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- Title
BASES AND HORIZONS OF PERSON-CENTERED WOMEN’S HEALTH 40 YEARS AFTER ALMA ATA.
- Authors
Wilson, C. Ruth; Hoope-Bender, Petra ten; Mezzich, Juan E.; Appleyard, James; Helgesen, Ann Karin; Snaedal, Jon
- Abstract
Forty years after the Alma Ata Declaration, opportunities and challenges in achieving person-centered care for all people remain, particularly for women. This review describes the foundations and horizons of the Geneva Declaration Person-Centered Women’s Health 40 Years after Alma Ata, issued as a consensus statement of the International College of Person Centered Medicine (ICPCM) meeting in April 2018. Person-centered medicine has as its central precept the relationship between a health professional and a person seeking care. This principle is the link to primary health care, which is built on a lasting relationship with individuals and populations. Women have particular health needs, partly based on reproductive health, influenced by the social context of their lives. There is a need for recommitment to the principles of Alma Ata if health for all is to be achieved. Equitable access to person-centered integrated care for women and men throughout the life course is a human right. Universal health care, based on primary health care as a general health strategy, is the precursor for achieving this aim.
- Subjects
PATIENT-centered care; WOMEN'S health; REPRODUCTIVE health; HEALTH planning; SOCIAL context
- Publication
International Journal of Person Centered Medicine, 2018, Vol 8, Issue 1, p19
- ISSN
2043-7730
- Publication type
Article