of    working styles associated with improved equity that health systems should increasingly    embrace. But providing respectful (as well as effective and efficient) care    remains the bedrock of, and political legitimacy, for health systems. Most health    workers will not function as social animateurs, nor need they be; moreover,    most lack the skills to do so (26). Ensuring that some health workers can and    do occupy the role niches in <a href="#box1">Box 1</a> suffices. </p>     <p>But there has long been an artificial divide in the community health literature    between &#039;health systems&#039; and &#039;community&#039; and between &#039;health    worker&#039; (regardless of health system role) and &#039;citizen,&#039; which    can be laid to rest through a brief re-consideration of the idea of participation.    Two anecdotes illustrate the point being made.</p>     <p>In the first, a health worker engaged community groups in a process of drafting    a policy report on housing as a public health issue. The groups had been looking    for an entry into policy influence and believed this presented an opportunity.    But after several meetings to revise the recommendations (seen by the health    system as too provocative) the community groups quit the process with feelings    of being used or manipulated. They had not been; the health worker had been    genuine with the invitation. But the health worker has also confused participation    in a bureaucratic process of evidence-gathering with participation in a political    process of policy-demands. Government departments rarely make bold policy statements.    Citizens groups hold that entitlement. But government departments can provide    good evidence supporting citizen demands. The participatory agenda thus becomes    a strategic one: how do health workers and health systems engage with community    groups in a process of social change, in which the powers and authority of their    respective positions are brought separately, but in concert, to bear on the    policy issue?</p>     <p>In the second, after a long participatory day of learning about community participation    in health, one of the attendees confronted me with the question: &#039;But how    can we get our community members to be more interested in participating in our    programs and activities?&#039; None of the content or lessons generated during    the day had found a place to stick with this health worker. In an effort to    have her answer her own question (believing people usually are repositories    of knowledge that awaits only the right interrogative) I replied simply: &#039;What    motivates you to participate in local programs and activities?&#039; Her face    looked even more puzzled, and the question answered itself. To affirm it, I    asked for a show of hands of health workers who had recently engaged in some    volunteer, community good activity. Of seventy attendees, perhaps ten hands    were raised. The workshop ended with my statement: &#039;Until you as health    workers become active citizens, you will never understand how to invite citizens    to become active participants.&#039;</p>     <p>Health workers are citizens, regardless of their functional role within health    systems. Our ability to promote greater health equity is not simply a function    of our jobs. It is a responsibility of our citizenship. </p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p align="center"><font size="3"><b>Conclusion</b></font></p>     <p>Working through the main ideas in this highly condensed article, what general    conclusions might be drawn?</p>     <p>First, promoting health equity is an inherently political act. &#039;Politics&#039;    has a long etymological history that began with cities (polis) and their citizens    (polites), evolving in use to refer to governing decisions (policies) that are    wise, prudent and judicious. The heart of politics is citizenship and the right    of people to participate in collective decisions that affect their lives. This    right, in turn, rests on people determining which collective decisions are important    to their lives. Too often health workers and health systems have defined these    decisions as individualized lifestyle choices rather than systemically structured    inequalities (&#039;social determinants&#039;). </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Second, political acts involve power, inevitably so when equity (fairness)    and changes in existing systems of social stratification begin to define health    system goals. In terms of fairness, publicly-financed primary health care disproportionately    benefits poorer groups in access, outcome and economic redistribution (31).    But to be effective, PHC needs sufficient financing based on a cross-subsidy    from rich to poor and from healthy to sick: i.e., progressively financed universal    insurance. Achieving such financing can challenge the economic power of elite    groups. To attend to changing inequalities in social determinants of health,    PHC must strive for comprehensiveness: &#039;paying the equity premium&#039;    to ensure services are accessible by need, protecting resources for community    organization and action, working across government and state/civil society sectors    in &#039;healthy public policy&#039; formation and advocating against elite    group power that may threaten progressive health change. These actions, too,    require in the argot of social activists, &#039;speaking truth to power&#039;.    Therein lays the possibility of a more comprehensive PHC.</p>     <p>Third, there are many examples of where these actions have been attempted;    although few where they have become characteristics of whole health systems.    Strategies for advancing towards PHC-oriented health systems that are both equitable    and comprehensive are known. So, too, are the main enabling contexts: political    leadership supportive of social democracy, organized civil society, champions    within public health bureaucracies, pluralistic media, cross-class solidarity    (champions within elite groups). Where these are lacking, health workers face    an ethical imperative to help in their creation. I refer to it as an ethical    imperative since failure to do so is likely to lead to a morally indefensible    increase in health disparities.</p>     <p>Fourth, while some low- and middle-income countries, including several in Latin    America, are increasing the breadth of universality in coverage and depth of    their PHC orientation, others, including some high-income countries, are increasing    the role of private markets in financing and delivery. Even as health has risen    dramatically in global policy debate, the financial crisis is threatening reductions    in aid or other multilateral transfers for health (of importance to least developed    countries); or a triage of health assistance based on the national security    or economic self-interests of donor nations. A discourse of improving health    system effectiveness and efficiency co-exists and challenges one premised more    on health system equity. Within the same country or region, one can find health    policy pronouncements calling for reductions in social inequities while imposing    results-based funding models; proclaiming the importance of &#039;money for    what is valued&#039; while espousing the necessity of &#039;value for money&#039;;    holding health as a human right while engaging in trade talks to commodify its    global exchange. The most important health systems governance challenge of the    moment may well be negotiating these competing health frames. </p>     <p>Fifth and finally, other challenges loom larger on the horizon: the world-wide    rise in chronic disease, no longer supplanting infectious disease in a mythical    epidemiological transition but co-existing in multiple burden; the greying of    the world, with increasing age-dependency ratios in developing, as well as developed,    countries; the frailty of the (still dominant) neoliberal global economic model    to be sustainable, whether in terms of health, environment or poverty reduction;    and the arrival of climate change.</p>     <p>Enumerating these challenges is easy; planning for them is not. That these    challenges are not exclusive to health systems or health workers offers some    comfort. It also underscores the importance of strengthening health system capacities    in the roles identified in Box 1. In such actions lies the optimism essential    to any healthful future, a state of being that I have come to regard less as    a personal disposition than as a fundamental of effective politics.</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p align="center"><b>REFERENCES</b></p>     <!-- ref --><p> 1. Labont&eacute; R, Sanders D, Baum F, Schaay N, Packer C, Laplante D, et    al. Implementation, Effectiveness   and Political Context of Comprehensive Primary Health Care: Preliminary Findings    of a   Global Literature Review. Australian Journal of Primary Health 2008; 14(3):    58-67.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000070&pid=S0124-0064201000070000500001&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><!-- ref --><p> 2. World Health Organization (WHO). 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