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Int J Health Policy Manag · Jul 2014
Global health politics: neither solidarity nor policy: Comment on "Globalization and the diffusion of ideas: why we should acknowledge the roots of mainstream ideas in global health".
- Claudio A Méndez.
- Instituto de Salud Pública, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Austral de Chile, Valdivia, Chile. ; Programa de Salud Global, Instituto de Salud Poblacional, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
- Int J Health Policy Manag. 2014 Jul 1;3(2):103-5.
AbstractThe global health agenda has been dominating the current global health policy debate. Furthermore, it has compelled countries to embrace strategies for tackling health inequalities in a wide range of public health areas. The article by Robert and colleagues highlights that although globalization has increased opportunities to share and spread ideas, there is still great asymmetry of power according to the countries' economic and political development. It also emphasizes how policy diffusion from High Income Countries (HICs) to Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) have had flaws at understanding their political, economic, and cultural backgrounds while they are pursuing knowledge translation. Achieving a fair global health policy diffusion of ideas would imply a call for a renewal on political elites worldwide at coping global health politics. Accordingly, moving towards fairness in disseminating global health ideas should be driven by politics not only as one of the social determinants of health, but the main determinant of health and well-being among-and within-societies.
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