WMJ 02 2007

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WorldMMeeddiiccaall JJoouurrnnaall
Vol. No.2,June200753
OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE WORLD MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, INC.
G 20438
Contents
EEddiittoorriiaall 29
New Chair of WMA Council 29
Dr. André Wynen 1924–2007 30
MMeeddiiccaall EEtthhiiccss aanndd HHuummaann RRiigghhttss
Release of Palestinian Physician
and Bulgarian Nurses 31
WMA Declaration Concerning Support for
Medical Doctors Refusing to Participate in,
or to Condone, the Use of Torture or
Other Forms of Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment 33
WWoorrlldd MMeeddiiccaall AAssssoocciiaattiioonn
176th
WMA Council meeting 31
Secretary General’s report to the
176th
WMA Council Session 43
FFrroomm tthhee SSeeccrreettaarryy GGeenneerraall
About Changing the Scope of Practice,
Task Shifting and the Proper Use of Words 46
WWHHOO
Practical solutions to tackle
health worker migration 47
International Health Regulations
enter into force 48
WHO 15th
essential medicines list published 50
New opportunity to respond to international
public health threats 50
Global health partners mobilize
to counter yellow fever 51
2.5 million people in India living with HIV,
according to new estimates 52
WHO publishes key world health statistics 53
New WHO report marks First
UN Global Road Safety Week 54
WHO and UNAIDS issue new guidance on HIV
testing and counselling in health facilities 55
176th
WMA Council Meeting
00_US_02_2007.qxd 02.08.2007 09:06 Seite 1
Website: https://www.wma.net
WMA Directory of National Member Medical Associations Officers and Council
Association and address/Officers
WMA OFFICERS
OF NATIONAL MEMBER MEDICALASSOCIATIONS AND OFFICERS
i see page ii
President-Elect President Immediate Past-President
Dr. J. Snaedal Dr. N. Arumagam Dr. Kgosi Letlape
Icelandic Medical Assn. Malaysian Medical Association The South African Medical Association
Hlidasmari 8 4th Floor MMA House P.O Box 74789
200 Kopavogur 124 Jalan Pahang Lynnwood Ridge 0040
Iceland 53000 Kuala Lumpur Pretoria 0153
Malaysia South Africa
Treasurer Chairman of Council Vice-Chairman of Council
Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. J. D. Hoppe Dr. J. E. Hill Dr. K. Iwasa
Bundesärztekammer American Medical Association Japan Medical Association
Herbert-Lewin-Platz 1 515 North State Street 2-28-16 Honkomagome
10623 Berlin Chicago, ILL 60610 Bunkyo-ku
Germany USA Tokyo 113-8621
Japan
Secretary General
Dr. O. Kloiber
World Medical Association
BP 63
01212 Ferney-Voltaire Cedex
France
ANDORRA S
Col’legi Oficial de Metges
Edifici Plaza esc. B
Verge del Pilar 5,
4art. Despatx 11, Andorra La Vella
Tel: (376) 823 525/Fax: (376) 860 793
E-mail: coma@andorra.ad
Website: www.col-legidemetges.ad
ARGENTINA S
Confederación Médica Argentina
Av. Belgrano 1235
Buenos Aires 1093
Tel/Fax: (54-11) 4381-1548/4384-5036
E-mail:
comra@confederacionmedica.com.ar
Website: www.comra.health.org.ar
AUSTRALIA E
Australian Medical Association
P.O. Box 6090
Kingston, ACT 2604
Tel: (61-2) 6270-5460/Fax: -5499
Website: www.ama.com.au
E-mail: ama@ama.com.au
AUSTRIA E
Österreichische Ärztekammer
(Austrian Medical Chamber)
Weihburggasse 10-12 – P.O. Box 213
1010 Wien
Tel: (43-1) 51406-931/Fax: -933
E-mail: international@aek.or.at
REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA E
Armenian Medical Association
P.O. Box 143, Yerevan 375 010
Tel: (3741) 53 58-68
Fax: (3741) 53 48 79
E-mail:info@armeda.am
Website: www.armeda.am
AZERBAIJAN E
Azerbaijan Medical Association
5 Sona Velikham Str.
AZE 370001, Baku
Tel: (994 50) 328 1888
Fax: (994 12) 315 136
E-mail: Mahirs@lycos.com /
azerma@hotmail.com
BAHAMAS E
Medical Association of the Bahamas
Javon Medical Center
P.O. Box N999
Nassau
Tel: (1-242) 328 1857/Fax: 323 2980
E-mail: mabnassau@yahoo.com
BANGLADESH E
Bangladesh Medical Association
BMA Bhaban 5/2 Topkhana Road
Dhaka 1000
Tel: (880) 2-9568714/9562527
Fax: (880) 2-9566060/9568714
E-mail: bma@aitlbd.net
BELGIUM F
Association Belge des Syndicats
Médicaux
Chaussée de Boondael 6, bte 4
1050 Bruxelles
Tel: (32-2) 644-12 88/Fax: -1527
E-mail: absym.bras@euronet.be
Website: www.absym-bras.be
BOLIVIA S
Colegio Médico de Bolivia
Calle Ayacucho 630
Tarija
Fax: (591) 4663569
E-mail: colmed_tjo@hotmail.com
Website: colegiomedicodebolivia.org.bo
BRAZIL E
Associaçao Médica Brasileira
R. Sao Carlos do Pinhal 324 – Bela Vista
Sao Paulo SP – CEP 01333-903
Tel: (55-11) 317868-00/Fax: -31
E-mail: presidente@amb.org.br
Website: www.amb.org.br
BULGARIA E
Bulgarian Medical Association
15, Acad. Ivan Geshov Blvd.
1431 Sofia
Tel: (359-2) 954 -11 26/Fax:-1186
E-mail: usbls@inagency.com
Website: www.blsbg.com
CANADA E
Canadian Medical Association
P.O. Box 8650
1867 Alta Vista Drive
Ottawa, Ontario K1G 3Y6
Tel: (1-613) 731 8610/Fax: -1779
E-mail: monique.laframboise@cma.ca
Website: www.cma.ca
CHILE S
Colegio Médico de Chile
Esmeralda 678 – Casilla 639
Santiago
Tel: (56-2) 4277800
Fax: (56-2) 6330940 / 6336732
E-mail: rdelcastillo@colegiomedico.cl
Website: www.colegiomedico.cl
Title page: The historic Meistersaal (1910–1913), Potzdammer Platz, Berlin, site of the 176th
WMA Council meeting (lower photo)
was built as a Guild House by architectural students. Later noted for its nearness to the Berlin Wall (“The Hall by the Wall”),
it was to become famous especially for its superb recording acoustics. It was damaged in WW II
and after restoration was used for concerts in the 50s and 60’s.
Further restored in 2003, the Hall continues to be used for concerts, lectures and meetings etc.
U2–4_WMJ_02_07.qxd 02.08.2007 09:02 Seite U2
CHINA E
Chinese Medical Association
42 Dongsi Xidajie
Beijing 100710
Tel: (86-10) 6524 9989
Fax: (86-10) 6512 3754
E-mail: suyumu@cma.org.cn
Website: www.chinamed.com.cn
COLOMBIA S
Federación Médica Colombiana
Carrera 7 N° 82-66, Oficinas 218/219
Santafé de Bogotá, D.E.
Tel/Fax: (57-1) 256 8050/256 8010
E-mail: federacionmedicacol@
sky.net.co
DEMOCRATIC REP. OF CONGO F
Ordre des Médecins du Zaire
B.P. 4922
Kinshasa – Gombe
Tel: (243-12) 24589
Fax (Présidente): (242) 8846574
COSTA RICA S
Unión Médica Nacional
Apartado 5920-1000
San José
Tel: (506) 290-5490
Fax: (506) 231 7373
E-mail: unmedica@sol.racsa.co.cr
CROATIA E
Croatian Medical Association
Subiceva 9
10000 Zagreb
Tel: (385-1) 46 93 300
Fax: (385-1) 46 55 066
E-mail: hlz@email.htnet.hr
Website: www.hlk.hr/default.asp
CZECH REPUBLIC E
Czech Medical Association
J.E. Purkyne
Sokolská 31 – P.O. Box 88
120 26 Prague 2
Tel: (420-2) 242 66 201-4
Fax: (420-2) 242 66 212 / 96 18 18 69
E-mail: czma@cls.cz
Website: www.cls.cz
CUBA S
Colegio Médico Cubano Libre
P.O. Box 141016
717 Ponce de Leon Boulevard
Coral Gables, FL 33114-1016
United States
Tel: (1-305) 446 9902/445 1429
Fax: (1-305) 4459310
DENMARK E
Danish Medical Association
9 Trondhjemsgade
2100 Copenhagen 0
Tel: (45) 35 44 -82 29/Fax:-8505
E-mail: er@dadl.dk
Website: www.laegeforeningen.dk
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC S
Asociación Médica Dominicana
Calle Paseo de los Medicos
Esquina Modesto Diaz Zona
Universitaria
Santo Domingo
Tel: (1809) 533-4602/533-4686/
533-8700
Fax: (1809) 535 7337
E-mail: asoc.medica@codetel.net.do
ECUADOR S
Federación Médica Ecuatoriana
V.M. Rendón 923 – 2 do.Piso Of. 201
P.O. Box 09-01-9848
Guayaquil
Tel/Fax: (593) 4 562569
E-mail: fdmedec@andinanet.net
EGYPT E
Egyptian Medical Association
„Dar El Hekmah“
42, Kasr El-Eini Street
Cairo
Tel: (20-2) 3543406
EL SALVADOR, C.A S
Colegio Médico de El Salvador
Final Pasaje N° 10
Colonia Miramonte
San Salvador
Tel: (503) 260-1111, 260-1112
Fax: -0324
E-mail: comcolmed@telesal.net
marnuca@hotmail.com
ESTONIA E
Estonian Medical Association
(EsMA)Pepleri 32
51010 Tartu
Tel/Fax (372) 7420429
E-mail: eal@arstideliit.ee
Website: www.arstideliit.ee
ETHIOPIA E
Ethiopian Medical Association
P.O. Box 2179
Addis Ababa
Tel: (251-1) 158174
Fax: (251-1) 533742
E-mail: ema.emj@telecom.net.et /
ema@eth.healthnet.org
FIJI ISLANDS E
Fiji Medical Association
2nd Fl. Narsey’s Bldg, Renwick Road
G.P.O. Box 1116
Suva
Tel: (679) 315388/Fax: (679) 387671
E-mail: fijimedassoc@connect.com.fj
FINLAND E
Finnish Medical Association
P.O. Box 49
00501 Helsinki
Tel: (358-9) 3930 91/Fax-794
E-mail: fma@fimnet.fi
Website: www.medassoc.fi
FRANCE F
Association Médicale Française
180, Blvd. Haussmann
75389 Paris Cedex 08
Tel/Fax: (33) 1 45 25 22 68
GEORGIA E
Georgian Medical Association
7 Asatiani Street
380077 Tbilisi
Tel: (995 32) 398686 / Fax: -398083
E-mail: Gma@posta.ge
GERMANY E
Bundesärztekammer
(German Medical Association)
Herbert-Lewin-Platz 1
10623 Berlin
Tel: (49-30) 400-456 369/Fax: -387
E-mail: renate.vonhoff-winter@baek.de
Website: www.bundesaerztekammer.de
GHANA E
Ghana Medical Association
P.O. Box 1596
Accra
Tel: (233-21) 670-510/Fax: -511
E-mail: gma@ghana.com
HAITI, W.I. F
Association Médicale Haitienne
1ère
Av. du Travail #33 – Bois Verna
Port-au-Prince
Tel: (509) 245-2060
Fax: (509) 245-6323
E-mail: amh@amhhaiti.net
Website: www.amhhaiti.net
HONG KONG E
Hong Kong Medical Association, Chi-
naDuke of Windsor Building, 5th Floor
15 Hennessy Road
Tel: (852) 2527-8285
Fax: (852) 2865-0943
E-mail: hkma@hkma.org
Website: www.hkma.org
HUNGARY E
Association of Hungarian Medical
Societies (MOTESZ)
Nádor u. 36 – PO.Box 145
1443 Budapest
Tel: (36-1) 312 3807 – 311 6687
Fax: (36-1) 383-7918
E-mail: motesz@motesz.hu
Website: www.motesz.hu
ICELAND E
Icelandic Medical Association
Hlidasmari 8
200 Kópavogur
Tel: (354) 8640478
Fax: (354) 5644106
E-mail: icemed@icemed.is
INDIA E
Indian Medical Association
Indraprastha Marg
New Delhi 110 002
Tel: (91-11) 23370009/23378819/
23378680
Fax: (91-11) 23379178/23379470
E-mail: inmedici@vsnl.com
INDONESIA E
Indonesian Medical Association
Jalan Dr Sam Ratulangie N° 29
Jakarta 10350
Tel: (62-21) 3150679
Fax: (62-21) 390 0473/3154 091
E-mail: pbidi@idola.net.id
IRELAND E
Irish Medical Organisation
10 Fitzwilliam Place
Dublin 2
Tel: (353-1) 676-7273Fax: (353-1)
