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Does ratification of human-rights treaties have...
Journal article

Does ratification of human-rights treaties have effects on population health?

Abstract

Human-rights treaties indicate a country's commitment to human rights. Here, we assess whether ratification of human-rights treaties is associated with improved health and social indicators. Data for health (including HIV prevalence, and maternal, infant, and child [<5 years] mortalities) and social indicators (child labour, human development index, sex gap, and corruption index), gathered from 170 countries, showed no consistent associations between ratification of human-rights treaties and health or social outcomes. Established market economy states had consistently improved health compared with less wealthy settings, but this was not associated with treaty ratification. The status of treaty ratification alone is not a good indicator of the realisation of the right to health. We suggest the need for stringent requirements for ratification of treaties, improved accountability mechanisms to monitor compliance of states with treaty obligations, and financial assistance to support the realisation of the right to health.

Authors

Palmer A; Tomkinson J; Phung C; Ford N; Joffres M; Fernandes KA; Zeng L; Lima V; Montaner JS; Guyatt GH

Journal

The Lancet, Vol. 373, No. 9679, pp. 1987–1992

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

June 6, 2009

DOI

10.1016/s0140-6736(09)60231-2

ISSN

0140-6736

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