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Untitled Document
The World Health Organization is pleased to have the opportunity to address
the 22nd session of the Working Group on Indigenous Populations. We note that
the activities of both the Working Group and the Permanent Forum for Indigenous
Issues have done much to advance the cause of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples.
Set against the backdrop of the International Decade of Indigenous Populations,
the Working Group has emerged as a focal point of international action on indigenous
issues.
In this context, we would like to highlight some of our ongoing
activities, which may be of particular interest to this Working Group. First,
our Health Equity and Human Rights teams have been jointly working on a data
analysis process, which should provide a means for considering health disparities
among ethnic groups. The main objective is to analyze disparities in health
on the basis of ethnic/indigenous affiliation, based on data from 64 countries
(34 from the World Health Survey and 37 with Demographic and Health Surveys;
7 countries appear in both data sets) The data analysis will result in a publication
that will highlight the health situation of marginalized ethnic population groups,
including indigenous and tribal peoples, from a human rights perspective. In
other words, it will use the normative framework of human rights to consider
health disparities as constituting lack of fulfillment or denial of health rights
of these population groups.
Second, WHO proposes to establish a Commission on the social
determinants of health. The Commission will assemble relevant evidence on the
social factors that lead to widespread ill-health in disadvantaged communities.
But most important, it will spearhead a political advocacy process to drive
change. The Commission's overarching goal is to increase vulnerable people's
chances to be healthy by promoting a core policy emphasis on the social determinants
of health in countries, at WHO, and among global health actors. To reach its
aims, the Commission will emphasize the political aspects of public health improvement.
At the same time, it will "put faces" on policies, offering a forum
for encounter, learning, critique and collaboration among public health scientists,
policymakers and community representatives.
The WHO looks forward to the activities of this Working Group
and to the opportunity to hear the perspectives of indigenous peoples and their
communities and organizations. We are pleased to collaborate with other UN agencies,
and in particular indigenous representatives themselves, in advancing the health
and human rights of indigenous populations.
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