6612758/6682168
Website: www.imo.ie
ISRAEL E
Israel Medical Association
2 Twin Towers, 35 Jabotinsky St.
P.O. Box 3566, Ramat-Gan 52136
Tel: (972-3) 6100444 / 424
Fax: (972-3) 5751616 / 5753303
E-mail: doritb@ima.org.il
Website: www.ima.org.il
JAPAN E
Japan Medical Association
2-28-16 Honkomagome, Bunkyo-ku
Tokyo 113-8621
Tel: (81-3) 3946 2121/3942 6489
Fax: (81-3) 3946 6295
E-mail: jmaintl@po.med.or.jp
KAZAKHSTAN F
Association of Medical Doctors
of Kazakhstan
117/1 Kazybek bi St.,
Almaty
Tel: (3272) 62 -43 01 / -92 92
Fax: -3606
E-mail: sadykova-aizhan@yahoo.com
REP. OF KOREA E
Korean Medical Association
302-75 Ichon 1-dong, Yongsan-gu
Seoul 140-721
Tel: (82-2) 794 2474
Fax: (82-2) 793 9190
E-mail: intl@kma.org
Website: www.kma.org
KUWAIT E
Kuwait Medical Association
P.O. Box 1202
Safat 13013
Tel: (965) 5333278, 5317971
Fax: (965) 5333276
E-mail: aks.shatti@kma.org.kw
LATVIA E
Latvian Physicians Association
Skolas Str. 3
Riga
1010 Latvia
Tel: (371-7) 22 06 61; 22 06 57
Fax: (371-7) 22 06 57
E-mail: lab@parks.lv
LIECHTENSTEIN E
Liechtensteinischer Ärztekammer
Postfach 52
9490 Vaduz
Tel: (423) 231-1690
Fax: (423) 231-1691
E-mail: office@aerztekammer.li
Website: www.aerzte-net.li
LITHUANIA E
Lithuanian Medical Association
Liubarto Str. 2
2004 Vilnius
Tel/Fax: (370-5) 2731400
E-mail: lgs@takas.lt
Website: www.lgs.lt
LUXEMBOURG F
Association des Médecins et
Médecins Dentistes du Grand-
Duché de Luxembourg
29, rue de Vianden
2680 Luxembourg
Tel: (352) 44 40 331
Fax: (352) 45 83 49
E-mail: secretariat@ammd.lu
Website: www.ammd.lu
MACEDONIA E
Macedonian Medical Association
Dame Gruev St. 3
P.O. Box 174
91000 Skopje
Tel/Fax: (389-91) 232577
E-mail: mld@unet.com.mk
MALAYSIA E
Malaysian Medical Association
4th Floor, MMA House
124 Jalan Pahang
53000 Kuala Lumpur
Tel: (60-3) 40413740/40411375
Association and address/Officers
ii
U2–4_WMJ_02_07.qxd 02.08.2007 09:02 Seite U3
Association and address/Officers
iii
Fax: (60-3) 40418187/40434444
E-mail: mma@tm.net.my
Website: http://www.mma.org.my
MALTA E
Medical Association of Malta
The Professional Centre
Sliema Road, Gzira GZR 06
Tel: (356) 21312888
Fax: (356) 21331713
E-mail: mfpb@maltanet.net
Website: www.mam.org.mt
MEXICO S
Colegio Medico de Mexico
Fenacome
Hidalgo 1828 Pte. D-107
Colonia Deportivo Obispado
Monterrey, Nuevo Léon
Tel/Fax: (52-8) 348-41-55
E-mail: rcantum@doctor.com
Website: www.cmm-fenacome.org
NAMIBIA E
Medical Association of Namibia
403 Maerua Park – POB 3369
Windhoek
Tel: (264) 61 22 44 55/Fax: -48 26
E-mail: man.office@iway.na
NEPAL E
Nepal Medical Association
Siddhi Sadan, Post Box 189
Exhibition Road
Katmandu
Tel: (977 1) 4225860, 231825
Fax: (977 1) 4225300
E-mail: nma@healthnet.org.np
NETHERLANDS E
Royal Dutch Medical Association
P.O. Box 20051
3502 LB Utrecht
Tel: (31-30) 28 23-267/Fax-318
E-mail: j.bouwman@fed.knmg.nl
Website: www.knmg.nl
NEW ZEALAND E
New Zealand Medical Association
P.O. Box 156
Wellington 1
Tel: (64-4) 472-4741
Fax: (64-4) 471 0838
E-mail: nzma@nzma.org.nz
Website: www.nzma.org.nz
NIGERIA E
Nigerian Medical Association
74, Adeniyi Jones Avenue Ikeja
P.O. Box 1108, Marina
Lagos
Tel: (234-1) 480 1569,
Fax: (234-1) 492 4179
E-mail: info@nigeriannma.org
Website: www.nigeriannma.org
NORWAY E
Norwegian Medical Association
P.O.Box 1152 sentrum
0107 Oslo
Tel: (47) 23 10 -90 00/Fax: -9010
E-mail: ellen.pettersen@
legeforeningen.no
Website: www.legeforeningen.no
PANAMA S
Asociación Médica Nacional
de la República de Panamá
Apartado Postal 2020
Panamá 1
Tel: (507) 263 7622 /263-7758
Fax: (507) 223 1462
Fax modem: (507) 223-5555
E-mail: amenalpa@cwpanama.net
PERU S
Colegio Médico del Perú
Malecón Armendáriz N° 791
Miraflores, Lima
Tel: (51-1) 241 75 72
Fax: (51-1) 242 3917
E-mail: decano@cmp.org.pe
Website: www.cmp.org.pe
PHILIPPINES E
Philippine Medical Association
PMA Bldg, North Avenue
Quezon City
Tel: (63-2) 929-63 66/Fax: -6951
E-mail: medical@pma.com.ph
Website: www.pma.com.ph
POLAND E
Polish Medical Association
Al. Ujazdowskie 24, 00-478 Warszawa
Tel/Fax: (48-22) 628 86 99
PORTUGAL E
Ordem dos Médicos
Av. Almirante Gago Coutinho, 151
1749-084 Lisbon
Tel: (351-21) 842 71 00/842 71 11
Fax: (351-21) 842 71 99
E-mail: intl@omcne.pt
Website: www.ordemdosmedicos.pt
ROMANIA F
Romanian Medical Association
Str. Ionel Perlea, nr 10
Sect. 1, Bucarest
Tel: (40-1) 460 08 30
Fax: (40-1) 312 13 57
E-mail: AMR@itcnet.ro
Website: ong.ro/ong/amr
RUSSIA E
Russian Medical Society
Udaltsova Street 85
119607 Moscow
Tel: (7-095)932-83-02
E-mail: info@rusmed.ru
Website: www.russmed.ru
SAMOA E
Samoa Medical Association
Tupua Tamasese Meaole Hospital
Private Bag – National Health Services
Apia
Tel: (685) 778 5858
E-mail: vialil_lameko@yahoo.com
SINGAPORE E
Singapore Medical Association
Alumni Medical Centre, Level 2
2 College Road, 169850 Singapore
Tel: (65) 6223 1264
Fax: (65) 6224 7827
E-Mail: sma@sma.org.sg
www.sma.org.sg
SLOVAK REPUBLIC E
Slovak Medical Association
Legionarska 4
81322 Bratislava
Tel: (421-2) 554 24 015
Fax: (421-2) 554 223 63
E-mail: secretarysma@ba.telecom.sk
SLOVENIA E
Slovenian Medical Association
Komenskega 4, 61001 Ljubljana
Tel: (386-61) 323 469
Fax: (386-61) 301 955
SOMALIA E
Somali Medical Association
14 Wardigley Road – POB 199
Mogadishu
Tel: (252-1) 595 599
Fax: (252-1) 225 858
E-mail: drdalmar@yahoo.co.uk
SOUTH AFRICA E
The South African Medical Associa-
tionP.O. Box 74789, Lynnwood Rydge
0040 Pretoria
Tel: (27-12) 481 2036/2063
Fax: (27-12) 481 2100/2058
E-mail: sginterim@samedical.org
Website: www.samedical.org
SPAIN S
Consejo General de Colegios Médicos
Plaza de las Cortes 11, Madrid 28014
Tel: (34-91) 431 7780
Fax: (34-91) 431 9620
E-mail: internacional1@cgcom.es
SWEDEN E
Swedish Medical Association
(Villagatan 5)
P.O. Box 5610, SE – 114 86 Stockholm
Tel: (46-8) 790 33 00
Fax: (46-8) 20 57 18
E-mail: info@slf.se
Website: www.lakarforbundet.se
SWITZERLAND F
Fédération des Médecins Suisses
Elfenstrasse 18 – C.P. 170
3000 Berne 15
Tel: (41-31) 359 –1111/Fax: -1112
E-mail: fmh@hin.ch
Website: www.fmh.ch
TAIWAN E
Taiwan Medical Association
9F No 29 Sec1
An-Ho Road
Taipei
Tel: (886-2) 2752-7286
Fax: (886-2) 2771-8392
E-mail: intl@med-assn.org.tw
Website: www.med.assn.org.tw
THAILAND E
Medical Association of Thailand
2 Soi Soonvijai
New Petchburi Road
Bangkok 10320
Tel: (66-2) 314 4333/318-8170
Fax: (66-2) 314 6305
E-mail: math@loxinfo.co.th
Website: www.medassocthai.org
TUNISIA F
Conseil National de l’Ordre
des Médecins de Tunisie
16, rue de Touraine
1002 Tunis
Tel: (216-71) 792 736/799 041
Fax: (216-71) 788 729
E-mail: ordremed.na@planet.tn
TURKEY E
Turkish Medical Association
GMK Bulvary
Sehit Danis Tunaligil Sok. N° 2 Kat 4
Maltepe 06570
Ankara
Tel: (90-312) 231 –3179/Fax: -1952
E-mail: Ttb@ttb.org.tr
Website: www.ttb.org.tr
UGANDA E
Uganda Medical Association
Plot 8, 41-43 circular rd.
P.O. Box 29874
Kampala
Tel: (256) 41 32 1795
Fax: (256) 41 34 5597
E-mail: myers28@hotmail.com
UNITED KINGDOM E
British Medical Association
BMA House, Tavistock Square
London WC1H 9JP
Tel: (44-207) 387-4499
Fax: (44- 207) 383-6710
E-mail: vivn@bma.org.uk
Website: www.bma.org.uk
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA E
American Medical Association
515 North State Street
Chicago, Illinois 60610
Tel: (1-312) 464 5040
Fax: (1-312) 464 5973
Website: http://www.ama-assn.org
URUGUAY S
Sindicato Médico del Uruguay
Bulevar Artigas 1515
CP 11200 Montevideo
Tel: (598-2) 401 47 01
Fax: (598-2) 409 16 03
E-mail: secretaria@smu.org.uy
VATICAN STATE F
Associazione Medica del Vaticano
Stato della Città del Vaticano
00120 Città del Vaticano
Tel: (39-06) 69879300
Fax: (39-06) 69883328
E-mail: servizi.sanitari@scv.va
VENEZUELA S
Federacion Médica Venezolana
Avenida Orinoco
Torre Federacion Médica Venezolana
Urbanizacion Las Mercedes
Caracas
Tel: (58-2) 9934547
Fax: (58-2) 9932890
Website: www.saludfmv.org
E-mail: info@saludgmv.org
VIETNAM E
Vietnam Medical Association
(VGAMP)68A Ba Trieu-Street
Hoau Kiem District
Hanoi
Tel/Fax: (84) 4 943 9323
ZIMBABWE E
Zimbabwe Medical Association
P.O. Box 3671
Harare
Tel: (263-4) 791553
Fax: (263-4) 791561
E-mail: zima@zol.co.zw
U2–4_WMJ_02_07.qxd 02.08.2007 09:02 Seite U4
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OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF
THE WORLD MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION
Hon. Editor in Chief
Dr. Alan J. Rowe
Haughley Grange, Stowmarket
Suffolk IP14 3QT
UK
Co-Editors
Prof. Dr. med. Elmar Doppelfeld
Deutscher Ärzte-Verlag
Dieselstr. 2
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Editorial
It is with sadness that we open this issue of the WMJ with the obituary of Dr. Andre Wynen,
Secretary General Emeritus of the World Medical Association. However, it is timely that the
principles of the WMA and the issues he fought for are reflected in the report of the release of
the doctor and nurses imprisoned and under sentence of death in Libya and by the emphasis
placed by the Council in reaffirming the Declaration of Hamburg concerning Torture. Also, in
the report of the 176th
WMA Council meeting the concerns expressed about threats to the
autonomy of physicians, of their patients and on the governing of the medical profession.
In a world of constant and rapid change, we include reports on WHO and other international
initiatives to contain increasing threats to public health, the problems of the shortages of health
professionals and on global partnerships to enhance the production of therapeutic agents.
In the busy life of physicians engaged in day to day care of the sick and injured, while endeav-
ouring to keep track of changes in knowledge and advances in technology, it is difficult to find
time to reflect on the pressures which changing social attitudes place on the basic ethical tenets
upon which medical practice is based. In particular the increasing pressures imposed by eco-
nomic constraints impose a duty on physicians both individually and collectively to reflect and
act on the principles which should govern their professional activity. The role of national med-
ical associations in stressing the importance of these messages to its members cannot be
overemphasised. As the WMA Secretary General indicates in his column, it is important to
recognise that political objectives can be achieved in many insidious ways of which all physi-
cians need to be aware.
New Chair of WMA Council
Dr. Edward Hill was elected chair of WMA Council at the 176th
Council meeting. Dr. Hill, A
family physicians from Tulepo, Mississippi, Dr. Hill was President of American Medical
Association in 2005, had been Chair of the AMA Board of Trustees for three years. Qualifying
in medicine at the University of Mississippi he served as a general medical officer in the US
Navy and for 27 years practiced in the rural Mississippi Delta, later becoming Director of the
Family Practice residency Programme at North Mississippi Medical Centre, the USA’s largest
rural hospital. Dr. Hull developed and directed
a local health programme which successfully
reduced the foetal mortality rate from one of the
highest in the USA to below the national aver-
age.
Dr. Hill has been President of the Mississippi
State Medical Association, President of the
Mississippi Academy of Family Physicians,
Delegate to the American Academy of Family
Physicians and President of the Southern
Medical Association. “Dr. Hill succeeds Dr.
Yoram Blachar who, after four years, stood
down from the post.”
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:14 Seite 29
Obituary
30
André Wynen, Secretary General
Emeritus of the World Medical Asso-
ciation, a staunch protagonist and defend-
er of the medical profession and its
patients, its autonomy and professional
ethics, died on 10th
June, 2007, at the age
of 83. He was known and respected by his
professional colleagues and many others
world wide for his promotion of the high-
est standards of med-
ical ethics both in the
practice of medicine, in
the care of the sick and
in the interests of
humanity at large.
André Wynen, the son
of a civil engineer was
born on the 8th
De-
cember 1923. Brussels.
During the Second
World War, he was
called-up at the age of
16 to serve in the
Recruitment Corps of
the Belgian Army.
Following the German
occupation, having failed to escape from
France to Africa he returned to Belgium,
eventually joining the Resistance. He suf-
fered imprisonment first in Breendonk and
then in Buchenwald concentration camps,
surviving, despite his many terrible expe-
riences which included exposure to
typhus, many victims of which he nursed.
On his liberation and return to Belgium,
he was found to have tuberculosis which
was treated in Switzerland. It was not until
1947 that he was able to take up his med-
ical studies again. He had completed his
first examination at the then illegal facul-
ty in Namur in 1942, before he was
imprisoned, but after his recovery from
tuberculosis resumed his interrupted stud-
ies, qualifying in 1950.
