On 7 April, World Health Day, WHO will celebrate its 76th anniversary—and for 50 of those years, WHO has worked closely with the WCC. "Our shared work in the areas of public health, promoting health, keeping the world safe, and serving the vulnerable so that more people benefit from universal health coverage, has led to many achievements as well as the discovery of more challenges ahead,” said WCC general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay. Specific issues of collaboration have included primary healthcare, promotion of breastfeeding, access to essential drugs, addressing HIV, and addressing pandemics and outbreaks such as EBOLA and COVID-19. The WCC is planning an online conference in June to celebrate the relationship, and to explore how the contributions of faith communities can be further strengthened, particularly through the new WCC Commission of the Churches on Health and Healing. A rich history The WCC created the Christian Medical Commission in 1968 to help member churches encourage church-related health programmes to develop ecumenical cooperation. In its early years, the Christian Medical Commission emphasized the promotion of primary health care as a means of redressing the imbalance between sophisticated and expensive institutional medical care for a few—and hardly any for the rest. The relationship between the WCC and WHO officially began when the newly formed WCC Christian Medical Commission held two conferences to examine the role of the church in providing healthcare through medical missions. What followed was a theologically informed shift from hospital-based tertiary care in cities, many in post-colonial settings, to primary care delivery in rural as well as urban communities. A close relationship between the leaders of the Christian Medical Commission and the WHO facilitated a parallel and equally radical shift in the WHO’s strategy, from a vertical or top-down focus on single diseases to the 1978 Declaration of Alma Ata, which focused on primary care. Both the WHO and the Christian Medical Mission saw primary care as a more just and egalitarian way to distribute resources and bring health to all. At that time, primary health care was considered a radical approach to health services. The Christian Medical Commission, working through WCC member churches, greatly enhanced the case for primary health care within WHO and its subsequent support by nongovernmental organizations concerned with community health. Key in the history of the WCC and WHO collaboration was the Alma Ata Declaration, which stated: “Governments have a responsibility for the health of their people which can be fulfilled only by the provision of adequate health and social measures.” The declaration was adopted at the International Conference on Primary Health Care, Almaty, Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic, in what was then the Soviet Union. The declaration’s specific inclusion of human rights and concern for equity and community participation dovetailed with the work the WCC was doing globally. |
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