Dr. Wynen’s chosen professional career
was that of surgery, practising as a gener-
al surgeon. He first practiced in Braine
l’Alleud where he later built a small hos-
pital and subsequently the 250 bed hospi-
tal with all its services. There he gained
considerable experience in traumatology
from road traffic accidents in the area.
André Wynen also operated at the Cavell
Hospital, a private hospital in Bruxelles
where, following a major financial crisis
leading to its threatened closure, the work-
ers trade union (including the hospital
doctors who were members of the
Association Belge des
Syndicats Médicaux of
which Dr. Wynen was a
founder and for many
years the President)
reacted against its clo-
sure by occupying the
building for more than
three months.
Eventually, following the
intervention of the
Minister and negotia-
tions led by Dr. Wynen,
his proposition for solv-
ing the problems (based
on the principles under
which Braine l’Alleud
hospital had been estab-
lished) was accepted and with 37 col-
leagues, the non profit making “Institut
Médical Edith Cavell“ was formed, ensur-
ing continuity of medical care in this re-
established private hospital. This is one
illustration of his engagement on behalf of
health professionals and patients, ensuring
the survival of the hospital and proper
conditions under which doctors and other
health workers could care for their
patients.
Dr. Wynen played a major role in Belgian
national medical politics not only in the
formation of the Association Belge des
Syndicats Médicaux, but also Hospital
and other organisations. He was deeply
involved in the major conflict between the
physicians and the government over a
reform of the Leburton Law. This would
have penalised patients who chose to con-
sult a physician who had not accepted the
agreement with the social security system.
The patients’ freedom of choice for med-
ical care was a principle which Dr. Wynen
regarded as a fundamental right of all citi-
zens, as did many of his colleagues. The
defence of this principle led to a success-
ful national doctors’ strike, organised in
such a way that arrangements ensured the
provision of urgent and emergency ser-
vices. Eventually the government agreed
to negotiations with the Medical Trade
Union and the law was modified. A further
indication of Wynen’s tenacity in defend-
ing patients’ care, occurred when he later
engaged with the government when it
tried to limit the number of installations of
scanners in Belgium. This involved him in
a court case in which in the end he was
successful, although it placed him at con-
siderable personal risk. He was even pub-
licly threatened with imprisonment.
On the international scene Dr. Wynen was
equally active medico-politically as Head
of the Belgian Delegation and as President
of the Comité Permanent des Medécins de
la CEE during the Belgian Presidency
1967–1970. He was also a Member of the
Advisory Committee on Medical Training
(ACMT) of the EEC, a co-founder of the
European Academy of Post-graduate
Education and a participant in many other
international organisations.
Dr. Wynen’s devotion to the medical pro-
fession and deep concern with profession-
al standards, the ethical aspects of medical
practice (including its role as the advocate
of patients), was demonstrated by his con-
tinuing activity in the World Medical
Association (WMA). The WMA had been
founded after the Second World War and
in a reaction to the horrifying breaches of
medical ethics during that period, focused
its main activity on establishing world
wide international principles and codes of
medical ethics. André Wynen had a dri-
ving concern in the establishment of the
highest standards of medical ethics to gov-
ern the practice of medicine, the profes-
sional autonomy of its practitioners in the
preservation of life and the care of those
who are sick. This duty of care was one
which could be detected throughout his
life, from his early nursing care of his fel-
low prisoners with typhus to his fights,
Dr. André Wynen 1924–2007
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:14 Seite 30
Obituary / Medical Ethics / WMA
31
Both the World Medical Association and the
International Council of Nurses welcomed
the release of the Palestinian physician and
the five nurses who have been incarcerated
for eight years, ultimately under sentence of
death in Libya. These health professionals
had been accused by Libya of deliberately
infecting more than 400 Libyan children with
HIV. Despite the clear evidence of a number
of leading world experts to the contrary, the
Libyan Courts found them guilty and ulti-
mately condemned them to death. Following
extensive representation from throughout the
world and other interventions, the death sen-
tence has been dropped and all the health pro-
fessionals have left Libya for Bulgaria.
many years later, to seek the release of
physicians sick and imprisoned e.g.
under the Pinochet regime in Chile, an
action in which he spared neither him-
self nor any other effort to achieve suc-
cess.
As Chairman of Council and later for
17 years as Secretary General of the
WMA, Dr. Wynen contributed to the
preparation and adoption of the impor-
tant Declarations of Tokyo and
Helsinki and during a difficult period in
the history of the WMA, greatly con-
tributed to its survival and renewal.
His huge contribution to the work of
the WMA was recognised by his col-
leagues all over the world when he was
made Secretary General Emeritus. He
was the recipient of a considerable
number of honours from many coun-
tries and only 18 months ago, his inter-
national significance in medical care
was recognised by his own government
when he was invested as a Grand
Officer of the Order of Leopold.
Sometimes controversial and always
formidable in his defence of the princi-
ples on which both the duty and rights
of physicians are based, he was consid-
erate, kind and a good friend to many
across the world. Dr. Wynen could
never be thought of without his wife
Nicole and his family to whom he was
deeply attached. His partnership with
Nicole was something to be envied.
Indeed following his serious cycling
accident, many would agree that his
remarkable recovery would not have
been possible without the outstanding
support of his wife, nor indeed would
he have been able to continue his many
activities without her support.
André Wynen’s contribution to
advancing the care of patients and
defending health related human rights,
the autonomy of his professional col-
leagues in the practice of medicine, the
promotion of high standards of med-
ical education and of medical ethics,
will be greatly missed both nationally
and internationally.
Release of Palestinian Physician and
Bulgarian Nurses
The 176th
Council meeting took place this
year in Berlin, Germany on 10-12th
May
2007.
While the Council meetings associated with
the General Assembly take place each year
in a different member state, this was the
first time for many years that the mid-term
Council meeting has taken place outside
France. The meeting was held in the
Meistersaal, Berlin at the invitation of the
German Medical Association and had the
biggest ever attendance at a council meet-
ing, 130 individuals from 16 countries.
Dr. Kloiber, the Secretary-General, called
the meeting to order and Professor Hoppe,
in welcoming the Council to Berlin, gave a
brief outline of the history of the
Meistersaal in which the meeting was tak-
ing place, following which Dr. Coble (a
Past President) gave an introductory talk
for the benefit of new members of Council
outlining the way in which the WMA had
developed since the Washington meeting in
2002. He said that major improvements in
governance were adopted in Santiago,
including the introduction of council orien-
tation guides, resulting in improved func-
tioning of council etc. and ensuring that the
voice of the minority was heard. In Helsinki
the Canadian Medical Association had pro-
posed the formation of a Business
176th
WMA Council meeting
Committee stimulated by a previous survey
of the membership on their expectations of
the WMA. This survey identified concerns
about autonomy, the need to be strong on
Public Health, on advocacy and outreach
especially to NMAs, the other health pro-
fessions and the World Bank etc. This had
all been done.
Six months before the General Assembly
in Tokyo a search committee was estab-
lished by Council, resulting in the appoint-
ment of a new Secretary General, Dr.
Kloiber, the following year. Research con-
centrated on improving outreach, regular
meetings developed and individuals were
identified who showed the qualities of
Caring, Ethics and Science, without which
he commented “caring and ethics alone is
nothing but well-intended kindness, not
Medicine”. These individuals were pre-
sented at the Santiago Assembly in the
book “Caring Physicians of the World”
(CPW). They comprised individuals not
known world wide but demonstrating
social qualities as well as those related to
activities associated with professional
ethics, medical science and practice. The
volume “Caring Physicians of the World,
launched in Santiago was also presented to
the World Health Assembly. The CPW ini-
tiative extended outreach to NMAs and
included meetings in Africa, in Europe,
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:14 Seite 31
WMA
32
Latin-America, North America and the
Asian/Pacific region. The question was
then how to proceed? The book has now
been translated into Spanish in South
America and the South African Medical
Association was organising a further meet-
ing in Africa. “We need to increase the
ability of the medical profession to
emerge.” Dr. Coble announced that a
course on Leadership is being organised
later this year for those with knowledge
and judgement and quoted Osler and
Tolstoi as examples of the qualities of
those able to inspire hope and trust. He
also stressed that there was a need now to
inspire members of NMAs and was sure
that the Leadership course would be a step
in this direction.
Council meeting
Dr. Kloiber then formally opened the
Council meeting and called on the retiring
Chair, Dr.Yoram Blachar, to address the
Council.
Dr. Blachar
Dr. Blachar recalled he had been active in
the WMA for more than 10 years, as a
member of Council, Chair of the Socio-
Medical Affairs committee and finally for
the past 4 years Chair of Council. This was
at a time when members had expressed
dissatisfaction with the organisation’s
activities and in consequence the organisa-
tion underwent major change which, with
the assistance of many members of coun-
cil, had taken place under his chairman-
ship. He continued “With the hard work of
Dr. John Williams and through many
workgroups in which members had taken
part, we were able to revise and update the
weighty stock of Statements, Resolutions
and Declarations, to rescind and archive
those which merited it and to reaffirm
those Statements that were still relevant.
The WMA also underwent an important
change in governance. We were able to
establish the Executive Committee and
kept the finance Committee updated with a
running account of the financial status of
the association. As a result of the survey
conducted amongst you, we learned your
priorities for topics to be dealt with and
issues and problems to be raised on our
agenda. The crux of the WMA’s activities
was and remains the ethical area, but other
topics such as health care reforms, physi-
cian autonomy, medical malpractice and
others were given prominent place on our
agenda. In addition, a workgroup was
formed to implement the need to diversify
the WMA’s activities and expand its
sources of income beyond that of member-
ship dues alone.”
Stressing that it was difficult to exaggerate
the importance of WMA, he indicated that it
was the central body shaping ethical princi-
ples in medicine accepted worldwide.
“Despite the changes experienced by the
organisation in the last few years it remains
the most important meeting place of med-
ical representatives from all corners of the
globe. The problems faced by physicians
worldwide are similar, if not identical, in
every country. We physicians are forced to
deal with limited resources for expanding
technologies and new treatments and are
faced with the end of the paternalistic era.
All these factors and more, impact on the
relationship between our patients and physi-
cians. This relationship has evolved into
one of partnership in determining care, par-
ticularly since in the age of the Internet,
medical information has become accessible
to all through the click of a mouse. In addi-
tion, in an era when sacred cows are slaugh-
tered daily, we physicians are fodder for the
media”
Addressing the constant threats to the pro-
fession, and observing that differences
between geographical areas and different
countries can be stark, Dr. Blachar referred
to the existence of areas in which the severe
shortage of physicians was so bad that
“barefoot doctors” had to be trained instead
of physicians, to the influence of economic
pressures, to the heavy workload and to the
transfer of some functions from physicians
to nurses and other paramedical profession-
als. In the context of the issue of physician
migration, which was of importance to
WMA and to society as a whole, he said that
“this creates a serious shortage to the point
of endangering entire populations in certain
countries where the “brain drain” from
poorer less developed countries to more
established countries is acute. This issue
raises ethical questions which must be
addressed”.
Dr. Blachar expressed his thanks for his
term as Chairman and his gratitude to the
two Secretary Generals with whom he had
had the privilege of working. He referred to
Dr. Delon Humans’s contribution in bring-
ing new life to the WMA, helping it to
176th
Council in session.
Cont. p. 35
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:15 Seite 32
Medical Ethics
33
PREAMBLE
1. On the basis of a number of internation-
al ethical declarations and guidelines
subscribed to by the medical profes-
sion, medical doctors throughout the
world are prohibited from countenanc-
ing, condoning or participating in the
practice of torture or other forms of
cruel, inhuman or degrading proce-
dures for any reason.
2. Primary among these declarations are
the World Medical Association’s
International Code of Medical Ethics,
Declaration of Geneva, Declaration of
Tokyo, and Resolution on Physician
Participation in Capital Punishment;
the Standing Committee of European
Doctors’ Statement of Madrid; the
Nordic Resolution Concerning Phy-
sician Involvement in Capital
Punishment; and, the World Psychiatric
Association’s Declaration of Hawaii.
3. However, none of these declarations or
statements addresses explicitly the
issue of what protection should be
extended to medical doctors if they are
pressured, called upon, or ordered to
take part in torture or other forms of
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment. Nor do these declara-
tions or statements express explicit sup-
port for, or the obligation to protect,
doctors who encounter or become
aware of such procedures.
RESOLUTION
4. The World Medical Association
(WMA) hereby reiterates and reaffirms
the responsibility of the organised med-
ical profession:
i. to encourage doctors to honour
their commitment as physicians
to serve humanity and to resist
any pressure to act contrary to
the ethical principles governing
their dedication to this task;
ii. to support physicians experienc-
ing difficulties as a result of
their resistance to any such pres-
sure or as a result of their
attempts to speak out or to act
against such inhuman proce-
dures; and,
iii. to extend its support and to
encourage other international
organisations, as well as the
national member associations
(NMAs) of the World Medical
Association, to support physi-
cians encountering difficulties
as a result of their attempts to
act in accordance with the high-
est ethical principles of the pro-
fession.
5. Furthermore, in view of the continued
employment of such inhumane proce-
dures in many countries throughout the
world, and the documented incidents of
pressure upon medical doctors to act in
contravention to the ethical principles
subscribed to by the profession, the
WMA finds it necessary:
i. to protest internationally against
any involvement of, or any pres-
sure to involve, medical doctors
in acts of torture or other forms
of cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment;
ii. to support and protect, and to
call upon its NMAs to support
and protect, physicians who are
resisting involvement in such
inhuman procedures or who are
working to treat and rehabilitate
victims thereof, as well as to
secure the right to uphold the
highest ethical principles
including medical confidentiali-
ty;
iii. to publicise information about
and to support doctors reporting
evidence of torture and to make
known proven cases of attempts
to involve physicians in such
procedures; and,
iv. to encourage national medical
associations to ask correspond-
ing academic authorities to teach
and investigate in all schools of
medicine and hospitals the con-
sequences of torture and its treat-
ment, the rehabilitation of the
survivors, the documentation of
torture, and the professional pro-
tection described in this De-
claration.
World Medical Association Declaration Concerning Support for
Medical Doctors Refusing to Participate in, or to Condone, the Use of
Torture or Other Forms of Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment
Adopted by the 49th
WMA General Assembly Hamburg, Germany, November 1997 and
re-affirmed by the 176th
WMA Council, Berlin meeting 2007.
The policy of the Declaration of Hamburg was reaffirmed by the Council at their 176th
meeting in Berlin, stressing the need for it
to be given wider publicity (see p. 38).
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:15 Seite 33
WMA
34
reach greater visibility, strengthening ties
with organisations such as WHO and mak-
ing cooperation with the World Health
Professions Alliance both a fact and an
great advantage. Dr. Blachar thanked Dr.
Kloiber who had brought to the WMA
greater financial stability and organisation-
al and administrative efficiency, while
planting the seeds of future growth and
development of the organisation. Closing,
Dr. Blachar said” I wish my successor as
enjoyable a candidacy as I experienced,
and I hope to have the opportunity to con-
tinue to contribute to this great organisa-
tion. Thank you for allowing me to serve
the WMA”.
Dr. Kloiber thanked Dr. Blachar both for the
privilege of working with him as Secretary
General during the past two years and also
before that as a member of the
Bundesärztekammer. It had been obvious
that Dr. Blachar wished to raise the WMA
to a new level and style of work. This had
been particularly difficult for WMA with
not only the problems of governance and
finance but also the changes taking place in
medicine internationally. He thanked him
for his friendship and trust which he had
much appreciated.
Death of Dr. Odenbach
Dr. Kloiber, after reporting apologies for
absence, reported the sad death of Dr.
Odenbach. He had been a great supporter
and worker for WMA over a very long peri-
od, extending back to his first appearance as
a student representative of the International
Medical Students Association nearly 55
years ago, then as a member of the German
Delegation over the many years which fol-
lowed. He would be greatly missed.
Council stood in silent tribute.
Continuing, Dr. Kloiber observed that this
was the biggest Council meeting ever, with
16 states being represented on Council
directly. He recognised 10 new members of
the Council and welcomed as observers,
Dr. René Salzberg (FMH), Dr. Reyes
(ICRC), Professor Orof Mezzich ( World
Pychiatric Association) Mr. O Meretoja
(Confermel)
Chair of Council
Dr. Edward Hill (USA), Past President of
the American Medical Association was
elected Chair of Council by acclamation.
Dr Hill, acknowledging his thanks on being
elected, referred to the improvements in the
last two years which were a tribute to a well
motivated Secretary-General and to the
Strategic Plan. Faced with major problems
which would require evidence-based solu-
tions, there is a need to address some
NMAs’ problems which will require more
staff and new policies. He would do his
utmost to advance the work of the WMA.
Vice-Chair of Council
Dr. K. Iwasa (Japan) was elected Vice-
Chair by acclamation.
Treasurer
Dr. J. D. Hoppe (Germany) was re-elected.
Council then proceeded to elect members of
Standing Committees and Committee
Advisers.
Dr. Kloiber then introduced Ms. Seebohm
of the Bundesärztekammer, the new Legal
Adviser, and paid tribute to the work of Ms.
Leah Wapner, Secretary General of the
IMA, who had provided assistance with the
legal work during the interim period and
would continue to give assistance. He
thanked the Israeli Medical Association for
making this possible.
Report of the President, Dr.
Nachiappan Arumugam
Dr. Arumugam said that in the last six
months he had met lots of members. Some
thought of WMA as a powerful body in the
middle of Europe. Others wonder who it is
and what it does. He had attended a number
of NMA meetings to meet them and discuss
their problems. Dr. Arumugam referred to
the current challenges to the practice of
medicine, the need to get people interested
and spoke about meetings he had attended
in South East Asia, Thailand and India, say-
ing that he had found a general feeling of
need to get to NMAs, promote activities
and present the challenges. In particular he
enlarged on the problems of globalisation,
migration of physicians, problems associat-
ed with EU legislation, with training and
the privatisation of medical education, pay-
ment systems and medico-legal problems.
There was also the problem of differences
in medical ethics. He was grateful for the
opportunity which these visits had offered
to explore these issues with NMAs.
Dr. Hill thanked the President for his report
and moved to the Secretary General’s
Report.
Secretary General’s Report
Dr. Kloiber said that the written report (see
also p. 43) was in a different format. It fell
into two parts namely, a general part and
also a part dealing with cooperation with
WHO which would be taken later in the
agenda. Some work had fallen to the
Finance and Planning Committee which has
had more work to do, including the consol-
idation with finance. All the efforts have
been successful in this work which includ-
ed control of Dues, support in Kind control
and Advocacy. There was better support of
relations with NMAs.
The biggest project had been “Caring
Physicians of the World” (CPW), with the
book CPW in Santiago, including sponsor-
ship of the edition in Spanish launched in
March this year in Florida. With Dr. Coble
there will be a Leadership Course in the
autumn. This would be at and with the
assistance of INSEAD, an international uni-
versity in Fontainebleau (France).
Nominations for this course will be dealt
with by an advisory committee and the new
executive committee.
Turning to the World Health Professions
Alliance Dr. Kloiber commented that his
predecessor had initiated this alliance with
the Nurses and the Pharmacists – a very
clever and necessary move. It was easy for
international bodies to say of individual
professions “you are giving a very partial
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:15 Seite 34
WMA
35
view”. The Health Professions Alliance is
the answer to this. It doesn’t mean giving up
the individual positions of professions.
Often our problems are similar. WHPA has
held two forums in 2004 and 2006. A com-
mon conference on Regulation is planned
for May next year. He commented that in
the Pacific, in Asia, in Europe and probably
in America, governments are becoming
increasingly intrusive in regulation. There
was a need to express our views on Self-
regulation.
Dr. Kloiber concluded by saying that he had
been asked by the Chairman of Council to
work on the Consolidation of Standing
Documents and would ask Mrs. Melke
Borow (IMA) to give a brief report on this.
Dr. Snaedal, President Elect, (Iceland MA)
spoke of a project in which the WMA had
been involved, namely the Istambul
Protocol. There had been a new invitation to
participate in the work.
Dr. Hanson (CMA) in the context of
Human Health Resources referred to “task
shifting” and asked what was WMA’s posi-
tion on this for the World Health Assembly.
While he agreed that there should be con-
solidation with other Health Professionals
he commented that we have individual
views and in this context there may be prob-
lems, especially in “task shifting”.
Mr .J. Johnson (BMA), referring to the
Regulation Conference next year, said that
they had problems in their own area in the
aspects of organ transplantation. The
ChMA Ethics Committee had discussed
several issues and principles which will
clarify the need to obtain written informed
consent of the individual donor or his/her
family before any donation can be made.
The ChMA realises the importance of
emphasising ethical rules to those who par-
ticipate in organ transplantation.
The discussions with ChMA included con-
sideration of the matter of procurement of
organs from prisoners, which opened up
issues of Chinese culture and ethical prac-
tice. While at the same time the ChMA
made clear their recognition of the human
rights of prisoners, there were cultural dif-
ferences in the interpretation of these. Dr.
Zhong also emphasised the strict laws
regarding the death penalty which now
required approval by the Chinese Supreme
Court.
The WMA delegation acknowledged the
cultural differences between the West and
China, but reiterated the fact that interna-
tional ethical rules, including the WMA
Statement on organ transplantation, pro-
hibit the procurement of organs from pris-
oners. The WMA delegation also main-
tained that there was no way of guarantee-
ing that a prisoner is free from coercion
pointing out that the prohibition in this
Statement protects prisoners’ human
rights.
The ChMA and WMA delegation agreed on
the prohibition of organ trade and on the
need for further work on ethical guidelines
on organ transplantation in China, noting
that there remain differences of opinion on
the notion of free and informed consent and
harvesting of organs from prisoners.
Finally Dr. Blachar said that although dif-
ferences between the two sides remained,
he felt that China was moving in the right
direction and was particularly encouraged
by the new law prohibiting organ trade.
In a second meeting with the Vice-Minister
of Health, Prof. Huang Jiefu, the Chinese
Government position was explained.
Especially the dependency on informed and
documented consent and but also the prohi-
bition of organ trade were two law projects
the Chinese Government wished to persue
UK. He would welcome input from other
NMAs.
Mrs. Malke Borow (IMA), referring to the
Consolidation of the Standing documents
said that they had tried to consolidate these
and make them readable in one document.
Obviously revisions could be introduced
during this process (for example the intro-
duction of Observer membership) and the
possible delegation of representation to
member NMAs when the need for represen-
tation was geographically in their area.
The Chair commented that proposals for
change need to be submitted.
China
Dr. Blachar said that the delegation, which
included the President and Secretary
General, had recently met with the Chinese
Medical Association (ChMA ) concerning
the issue of organ transplantation. Dr.
Zhong, President of the ChMA had given an
overview of the history of organ transplan-
tation in China, indicating that while the
1960’s and 70’s were not very successful in
terms of organ donation, the last couple of
years had proved more productive due, in
part, to great advances in technology.
However, the legal framework for these sur-
gical procedures has not advanced as quick-
ly as technology.
The ChMA had done much work to formu-
late and clarify guidelines on the ethical
Participant of the 176th
WMA Council Meeting.
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36
immediately. After a long discussion Prof.
Huang indicated that he would support a
move towards a ban on organs from prison-
ers.
The delegation recommended that further
negotiations continue with the aim that the
ChMA state its commitment to WMA ethi-
cal policy on consent and organ transplanta-
tion, and that the ChMA report back to
Council with an update at the General
Assembly.
The Council approved the recommenda-
tion that the discussions continue with a
view to the ChMA stating its commitment
to WMA policy on organ transplantation
and consent. A further report would be
made to the Assembly in Copenhagen in
October.
Mr. J Johnson (BMA), commented that for
the first time in a long period the ChMA
was present at this Council meeting. He
also reported that the BMA was organising
a conference on Transplantation in London
which would include international experts.
FINANCE AND PLANNING
COMMITTEE (FPC)
The Chair of Council called the meeting to
order, welcomed new members, received
apologies and the meeting approved the
minutes of the last meeting.
Mr. J. Johnson (BMA) was nominated by
Dr. Hanson (CMA) and was elected Chair
of the Committee by acclamation. In thank-
ing the committee Mr. Johnson pointed out
that in the United Kingdom, surgeons were
by custom addressed as Mister not Doctor,
although they were medically qualified!
Finance
The report on the membership dues pay-
ments was received and the Secretary
General said that developments had been
positive and thanked NMAs for their help in
this process. He reported that special
arrangements for some NMAs continued
and the report was received. Following
some discussion during which the Secretary
General noted a recent improvement in pay-
ment of dues arreas, reports on
Comparative Dues and on Dues arreas were
received.
Financial Statement
Mr. Hallmayr presented the Pre-audited
Statement for 2006 noting that the fully
audited Statement would be available in
June 2007. Dr. Bagenholm welcomed the
good result and asked whether, neverthe-
less, we should be careful. M. Hallmayr
agreed, the trend must become a firm one.
The Committee recommended that the
Statement be approved. This was later
adopted by Council.
Business Group.
Explaining that the Business Group was an
“ad hoc” Group, Dr. Kloiber reported that in
the past 18 months the activities had been
reduced to three, reinvestment in Portal
development, Meetings, and Future
Information Technology. The content needs
to meet short, mid- and long-term problems
and include content management, on-line
payment by members and an on-line chat
board.
Concerning conferences it is possible to
reduce costs. He drew attention to the fact
that most other conferences bring in some
income, and referred to the successful “Well
Doctor” conferences organised by the AMA
and CMA, held in Canada and the USAbien-
nially over the past four years. Following
further discussion, the BMA offered to host
one next year and the Australian Medical
Association in 3 years time. There was very
little risk attached to these successful confer-
ences and some profit.
The Chair commented that the Business
Group had proved its worth and during dis-
cussion the CMA offered to revise and
update the WMA website, a generous offer
which the Committee gratefully acknowl-
edged. It further discussed the Web Portal
and recommended that the mandate of the
Business Development Group be extended
and be authorised
1) to develop a business plan for a phased
approach to the establishment of a
WMA Web Portal,
2) to investigate corporate sponsorship for a
WMA Web Portal,
3) to proceed to develop a business plan for
future WMA meetings and conferences.
This recommendation was later adopted by
the Council.
WMA Meetings
The committee received reports on the
arrangements for the WMA General
Assembly in Seoul, South Korea in 2008
and for Copenhagen, Denmark in 2007.
After considering an oral report on planning
of future meetings and a presentation by the
Indian Medical Association on its plans for
the General Assembly in 2009, it recom-
mended that Council should commend the
theme for the 2008 Scientific Session to the
2007 Assembly as “Health and Human
Rights”.
Membership
The Secretary General referred members to
the written report and commented on the
strong membership of associates in the USA
and in Asia In the discussion the Chair sug-
gested that it would be helpful if NMAs had
copies of the form forAssociate Membership,
which was noted by the Secretary General.
The report of the Associate Members was
received.
OUTREACH
Public relations
The report on Public Relations was
received.
The Public Relations Consultant, Mr. Nigel
Duncan, urged NMAs to increase the use of
press releases as a mechanism for increas-
ing the visibility of the WMA.
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37
World Medical Journal
The committee received a proposal to
change the format of the World Medical
Journal, an offer for cooperation from the
Nature Publishing Group and a paper
regarding the Title of the World Medical
Journal in its present format.
The Chair said this was a major matter; the
papers were before the committee, includ-
ing the proposal from Nature and a decision
must be taken today.
The Secretary General referred to the major
effort and changed format which had been
introduced by the Editor and the need for
NMA input and support. As an internation-
al organisation WMA had to have an instru-
ment of communication. He stressed that
the World Medical Journal was an asset.
Both the options before the committee pre-
sent the committee with a need to go ahead
with exploring the possibilities. There
would be a need for considerable discussion
of the proposals.
Dr. Davis (America Medical Association),
presented a report on ideas for revamping
and relaunching the World Medical Journal
as a scientific journal, stressing that NMAs
should be involved in this project.
His proposal was to include original clinical
research, health services research, medical
ethics and medical education, healthcare
policy and public health in a peer reviewed
journal. Possible areas of special focus
could include international comparisons of
healthcare systems and their performance,
global spread of diseases and risks, globali-
sation of healthcare, health and human
rights, health impact of conflicts, medical
ethics guidelines and medical education
standards.
He outlined further detail on governance,
web-site, funding and the way forward. The
pros and cons of the two options were pre-
sented and committee addressed the two
proposals before them.
Discussions focused on the strategic objec-
tive of WMA publications, the audience
they intended to reach, the value and repu-
tation of the title “World Medical Journal”
and whether the focus of the content of the
journal should be clinical in nature or relat-
ed to medical ethics and human rights. The
WMJ Editor while agreeing that the propo-
sition was a compelling one and should be
explored, pointed out that a change in focus
to clinical issues would represent a funda-
mental change in the policy of the journal.
As his paper indicated, its function had
always quite specifically excluded discus-
sion of clinical problems (see the introduc-
tion to the Handbook of WMA Declarations
1992 & 1996), and the proposed change
would be a major change of policy. He also
drew attention to the need for a vehicle for
communicating material relating to the
main activities of the WMA in future, were
the new proposal to be implemented.
After a long discussion during which differ-
ing views were expressed, the committee
recommended that:
1. The proposal to revamp and re-launch the
World Medical Journal with assistance
from NMAs be further explored, includ-
ing seeking outside funding, be accepted.
2. That there be a further report to the next
council meeting.
3. That the proposal to adopt a new clinical
journal published by the Nature
Publishing group as an official publica-
tion of the WMA, be not accepted.
It was noted that, if the proposal above was
implemented, in the interim period a new
house publication would be needed as a
communications vehicle for administrative,
political, ethical and other non-clinical
issues within the WMA, possibly a “World
Medical Bulletin”.
4. The report of the World Medical Journal
was received.
These recommendations were later
approved by council.
MEDICAL ETHICS
COMMITTEE
Dr. Kloiber convened the meeting of the
Medical Ethics committee and called for
nominations for the Chair. Dr. Bagenholm
(Sweden), was elected by acclamation.
Dr. John Williams commenting on the oral
report, said that he had retired in December
but had done some work for the unit since
then. An on-line course on Medical Ethics
similar to the course for prison doctors was
being prepared with the Norwegian Medical
Association. It was an interactive course
based on the WMA Manual of Medical
Ethics, and would be launched very soon.
Turning to the Manual of Medical Ethics he
reported that this had now been translated
Medical Ethics Commettee in session.
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38
into 13 languages and an Estonian transla-
tion was nearly ready. Some 220,000 copies
had now been issued.
Policy review
The committee turned to work in progress
and considered the WMA proposal for a
Rapporteur on the Independence and
Integrity of Health Professionals. In
response to a question from the Chair, Prof.
Nathanson (BMA), said that there had been
little progress in the past 10 years. There is
a Special Rapporteur with a focus on Health
Professionals but the work was difficult
because of the case load. She considered
that it was important to keep this proposal
as the risk of health professionals losing
their independence was real because there
were major pressures on professional to
breech medical ethics. This view was
endorsed by Dr. Gallard (France), who
commented that the reasons for the original
statement had not gone away, there was a
need for a special rapporteur. The
Committee recommended that the State-
ment undergo minor editorial revision by
the British Medical Association and then be
returned to the council with the committee’s
recommendation that it be reaffirmed.
Declaration of Hamburg
During consideration of the Declaration of
Hamburg on Torture, Dr. Reyes (ICRC)
stressed that this Declaration needed to be
better known and the committee recom-
mended it be reaffirmed. This was later
approved by the Council, at which the
Editor indicated that it would be published
in the Journal and NMAs were invited to
give it greater publicity.
Licensing of Physicians flee-
ing Prosecution for Serious
Criminal Offences
The committee also recommended that the
WMA Statement on Licensing of
Physicians Fleeing Prosecution for Serious
Criminal Offences, be reaffirmed. This was
later adopted by Council.
Human Rights
The Secretary General gave an oral report
on Human Rights noting that the issue of
human organ transplantation in China had
been discussed earlier by the Council (see
above). Dr. Snaedall (Iceland) reminded the
committee that WMA had participated in the
first phase of activity in relation to the
Istambul Protocol visiting and teaching in
five countries. He reported that WMA had
been asked to participate also in phase 2 of
this activity- financed by the European
Union. Meanwhile Dr. Snaedall had visited
Egypt where he had been able to visit three
ministries as well as NGOs. Although the
authorities were reluctant, there was a pro-
ject for training later this year in which he
felt that WMA should participate. There was
a need for ethical input into this training. He
also noted that the Declaration of Hamburg
was always on the table during these discus-
sions. In response to the Chair’s question as
to what was being proposed, Dr. Snaedall
commented that in the first project we had
been full partners with ICRC, while in the
second project, formal participation would
depend on reimbursement of expenses.
Prof. Nathanson (BMA), echoing these
views, commented that documentation of
the effects of torture is very important. A
bigger issue was abuse – interrogational tor-
ture – which is extraordinarily pervasive. It
would be worthwhile for WMA to partici-
pate in this work and doctors who try to
deal with this would appreciate support.
She referred in particular to Zimbabwe
members being involved in assisting doc-
tors observing that the Zimbabwe represen-
tative on the ICRC had to take refuge in an
Embassy. She mentioned that Dafur was the
1st project and there would be a report on
an Iraq project next time.
Prof. Nathanson reported on a visit with
ICRC to India to a conference on “Health of
Detainees and Prisoners” at which there
were participants from all over India.
Participants reported that torture before trial
and in prison was common, but it was diffi-
cult to document torture during interroga-
tion. Both HIV/AIDS and MDR-Tb were
major problems. The Indian Medical
Association had agreed to support doctors
both at regional and national level. She
commended NMA Prison doctors in India.
Dr. Kumar (IMA) commented on the
importance of the issue of the health of doc-
tors who may have psychological / mental
torture. Dr. Kloiber commented that the
Prison Doctors Course continues and he
particularly thanked the ICRC and Dr.
Reyes for their work.
Proposed Statement on Stem
Cell research
The Committee considered a proposed
WMA Statement on Stem Cell Research
from the Icelandic Medical Association
where this issue had been discussed, but
progress had been delayed by Parliament.
At the suggestion of the Chair the commit-
tee agreed to recommend that the statement
be circulated to NMAs for comments and
that these be referred to a small working
group to prepare revision for the next meet-
ing, a recommendation accepted by council.
Proposed Statement on
Telemedicine
Dr. Jensen suggested that a proposed
Statement on Telemedicine be referred to
NMAs for comment. Dr. Willams reminded
the committee of the long history of this
subject and that this had been twice to
NMAs. The option would be to consider the
document as it is. The committee recom-
mended that the document on the table be
referred to NMAs. This was later agreed by
council.
Proposed Statement on
Human Tissue
Transplantation
Germany introduced a proposal for a state-
ment on Human Tissue for Transplantation,
referring to discussions in council and work
done by the working group chaired by Dr.
Vilmar resulting in the document now
before the committee. The new document
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39
supplements existing policy on organ trans-
plants. It covers not only issues but also
human cells which may be turned into final
products, in which there were large finan-
cial interests. The committee recommended
that the document be circulated for com-
ments to NMAs. This was later accepted by
council.
Future Work
A paper on priorities which listed a number
of possible topics for future work provoked
considerable debate. Dr. Davis (AMA) felt
the list to be a good start and should be the
basis for reflection before the Copenhagen
meeting later in the year. Concerning a sug-
gestion that WMA should develop the ethics
unit into an Ethics Institute and stating that
the AMA also had a goal of developing an
ethics institute, using an analogy with the
WHO’s work with Collaborating Centres he
suggested that consideration should be
given to WMA working with NMA
Institutes of Ethics. Prof. Nathanson (BMA)
agreed with the principle of working with
NMA Ethics committees. Turning to specif-
ic topics she noted that there was no mention
of policy on “Dual Responsibility”, also
commenting in general that statements
should deal with broad issues.
Dr. Jensen (DMA), felt that there was a
need to discuss ethical aspects of coopera-
tion with the Pharmaceutical Industry, mov-
ing that a paper on this topic should be pre-
pared for Copenhagen and that there should
be exploration of an agreement with the
industry. The Secretary General observed
that there had been an agreement with the
industry two years ago and appealed for
suggested amendments or a new proposal
on relations with the Pharmaceutical
Industry. The Chair pointed out that the
CPME had guidance on this topic. The issue
was not about ethics it was about collabora-
tion, to which Dr. Kloiber commented that
WMA had had an offer from the industry to
do this which Council had rejected. It had
also commented on the CPME/IFPMA doc-
ument and stated that shared governance
was not acceptable. After further support
for Dr. Jensen’s views and information
about the experience of other NMAs, the
committee proposed that: “The Danish
Medical Association prepare a discussion
document which would be discussed at the
next meeting of the MEC and that the topic
of elaborating common guidelines between
the WMA and the industry should be placed
on the agenda of the next Ethics
Committee.” This proposal was adopted.
It was reported that a paper on “medical
professionalism” was in preparation and it
was agreed that this would be updated and
the topic of medical professionalism from
the perspective of NMAs would be on the
agenda for the next meeting.
Dr. Williams raised the question of the
importance of promoting WMA policies
and how this was to be done. Dr. Kloiber
responded that the office is planning to rein-
troduce a printed Handbook as a loose leaf
binder which NMA would then be able to
keep up to date. It was hoped that this
would be ready in October. Whether the
material should be sent by mail or e-mail
had yet to be decided and discussions were
taking place with international organisa-
tions to promote WMA policies. He
appealed to NMAs to take WMA policies to
their Annual meetings so that they could be
discussed there, as happens in the AMA.
Such actions were important to enhance the
global image of the WMA.
Prof. Nathanson suggested asking Council
how they had found policy useful in the past
year and Dr. Haikerwal (Australia) reported
that the Australian Medical association had
formally adopted WMA policy. The Editor
referring to the policy of publishing impor-
tant statements in the WMJ, appealed to
NMAs to publicise policy in their Journals
and Dr. Kloiber emphasized the importance
of ensuring that NMAs’ members under-
stood what was actual WMA policy.
Declaration of Helsinki
In discussion of a document on the advan-
tages/disadvantages of updating the
Declaration of Helsinki (DoH), Dr.
Williams suggested that any review should
consider an open approach to take account
of all stakeholders, and decide a course of
action. Even if there are no changes, a
review would remind all interested parties
that the DH exists. One should try to con-
vince them that all other declarations in this
field are secondary to the Helsinki
Declaration. He suggested that the process
of review could be done quickly and that
each NMA should be responsible for con-
sultation within its own country; the WMA
could deal with International organisations.
Dr. Kloiber said that the document was part
of the Strategic Plan. There were major dis-
cussions before the last revision, and
numerous conferences worldwide. At the
time there was difficulty in deciding the
direction i.e. to protect the subject of
research. In Edinburgh it was recognised
that some things were not dealt with such as
the position of pregnant women in research.
We were now in 2007 and we should start
preparation for a review in 2009/10.,e.g.
look at epidemiological and psychiatric
research We need to keep working if we
want to keep ownership, look at document,
decide the problems and make proposals.
Dr. Snaedall (IMA) thanking Dr. Williams
for his paper agreed that the DoH remained
important. The research community was
catching up with new problems and we
need to decide on new topics which need to
be included.
Prof. Nathanson (BMA) reminded the com-
mittee how difficult it was to get the DH
revised. Edinburgh was a compromise. Did
we really want to open this up now? She felt
that we should not decide on new topics
today.
Dr. Letlape (Past President) proposed that a
work group be formed to review the
Declaration of Helsinki with the goal of
identifying lacunae without opening basic
issues. The committee made this recom-
mendation which was later approved by
council.
Other business
Dr. Kloiber introduced Professor Julian
Mezzich, President of the World Psychiatric
Association (WPA), who explained that the
WPA incorporated 151 national associa-
tions, and stressed that ethics were of para-
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40
mount concern to the Association. It had
taken the decision to approach WMA with a
view to collaboration on ethical issues,
including the Madrid Declaration which
was undergoing a three year review. It
would also like to collaborate on broader
issues, such as a holistic approach
“Psychiatry with and for the Person.“ He
hoped that it would be possible for this col-
laboration to occur.
Zimbabwe
Dr. Letlape spoke about the challenges
being faced in Zimbabwe. Reporting doc-
tors detained and tortured he said that
SAMA had been asked to act and needed
guidelines.
Dr. Kloiber commented that he had tried to
get reactions to these events from the
Zimbabwe Medical Association (ZMA) but
had failed to get any response. He asked for
guidance from SAMA on strategies for out-
reach to the ZMA and getting credible infor-
mation. In response to a suggestion that a
safe approach would be to look at any rele-
vant existing policy he agreed but said that
we didn’t have information and we don’t
want to add to the problems of the ZMA.
SOCIO-MEDICAL AFFAIRS
COMMITTEE
The Chair of Council opening the meeting
and following adoption of the minutes of
the Pilansberg meeting 2006, called for
nominations for the Chair of the Social
Affairs Committee to which Dr. Gomes do
Amiral was elected by acclamation.
Proposed major revision of
policies.
Antimicrobial Drugs
Discussion of the proposed major revision
of the statement on Anti-microbial Drugs
was introduced by the AMA and the com-
mittee agreed that this be circulated to
NMAs for comments.
Family Planning and the right
of a woman to contraception
After a number of comments were made
including one that access to contraception
for minors especially in emergency situa-
tions be added to the proposal. It was point-
ed out that this was a sensitive and difficult
issue to address. It was agreed that the
Statement on Family Planning and the
Right of a Woman to Contraception be cir-
culated to NMAs for comments.
Noise Pollution
After discussion and minor editorial amend-
ment, the committee recommended that the
statement be forwarded to the General
Assembly for adoption. This was approved
by council.
Economic Embargoes and
Health.
The committee recommendation that this
statement be reaffirmed, was later approved
by council.
The committee recommended that the
Israeli Medical Association undertake
responsibility for major revision of the
Declaration on Continuous Quality
Improvement in Health Care.
Health hazards of Tobacco
products.
After some discussion, it was agreed to rec-
ommend that the current paper be circulated
to NMAs for comments and that major revi-
sion be undertaken by the AMA.
Prohibition of Access of
Women to Health Care and
prohibition of Practice by
Femal Doctors in Afghanistan
The committee recommended that this doc-
ument undergo major revision by MASA
with the aim to make it more global in
scope.
New business
Dr. Davis presented an AMA proposal for a
Statement on Reducing Dietary Sodium
Intake, pointing out that most intake of
sodium was from processed foods. There is
a need to achieve major changes in this and
therefore the documents ends with recom-
mendations, in particular, a stepwise
approach to a 50% reduction of sodium in
processed foods. Pointing out that industry
was not interested, he said the last recom-
mendation was to engage in discussion of
the issue with governments, regulators and
other stakeholders.
The committee recommended that the pro-
posal be circulated to NMAs for comments.
Future Priorities
The committee considered a paper on future
priorities and Dr. Williams pointed out that
unlike the MEC whose remit was limited to
Medical Ethics, SMAC had a very wide
remit. Suggested areas had therefore been
grouped in the paper before the committee.
Under headings such as medical education,
professional policies, public health and the
committee had to decide on focus areas. We
already had some problems with the promo-
tion of WMA policies and had had some
discussion on this with WHO.
Dr. Hill, the Chair of Council, said consid-
eration was being given to having a small
group to develop Advocacy Agenda and
Policy before the October meeting. We now
have two programmes on Education and
consideration could be given to pro-
grammes for pandemic control and for
“antimicrobial” education. Dr. Hansen
(CMA) strongly supported the suggestion
of supporting work on Advocacy and the
role of NMAs in influencing health policies
etc. Prof Nathanson (BMA) supporting Dr.
Hill, pointed out that this was a very com-
plex issue. The Secretary General referring
to earlier discussions on participatory roles
discussed at the World Health Assembly,
felt that advocacy was an item which must
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41
be on the committee’s agenda regularly.
Commenting on education he referred to the
fact that education had been a very active
area of WMA’s work in the ‘70s at a time in
which World Federation on Medical
Education had been formed. As Secretary
General he was now on the Council of
WFME whose papers WMA normally
endorse. This does not however place a bar
on WMA activity in education. Amongst
other issues raised during the debate an
appeal, supported by Germany and Korea,
was made to NMAs to bring forward envi-
ronmental health issues, an area in which
the AMA had done a lot of work, France
raised the issue of both protection of
patients and the important issue of the
health of physicians and the need to exam-
ine doctors physical fitness to practice and
it was pointed out that the AMA included
this its ethical code.
Approving a motion that its agenda should
include a standing item on Advocacy, the
committee also recommended that a small
working group develop an advocacy agenda
and a process for handling the various
WMA advocacy issues to be presented to
SMAC at its meeting in October. This was
later approved by council.
Resumed Council session
In consideration of the Secretary General’s
report part two, Council engaged in a dis-
cussion of relationship with the WHO. It
took note in particular of two items which
figured in the agenda of the World Health
Assembly, namely Alcohol and Epidemic
preparedness. Attention was also drawn to
the inclusion of NMAs in official delega-
tions of some countries and Council was
reminded that WMA was now back in offi-
cial relationship with WHO. This carried
with it the obligation to support WHO poli-
cies. It was therefore essential that we were
represented and present throughout the
World Health Assembly meeting. It was
equally important that NMA’s should bring
WMA policy to the attention of their nation-
al delegations. The Secretary General said
that in the past two years there had been a
trend to be part of the activities with WHO,
notably in Tobacco control but also liaising
with WHPA in the Patient Safety initiative.
However, while we were quoted as partici-
pants none of the health professions
Association was in the Strategic Planning
Group of the Global Alliance for Patient
Safety. He stressed the importance of the
IMPACT Group on Counterfeit medicines.
Then referring to the World Health report
2006 “Human resources for Health”, Dr.
Kloiber pointed out that in the context of
the Global Alliance for the Workforce while
there was reluctance to include the health
professions, eventually we were asked to be
a participant. But again, none of the health
professions associations was placed in the
governance body which includes govern-
ments and Global funds such as the Gates
Foundation etc. In fact there was an oppor-
tunity for partnership but no role in decision
making bodies.
The donors currently follow the paradigm of
“task shifting” and the need to employ a lay
workforce. He was concerned that in this
context while this might have adverse effects
on retaining physicians and other health pro-
fessionals, an economist during a technical
discussion at WHO had expressed welcome
for this as he regarded them too expensive.
He then referred to Primary care, the Alma
Ata Declaration of WHO (1978) and the con-
cept of Targets. Primary Care was not only
important in Emergency situations but was
an essential part of all Health care systems.
However there was a feeling that one cannot
focus only on primary care for a long time.
In some rich countries where there have
been moves from an Agricultural to a
Service Society over at least three decades,
in the service industries health care always
is the biggest segment. The poor countries
of this world are now forced to do the
change from agricultural economies to ser-
vice economies in one step and in a very
short time. However forcing them to stay
with primary care only produces effective
blockade to build a viable service society.
Dr Kloiber referred to the forthcoming
Primary Care document which would need
to be studied with care and Dr. Letlape
(immediate past President) commented
with reference to ARVs, etc. that Primary
Medical Care documents should be for
everyone and be equitable.
The view was expressed that what was
needed was the ability to advocate for
physicians to be able to work with WHO
and help to resolve problems both at first
and third country level. There was a plea for
better advocacy policy.
Dr. Kloiber responding said it was not a
black or white picture. There are committed
technical staff at WHO who need to share
their frustration with you. At the same time
he is optimistic about the new Director
General, Dr. Chan. “The opening issue of
Primary Care will have to deal with con-
cerns about its role. Referring to the fact
that the UN system has to undergo change
Chair of Council, Secretary General reflecting.
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WMA
42
and this includes the WHO”, he said, “Dr.
Chan seems open to this. There should not
be a crusade against WHO. We need to con-
vince them to help people and be careful
about policies set up by politicians.”
Dr. de Leon (Uraguay) expressed concern
about the threat to physicians from WHO.
He congratulated Dr. Kloiber on his
remarks and agreed that task shifting could
be a considerable threat to physicians. He
considered that the primary care team
should always be led by a physician. At the
same time there was a threat with the prima-
ry care focus. WHO needs to look at every
aspect of care. However Primary Care was
needed in underdeveloped countries.
Dr. Haikerval (Australia) referred to a
major battle with the Registration body in
Australia. One needs to be careful with
words. “Task Substitution” is not the same
as “Task shifting”. He also stressed that
there must be someone who is responsible
for taking over care and prevention.
Dr. Bagenholm (SwMA) posing the question
how do we influence WHO, said that some
policies were good and some bad. We
should not be too negative. We should try to
have some technical input e.g. in the
Interministerial conference on Alcohol.
Referring to the USA Dr. Davis said they
had problems of task shifting with Nurses
and Optomotrists, Midwives and
Anaesthetist assistants. He referred to seek-
ing legal authority to do formal surgery
with a scalpel and also problems associated
with the Physicians Assistants stating that
we can effectively protect care and quality
if our own house is in order.
Dr. Williams reported that the Canadian
Medical Association has a policy on task
delegation with appropriate training; he fur-
ther commented that WHO staff say that the
Executive Board makes policy and staff
carry it out. NMAs need to work with gov-
ernments. Nationally there was a need to
distinguish the level at which decisions
were made. Dr. de Leon (Uraguay) agreed
that we should follow WHO moves and
trends and try to be present as observers at
Ministerial Conferences. Dr. Lemye
(Belgium) was concerned about the relation
of WMA with WHO, seeking a more loose
contact with the WHO:
Emergency Resolution
The Council discussed a proposal for an
Emergency Council Resolution on the situ-
ation in certain Latin American and
Caribbean states concerning the supply of
Cuban physicians and the by-passing of
systems set up to verify physicians’ creden-
tials and competence. It was reported that
the substance of this resolution had already
been subscribed to by all the Latin
American States.
After a lengthy discussion the Resolution
was adopted (see box on right).
Dafur
Dr. Blachar, expressing his concern that the
situation in Dafur, on which the council had
adopted a Resolution in 2005, had continued
to deteriorate, proposed that the Council as
an Emergency Resolution reaffirm its con-
demnation, which the council adopted.
WMA Council resolution in support of
the Medical Associations in Latin
America and the Caribbean
Berlin 10-12 May 2007
There are credible reports that
arrangements between the Cuban gov-
ernment and certain Latin American
and Caribbean governments to supply
Cuban Physicians to these countries are
bypassing systems, established to pro-
tect patients, that have been set up to
verify physicians’ credentials and com-
petence.
The World Medical Association is sig-
nificantly concerned that patients are
put at risk by unregulated medical
practices.
There exist already duly constituted
and legally authorised medical associa-
tions within this region that are
charged with the registration of physi-
cians and which should be consulted by
their respective Ministries of Health.
Therefore, the WMA:
1. Condemns any actions by govern-
ments in policies and practices that
subvert or bypass accepted standards
of medical credentialing and medical
care;
2. Calls upon the governments in Latin
America and the Caribbean to work
with the medical associations on all
matters related to physician certifi-
cation and the practice of medicine
and to respect the role and rights of
these medical associations and the
autonomy of the medical profession.
3. Urges, as a matter of utmost concern,
that the governments in Latin
America and the Caribbean Region
respect the WMA International Code
of Medical Ethics and the
Declaration of Madrid, that guide
the medical practice of physicians all
over the world.
11.5.2007
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43
Extracts from Secretary General’s report to
the 176th
WMA Council meeting.
The extracts from the Secretary General’s
written report below are largely those not
included in his oral report to council given
in two parts. These are to be found in the
report of the 176th
Council meeting on pages
34 and 35)
Consolidation of Finances
In continuing the efforts of the year 2005 it
was possible to foster the consolidation of
the WMA finances throughout the year
2006. A further significant improvement of
the situation was made possible by a rigid
application of the measures we had initiated
the year before.
• Financial control: This has been main-
tained with the counsel of the Treasurer,
the Chair of the Finance and planning
Committee and the help of the executive
treasurer.
• Priority setting: The World Medical
Association has initiated and continued
only such activities which we were able to
carry out without loses or where the
immediate value for the association was
obvious (e.g. the Ethics Unit).
• Reviewing contracts and business rela-
tions: Economic awareness remains an
important principle for all of our business
activities. However, most contracts had
been revised or renewed in 2005.
• Rebuilding internal staff: Due to the
ongoing consolidation process, the priori-
ty for 2006 was on financial stability. The
regained financial security will allow for
re-staffing in 2007.
• Application of rules: Counseling with the
executive committee, the financial offi-
cers or the Sponsorship advisory
Committee led to clear governance and to
financially sustainable partnerships and
sponsorship arrangements, thus reducing
Secretary General’s report to the
176th
WMA Council Session
the risk of financially non-sustainable
engagements or ethically questionable
liaisons.
Caring Physicians of the
World Initiative
Spanish Edition of the Caring Physicians
of the World Book
When we first introduced the Caring
Physicians of the World Book in October
2005 we found a very friendly and warm
reception in Santiago de Chile right before
our General Assembly. The Latin physi-
cians’ community particularly embraced the
book as a document for their work and gave
it a very warm welcome. Unfortunately, the
only thing we had to offer at that point in
time was an English edition. On March 27th
2007 we were able to present a Spanish ver-
sion of the book to the Inter-American
College in Miami, Florida. Like the original
English version, the Spanish edition is now
widely available.
After concluding a successful series of
regional leadership conferences, we have
looked for models to implement a strategic
option to support the development of inter-
national medical leadership. Some of our
constituent members already offer leader-
ship courses to their members or to their
officers, while others do not. The WMA is
positioned as a global organization and has
its own particular challenges when address-
ing the development of medical leadership
in that it has a multinational, multi-cultural
structure. We have taken this as a challenge
for developing a service that can be offered
in principal to all constituent members.
World Health Organization
Status of the WMA
As do other United Nations organizations,
the WHO allows international Non-
Governmental Organizations (NGOs) a spe-
cial status called “NGOs in official relations
with WHO”. Under this status, an NGO
may receive an invitation to make a short
intervention during the Executive Board
Meeting or the World Health Assembly. The
exact spoken text has to be handed in before
permission will be given.
The WMA will be invited to expert meet-
ings covering all the different topics the
WHO is currently dealing with. The partic-
ipating experts are always requested to hand
in a detailed submission regarding potential
conflicts of interest, including possible pos-
session of shares from tobacco or pharma-
ceutical companies by the expert, the send-
ing organization or his/her spouse.
The WMA has held this status with the
WHO since 1992 (again) and has to renew
it every third year. The renewal process
includes detailed information from the
financial statement and the sources of
income. A common work plan has to be set
up for the following three years.
The Executive Board Meeting of WHO has
reaffirmed the status of the WMA as an
NGO in official relations with the WHO in
its January 2007 meeting.
Human Resources
The World Health Report 2006 dealt with the
question of human resources for health. The
authors believe that the extreme shortage of
health professionals necessitates a strength-
ening of the lay workforce for health.
“Community health workers“ in many poor
countries of the world are being charged with
medical tasks to fulfill medical and nursing
roles especially in programs targeting
HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
While there is certainly a demand for imme-
diate action and for the inclusion of the infor-
mal workforce in some capacity, the overall
consequences for the health care systems in
general have not been thoroughly considered.
Together with large donors like the Gates
Foundation, the Global Fund, the US
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS relief
(PEPFAR), the World Bank and the World
Monetary Fund, the WHO is following the
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WMA
44
paradigm of “task shifting“ to transfer com-
petencies from health professionals to lay
persons. This is of significant concern to the
WMA, particularly as it relates to issues of
quality of care and patient outcomes and the
overall development of the health care sys-
tems.
Global Alliance for the
Workforce for Health
Under the leadership of the WHO, the
Global Alliance for the Workforce for
Health was founded in May 2006. During
the preparation of this Alliance, the
President of the World Medical Association
requested a formal participation of the
health profession in the construction of the
Alliance, which was denied. In the fall of
last year we received an invitation to join as
partners, which we accepted. However, as
of April 2007 we still have no access to the
governing bodies of this alliance.
International Medicinal
Products Anti-Counterfeiting
Taskforce – IMPACT
Counterfeit medical products produce mul-
tiple risks for medical safety:
• Their non- or sub-standard composition
may lead to low or non-existing levels of
active ingredients or their bioavailability.
Their production is not controlled and
quality is by no means guarantied. They
may even contain toxic components.
• Counterfeits may lead to completely erro-
neous medical judgments about the real
drugs, as adverse effect or non-effective-
ness may be attributed to the original
medication thereby leading to treatment
changes or discontinuation.
• If added to a current treatment scheme
(e.g. for the therapy of tuberculosis or
HIV infection) they may produce
extremely dangerous drug resistance.
• By reducing revenues for the legitimate
producers of a drug, counterfeits reduce
the ability to re-invest in research and
development.
• Counterfeits produce distrust in medical
treatments and reduce compliance.
Together with national governments, indus-
try, patient groups, Interpol and the World
Health Professional Alliance, WHO initiat-
ed the International Medicinal Products
Anti-Counterfeiting Taskforce (IMPACT).
This group has been formally installed in
October 2006 on invitation of the German
Government and tries to find political,
juridical, technological and informational
means to combat counterfeits in medicine.
The health professions participate especial-
ly in the field of providing and encouraging
information and communication about
counterfeit medicines and avoidance of
counterfeit products.
International Labor
Organization – ILO
Together with other healthcare organiza-
tions and the WHO, the World Medical
Association participated in a series of
roundtables on Diabetes and Social
Responsibility initiated by the Geneva
Social Observatory and the ILO. The round-
tables discussed the role of employers,
employees and their organizations in the
prevention and detection of diabetes. There
was particular interest in models of good
practice for healthy nutrition and life style
support in the work environment. A special
focus was also given to the roles of schools
in shaping nutritional habits and patterns of
physical activity.
Online Course on treatment
of multi-Drug-resistant tuber-
culosis (MDR-TB)
The development of an online course on the
treatment of multi-drug-resistant tuberculo-
sis is a joint initiative with the Foundation
for Professional Development of the South
African Medical Association and the
Norwegian Medical Association. It was
made possible by a grant from Eli Lilly, Inc.
The course has been completed and is avail-
able over the Internet under: http://lupin-
nma.net/tb.html
It is currently undergoing field-testing in
South Africa. Field tests with selected
groups of physicians are also planned for
the Philippines and Estonia. Further funds
have been secured for translation of the
course materials into Russian, Chinese and
Spanish.
World Health Professions
Alliance (WHPA)
In 1999 the International Council of Nurses
(www.icn.ch), the International Phar-
maceutical Federation (FIP) (www.fip.org)
and the WMA founded the World Health
Professions Alliance. The aim of the
alliance is to foster the cooperation of the
professional organizations and to augment
our advocacy work with the relevant inter-
national organizations, particularly the
WHO, and the general public.
Since its inauguration, the WHPA has taken
an active role in the anti-tobacco initiative,
the fight to protect human rights, the recog-
nition of the HIV/AIDS pandemic and
against discrimination of the mentally ill. In
a recent project the WHPA has drafted
guidelines for the competencies of interna-
tional health consultants. It has promoted
awareness on issues like antimicrobial
resistance, nutrition and health care for the
elderly. The WHPA has engaged in leader-
ship issues and has often overcome objec-
tion of officials to speak with a “single“
health profession.
The WHPA intensively cooperates with the
International Alliance of Patient
Organizations, IAPO (www.iapo.org), and
the Global Alliance for Patient safety,
which is led by the WHO.
The WHPA serves as a platform for various
discussions and initiatives in health care. It:
• Cooperates closely with the WHO and
industry to combat counterfeit drugs and
materials, and it is part of the
International Medicinal Products Anti-
Counterfeiting Taskforce – IMPACT
• Discusses overlapping educational issues
• Serves as a common platform on health
professional issues with the WHO
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WMA
45
• Bundles the interests of health professions
in relation to the Global Health
Workforce Alliance
During the last few years, human resources
have been a constant point of interest in the
international health debate. In poor coun-
tries as well as in rich countries, bad work-
ing conditions are strong reasons for health
professionals to quit or migrate. Reports
about stressful, often dangerous and under-
resourced working places do not increase
the attractiveness of the health professions.
The WHPA together with other partners
wishes to promote “Positive Practice
Environments“. We wish to show that
workplaces in the health care field can be
made safe and attractive by following the
good examples that already exist.
European Forum of Medical
Associations and WHO –
EFMA
Lisbon, 20-21 April 2007
The EFMA is the common forum of
Medical Associations of the WHO-Region
“Europe“ and the WHO Euro in
Copenhagen. This year’s forum gained con-
siderable political attention as the President
of the European Commission, Dr. J.M.
Barroso, and the regional director of the
World Health Organization, Dr. M. Danzon,
opened the forum. This has been a remark-
able change as during the last years the
forum did not receive the necessary atten-
tion of international politics and the WHO.
The forum discussed among other issues:
• Health and Migration
• Obesity
• Disaster preparedness
• Anti-Tobacco Activities of EFMA/WHO
• Health Systems and Policies and invest-
ments in health
• Country reports
The WMA legal advisor and Secretary
General of the Israeli Medical Association,
Adv. Leah Wapner, has been appointed as
the new Secretary General of the Forum.
Joint Commission
International – Hospital of
the future roundtable
The Joint Commission International is the
international arm of the American Joint
Commission (http://www.jointcommis-
sion.org/), describing itself as the
“nation’s predominant standards-setting
and accrediting body in health care“. JCI
offers mainly accreditation and certifica-
tion to health care institutions and is with-
out doubt one of the most important insti-
tutions in the world in the field of health
care quality.
While its main focus is still on hospitals, the
JCI has started a dialogue on the hospital of
the future, trying to analyze and describe
international trends in hospital development.
In a series of three roundtables, a group of
experts from various fields involving hospi-
tal care tried to outline the developmental
aspect from architectural designs, work
flows, social functions and interactions,
globalization and migration of health profes-
sionals, to the core of the hospital function,
the provision of care and medical services.
The roundtables served as preparation for an
international conference debating the future
trends in hospital development.
Microbial Resistance Policy
Seminar
Together with the AMA, the International
Society for Microbial Resistance and the
George Mason University School of Public
Policy, the WMA co-hosted a conference
on Microbial Resistance Policy. With a
group of experts on microbial resistance,
the conference analyzed the need for policy
development in the field on October 23,
2006. The Conference started off with a
review of the 1997 WMA policy on
Microbial resistance and resulted in sug-
gestions for development, which were
taken up by the AMA and are before the
WMA Council now as a redraft of the 1997
WMA policy.
In addition, the George Mason School of
Public Policy and the International Society
of Microbial Resistance are seeking the par-
ticipation of the WMA in developing a cer-
tificate course for medical policy. This offer
is currently under consideration by WMA.
Other national or regional
meetings:
The Secretary General attended national
meetings of the following WMA member
associations or their regional groups:
• Standing committee of European Doctors
(CPME), Luxembourg 27. – 28.10.2006
and Warsaw 16. – 17.03.2007
• International Union against Tuberculosis
and Lung Disease, Paris 01. – 02.11.2006
• European Conference on Environment
and Health, Paris 09.11.2006
• American Academy of Endocrinologists,
Phoenix 10.02.2007
• German-Russian Health Dialogue, Sochi
19. – 21.03.2007
Administrational Issues
Consolidation of Standing Documents
The constitution and regulations of the
WMA are spread over 6 basic documents.
While there are good reasons to keep some
of the rules separated there is also a lot of
historical and non-logical separation in the
documents. Fractional amendments led to
inconsistencies and did not add transparen-
cy to our rules.
With the help of our legal advisors, Mrs.
Leah Wapner and Mrs. Malke Borrows, a
first draft of the consolidated Articles and
Bylaws has been produced. The purpose of
this consolidation is to enhance readability
and clarity, to reduce length and to elimi-
nate possible contradictions and illogical
rules.
Furthermore, the draft will provide sugges-
tions that will allow for the adaptation of
rules to recent developments and to the
necessities of the work of the Association
(see also p. 35).
Dr. Otmar Kloiber
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From the Secretary General
46
by a physician. But where does the limit lie
and who drives it?
We also have to note how just words change
our world. Our willingness to adopt new
language when it comes under the veneer of
political correctness becomes a trap for our
profession:
• We are called “service providers“. That
is fine for those who wish to make us
dependent repair technicians. These peo-
ple believe that we just have to do what
we are being told (by our government,
hospital owner, insurance or managed
care organization). Of course we serve our
patients, but we are caregivers and not just
technicians. We need and have to demand
professional autonomy or at least clinical
independence – something service
providers don’t have.
• We are being submerged under the term
“health workers“. This produces the illu-
sion of exchangeability and the unimpor-
tance of learned professions.
• We speak about “customers“ and
“clients“, but indeed we have to serve
patients. Patients do not have the autono-
my of a customer (at least not when they
are really sick or injured) nor do we have
the right to do business with them as a
merchant can with his or her clients.
• We proudly call ourselves doctors, but
others in the health care arena carry this
title also and suddenly a doctor of optom-
etry, podometry or a PhD in nursing may
say to a patient: “I am your doctor“. The
six-year medical training makes us all to
physicians and that is the common
denominator. Even surgeons will have to
live with it.
• We have allowed our governments to
abuse the term physician for other
health care professionals. Why do we tol-
erate this?
The political strategy behind this is simple
and clear. It is to make physicians dispens-
able, to suggest that others can do the same
and to reduce access to high quality care. It
works so well, because we ourselves are the
best adapters to this type of language.
expensive and donors want to rely on
laypersons instead.
It would be too easy to describe this change
in scope of practice as just the result of a
change in technology or as a result of a
growing and unsatisfied demand for profes-
sional medical care. We ourselves have
been adding to this driving this change by
• the unwillingness by family practitioners
and other medical primary care givers to
provide medical care during nights and
on holiday. Our unwillingness to make
home visits or to settle in rural areas
opened the window for primary care
nurses. It also allowed practice structures
to develop which in many regions or
countries tended to endanger the
patient/physician relationship, already
quite impersonal. This is especially the
case when patients can no longer choose
their physician. In those settings the tra-
ditional binding between a family and
“their” family physician does not exist
anymore.
• the unwillingness to perform repetitive
tasks ourselves have let to the emergence
of many paramedical professions like
anesthesiology technicians or nurses,
ultrasound imaging assistance and others.
• the tendency to hyper specialize and at the
same time to negate our general capacity
as physicians leaves ample space for oth-
ers to fill this gap.
Of course many of these developments
have taken place because of ridiculous pay-
ment schemes or because work loads just
did not allow us to do what we would have
considered as being good practice. Of
course it may sometimes be correct to
charge a less qualified person with tasks
that don’t necessarily need to be performed
We all have been driven through selection
processes in school, admission tests, state
and board exams, audits, appraisals, recerti-
fication etc. There certainly is a high expec-
tation by the public and our patients con-
cerning the level of our knowledge, compe-
tency and skills. Yet more and more tasks
are being transferred or delegated to non-
physicians, to persons with significantly
less or no qualifying training at all.
This trend started decades ago with nurse
practitioners providing primary care instead
of GPs. It extended gradually to prescribing
by pharmacists, optometrists, psychothera-
pists and other health professions. The most
recent model is the most radical. The so-
called Task Shifting is mainly used in
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria care.
Laypersons are being deployed to initiate
and maintain complex treatments especially
in African countries, but also in other parts
of the world.
These laypersons called “community health
workers“ are often used in programmes by
the big donors who finance treatment in
poor populations.
Sometimes there are good reasons to
change the scope of practice, to share com-
petencies and to use lay help. Over time
many medical processes became very sim-
ple often automated and safe so that neither
the provision by nor the attendance of a
physician is necessary any more.
On the other hand in many African coun-
tries the physician to patient ratio is less
than a tenth of the relation in the rich coun-
tries of this world. That means access to
continuing competent medical care is prac-
tically impossible for the majority of the
population. The use of nurses, midwifes and
other health professions for medical treat-
ment is necessary. But in reality, even those
health professions are being seen as too
From the Secretary General’s Desk
About Changing the Scope of Practice,
Task Shifting and the Proper Use of Words
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:15 Seite 46
WHO
47
We will have to carefully define what is the
medical domain and what can and should be
done by others. We will have to find out
who is best suited to take over certain func-
tions and we will have to make sure that
responsibility goes with it.
What we define to be in the medical domain
and we are sure that it has to be done by
physicians (not “doctors“!) we will have to
fight for. it.
We will have to lift the curtain on “recerti-
fication“ and “revalidation“. With health
politicians demanding on one hand stricter
controls on physicians and on the other to
implementing task shifting, nothing other
than hypocrisy may be left.
This is not about payment and status. It is
about the quality of medical care that is
given to our patients. It is about safety and
access to real medical care and not a substi-
tute for it. Changing the scope of practice
sometimes reflects the progress in technol-
ogy and methods, but sometimes the short-
age of resources. But more and more it
becomes a silent technical approach of
rationing care.
In a recent article from Médicins Sans
Frontières website entitled “Coping with
health worker shortages: lessons and lim-
its“, Joseph Ramokoatsi from Lesotho
wrote “Task-shifting for rapid scale-up
must be balanced against the need to pro-
vide quality care and should not become an
alibi for accepting shortages of skilled staff.
Donors are quick to support initiatives
involving lay health workers, but often
refuse to fund measures to recruit and retain
health professionals.“
seek high-level political backing for its rec-
ommendations.
A recent study1
has shown that the number
of foreign-trained doctors has tripled in sev-
eral OECD countries over the past three
decades. The number of foreign-trained
doctors from countries with chronic short-
ages of health workers is relatively small
(less than 10% of the workforce) in devel-
oped countries. However, for some African
countries, the migration of a few dozen doc-
tors can mean losing more than 30% of their
workforce, even as basic health needs
remain unmet.
Other health professions are also affected
by this phenomenon. The study showed that
from Swaziland, 60 to 80 nurses migrate to
the United Kingdom each year, while fewer
than 90 graduate from Swazi schools.
GHWA partner and member Save the
Children UK estimates that the United
Kingdom saved £65 million in training
costs between 1998 and 2005 by recruiting
Ghanaian health workers.
Ms. Robinson summarized the need for
urgent action: “We cannot stand alone as
individual countries continue to address
their own increased needs for health work-
ers without looking beyond their shores to
the situation these migrating workers have
left behind in their homelands. We cannot
continue to shake our heads and bemoan the
devastating brain drain from some of the
neediest countries on the planet without
forcing ourselves to search for – and active-
ly promote – practical solutions that protect
both the right of individuals to seek
employment through migration and the
right to health for all people.“
One of the initiative’s first priorities will be
to support WHO in drafting a framework
for an International Code of Practice on
Health Worker Migration, as called for by a
resolution of the World Health Assembly in
2004. This framework will promote ethical
recruitment, the protection of migrant
health workers’ rights and remedies for
addressing the economic and social impact
of health worker migration in developing
countries. The Code of Practice will be the
first of its kind on a global scale for migra-
tion.
15 MAY 2007 | GENEVA – The Health
Worker Migration Policy Initiative held its
first meeting at the WHO headquarters in
Geneva. The initiative, led by Mary
Robinson, President of Realizing Rights: the
Ethical Globalization Initiative, and Dr.
Francis Omaswa, Executive Director of the
Global Health Workforce Alliance (GHWA),
is aimed at finding practical solutions to the
worsening problem of health worker migra-
tion from developing to developed countries.
WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan
said, “International migration of health per-
sonnel is a key challenge for health systems in
developing countries.“ The new initiative has
a Technical Working Group housed at WHO.
Medical Manpower
Practical solutions to tackle
health worker migration
The Health Worker Migration Policy
Initiative is made up of two groups that will
work closely together over the coming
months to develop recommendations. The
Migration Technical Working Group, which
is being coordinated by WHO, brings
together the International Organization for
Migration, the International Labour
Organization, professional associations,
experts and academics.
The Health Worker Global Policy Advisory
Council, under the leadership of Ms.
Robinson and Dr. Omaswa and with
Realizing Rights serving as its secretariat, is
made up of senior figures from developed
and developing countries. It will develop a
roadmap and a framework for a global code
of practice for health worker migration and
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:15 Seite 47
WHO
48
The initiative will also promote good prac-
tices and strategies to enable countries to
increase supply and retain their health
workers more effectively. The new tools
and policy recommendations developed by
the initiative will support better manage-
ment of migration through North-South col-
laboration.
Dr. Omaswa emphasized the importance of
addressing both the ‘push’ and ‘pull’ factors
simultaneously. “Health workers are a val-
ued and scarce resource. Demand is
increasing worldwide, but not enough are
being trained – in the developed or the
developing world. Developing countries
must prioritize health and health workers,
with better working conditions and incen-
tives so its workforce can stay and be more
efficient, while developed countries must
train more of their youth and try to be self-
sufficient.“
The Health Worker Migration Policy
Initiative is due to make initial policy rec-
ommendations by the end of 2008. Its oper-
ations are co-funded and coordinated by
Realizing Rights, the Global Health
Workforce Alliance, and the MacArthur
Foundation.
List of members
Health Worker Global Policy Advisory
Council
Co-Chairs
• Hon. Mary Robinson, President,
Realizing Rights
• Dr Francis Omaswa, Executive Director,
GHWA
Members
• Hon. Major Courage Quarshie, Minister
of Health, Ghana
• Hon. Erik Solheim, Minister of
International Development, Norway
• Hon. Patricia Aragon Sto Tomas, Minister
of Labor and Employment, the
Philippines
• Hon. Rosie Winterton, Minister of State
for Health Services, United Kingdom
• Dr Lincoln Chen, Director, Global
Equities Initiative, Harvard University
• Dr Anders Nordström, Assistant Director-
General, Health Systems and Services,
WHO
• Ms Janet Hatcher Roberts, Director,
Migration Health Department, IOM
• Mr Ibrahim Awad Director, International
Migration Programme, ILO
• Lord Nigel Crisp, Co-Chair, GHWA Task
Force on Scaling up Education & Training
• Dr Percy Mahlati, Director of Human
Resources, Ministry of Health, South
Africa
• Huguette Labelle, Chancellor, University
of Ottawa
• Dr Titilola Banjoko, Managing Director,
Africa Recruit
• Prof. Ruairi Brugha Head, Department of
Epidemiology & Public Health, Ireland
• Ms Sharan Burrow, President, International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions
• Ms Ann Keeling, Director, Social
Transformation Programs Division,
Commonwealth Secretariat
• Mr Markos Kyprianou, Director General,
Health & Consumer Protection, European
Commission
• Mr Peter Scherer, Directorate for
Employment, Labour and Social Affairs,
OECD
• Prof. Anna Maslin, Nursing Officer,
International Nursing & Midwifery
Health Professions Leadership Team,
Department of Health, United Kingdom
• Dr Mary Pittman, President, Health
Research & Education Trust, American
Hospitals Association
• Dr Jean Yan, Chief Scientist for Nursing
& Midwifery, WHO, chair of the
Migration Technical Working Group
Health Worker Global Policy Advisory
Council Secretariat:
• Ms Peggy Clark, Managing Director,
Realizing Rights
• Dr Ita Lynch, Health Advisor, Realizing
Rights
International Health Regulations
enter into force
New opportunity to respond to internation-
al public health threats
GENEVA – The revised International
Health Regulations (IHR) entered into force
on Friday, 15 June 2007. The Regulations
consist of a comprehensive and tested set of
rules and procedures which will help to
make the world more secure from threats to
global health. They were agreed by the
World Health Assembly in 2005 and repre-
sent a major step forward in international
public health security.
The Regulations establish an agreed frame-
work of commitments and responsibilities
for States and for WHO to invest in limiting
the international spread of epidemics and
other public health emergencies while min-
imizing disruption to travel, trade and
economies. Under the revised IHR, States
will be required to report all events that
could result in public health emergencies of
international concern, including those
caused by chemical agents, radioactive
materials and contaminated food.
In the early 21st
Century, demographic, eco-
nomic and environmental pressures have
created a unique combination of conditions
that allow new and re-emerging infectious
diseases to spread as never before. The
experience of recent decades shows that no
individual country can protect itself from
diseases and other public health threats. All
countries are vulnerable to the spread of
pathogens and their economic, political and
social impact.
The emergence of SARS in 2003 demon-
strated as no previous disease outbreak ever
had, how interconnected the world has
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:15 Seite 48
WHO
49
become and how rapidly a new disease can
spread. This shared vulnerability has also
created a need for collective defences and
for shared responsibility in making these
defences work. This is the underlying prin-
ciple of the International Health
Regulations.
“SARS was a wake-up call for all of us. It
spread faster than we had predicted and was
only contained through intensive coopera-
tion between countries which prevented this
new disease from gaining a foothold,“ said
Dr. Margaret Chan, Director-General of the
World Health Organization. “Today, the
greatest threat to international public health
security would be an influenza pandemic.
The threat of a pandemic has not receded,
but implementation of the IHR will help the
world to be better prepared for the possibil-
ity of a pandemic.“
The Regulations build on the recent experi-
ence of WHO and its partners in responding
to and containing disease outbreaks. Recent
experience shows that addressing public
health threats at their source is the most
effective way to reduce their potential to
spread internationally. The Regulations will
help to ensure that outbreaks and other pub-
lic health emergencies of international con-
cern are detected and investigated more
rapidly and that collective international
action is taken to support affected States to
contain the emergency, save lives and pre-
vent its spread.
WHO has already developed and built an
improved events management system to
manage potential public health emergen-
cies. WHO has also built strategic opera-
tions centres at its Geneva Headquarters
and in Regional Offices around the world,
which are available round-the-clock to
manage emergencies. WHO has also been
working with its partners to strengthen the
Global Outbreak Alert and Response
Network (GOARN), which brings together
experts from around the world to respond to
disease outbreaks.
“Implementing the IHR is a collective
responsibility and depends on the capacity
of all countries to fulfil the new require-
ments,“ said Dr. David Heymann, WHO
Assistant Director-General for
Communicable Diseases. “WHO will help
countries to strengthen the necessary capac-
ities to fully implement the Regulations.
This is our responsibility and we expect that
the entire international community is com-
mitted to the same goal of improving inter-
national public health security.“
WHO exercise to test global
system
In June also, WHO will hold the first exer-
cise to sharpen its preparedness under the
terms of the revised International Health
Regulations. The exercise will verify new
procedures for receiving, analysing and
responding to information about potential
public health emergencies. It will also
ensure the effectiveness of policy direction
and coordination, information management
and risk assessment capacity and communi-
cations between the Regional and Country
Offices and Headquarters of WHO.
The exercise will be the first of a series
meant to test and improve the mechanisms
in place in and between Member States and
at different levels of WHO.
The revised IHR require-
ments include
•• Notification. Greater openness
demanded by a world in which serious
disease events are increasingly visible.
The Regulations recognize that media and
other unofficial reports often appear in
advance of official notification of a public
health emergency of international con-
cern. To expedite the flow of timely and
accurate information, countries are
required to notify all events that may con-
stitute a public health emergency of inter-
national concern within 24 hours of
assessment.
•• Designation of National IHR Focal
Points: world on 24-hour alert. Under
the IHR every country is required to des-
ignate a National IHR Focal Point,
charged with providing to and receiving
information from WHO on a 24 hour
basis, seven days a week.
•• Establishment of core public health
capacities to maximize surveillance and
response. Under the IHR, each country is
committed to develop and maintain core
public health capacities for surveillance
and response. These capacities also
include outbreaks of chemical, radiologi-
cal and food origin. States are required to
establish such core capacities as soon as
possible, with a deadline of five years
after entry into force of the revised IHR.
•• New recognized rights for international
travellers. The IHR for the first time
include express requirements that interna-
tional travellers be treated with respect for
their dignity, human rights and fundamen-
tal freedoms when health measures are
applied. At the same time, they provide
for examinations and other health mea-
sures as necessary to protect against the
international spread of disease.
•• Cross-sectoral international collabora-
tion key to implementing IHR. WHO
needs the support of all stakeholders to
ensure international public health security.
The IHR foster multi-sectoral global part-
nership to respond collectively in the face
of epidemics and other major health emer-
gencies.
•• Threat-specific international pro-
grammes to improve international
health security. The IHR provide for
strengthening existing international dis-
ease control programmes, addressing
infectious diseases, food safety and envi-
ronmental safety. These programmes
make a vital contribution to the global
alert and response system as they allow
development of generic and threat-specif-
ic capacities.
For further information contact:
Cristiana Salvi
Communications Officer
IHR, Pandemic and Outbreak
Communications
WHO, Geneva
Tel.: +41 22 791 3583
Mobile: +39 348 019 2305
E-mail: salvic@who.int
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:15 Seite 49
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50
Following recommendations from the
Expert Committee on Essential Medicines,
the World Health Organization has begun
work to create a medicines list specifically
tailored to children’s needs. A group of
experts met in July 2007 to produce the first
international list of medicines to tackle dis-
eases with high mortality and morbidity
rates in children.
The Expert Committee made the recom-
mendation while meeting in Geneva to
update the general WHO Model List of
Essential Medicines. The list is published
and already includes some child specific
medicines.
Children suffer from the same illnesses as
adults but they are more seriously affected –
particularly in developing countries – by
certain conditions such as respiratory tract
infections, malaria and diarrhoeal diseases.
An estimated 10.6 million children under
five die every year, many from these treat-
able conditions. In 2005, 2.3 million chil-
dren under 15 years were HIV positive –
700000 new infections had occurred over
the twelve months.
In spite of the huge need, there are few
medicines made to measure for children or
that can be easily consumed by a child. At
present, children must often take portions of
adult tablets in a crushed form, with little
evidence of the efficacy and safety of the
dose. When medicines do exist in the right
dosage they are usually in syrup form,
which may pose supply, storage and pricing
problems in developing countries.
The challenge for children becomes more
acute when they are affected by a condition
requiring combination therapy (several medi-
cines rather than one) such as for HIV/AIDS
and malaria. In these cases, fixed dose com-
bination tablets are required (two- or three-in-
one pills). While production of adult fixed-
dose-combinations is increasing, it is sorely
lacking for children. In addition, antiretrovi-
Experts recommend innovation for children’s medicines
WHO 15th
essential medicines list published
rals for children are currently three times
more expensive than the adult versions.
The recommendation made by the Expert
Committee for an essential medicines list
for children will see WHO working with
partners to advocate innovation and
research into children’s medicines, the man-
ufacture of new dosage forms and new for-
mats, and ways in which information about
children’s medicines can be conveyed to
countries in a rapid, effective way.
The plan to work on better medicines for
children was backed by Member States at
WHO’s Executive Board meeting in
January this year and was on the agenda of
the World Health Assembly in May.
The Expert Committee made a number of
important updates to the WHO Model List
of Essential Medicines. Five fixed-dose-
combinations for adults were included for
HIV/AIDS. Two of these come from the
generic industry while the remaining three
are produced by brand name companies. All
WHO recommended antimalarials were
also added.
Five oral liquid formulations were included
for children – three for epilepsy, one for
children born prematurely, and one new
medicine for HIV/AIDS, although in single
dose. Three other epilepsy medicines were
included in the form of chewable, dis-
persable tablets, a format which evidence
increasingly shows to be effective for chil-
dren.
The WHO List of Essential Medicines pro-
vides a model for countries to select medi-
cines addressing public health priorities
according to quality, safety and efficacy
standards. It helps governments address
problems of cost and availability and pro-
vides guidance to the pharmaceutical indus-
try on medicines needs globally.
GENEVA – The revised International
Health Regulations (IHR) entered into force
on Friday, 15 June 2007. The Regulations
consist of a comprehensive and tested set of
rules and procedures which will help to
make the world more secure from threats to
global health. They were agreed by the
World Health Assembly in 2005 and repre-
sent a major step forward in international
public health security.
The Regulations establish an agreed frame-
work of commitments and responsibilities
for States and for WHO to invest in limiting
the international spread of epidemics and
other public health emergencies while min-
International Health Regulations enter into force
New opportunity to respond to international
public health threats
imizing disruption to travel, trade and
economies. Under the revised IHR, States
will be required to report all events that
could result in public health emergencies of
international concern, including those
caused by chemical agents, radioactive
materials and contaminated food.
In the early 21st Century, demographic,
economic and environmental pressures
have created a unique combination of con-
ditions that allow new and re-emerging
infectious diseases to spread as never
before. The experience of recent decades
shows that no individual country can pro-
tect itself from diseases and other public
WMJ_2_29-56.qxd 02.08.2007 09:15 Seite 50
WHO
51
health threats. All countries are vulnerable
to the spread of pathogens and their eco-
nomic, political and social impact.
The emergence of SARS in 2003 demon-
strated, as no previous disease outbreak
ever had, how interconnected the world has
become and how rapidly a new disease can
spread. This shared vulnerability has also
created a need for collective defences and
for shared responsibility in making these
defences work. This is the underlying prin-
ciple of the International Health
Regulations.
“SARS was a wake-up call for all of us. It
spread faster than we had predicted and was
only contained through intensive coopera-
tion between countries which prevented this
new disease from gaining a foothold,“ said
Dr. Margaret Chan, Director-General of the
World Health Organization. “Today, the
greatest threat to international public health
security would be an influenza pandemic.
The threat of a pandemic has not receded,
but implementation of the IHR will help the
world to be better prepared for the possibil-
ity of a pandemic.“
The Regulations build on the recent experi-
ence of WHO and its partners in responding
to and containing disease outbreaks. Recent
experience shows that addressing public
health threats at their source is the most
effective way to reduce their potential to
spread internationally. The Regulations will
help to ensure that outbreaks and other pub-
lic health emergencies of international con-
cern are detected and investigated more
rapidly and that collective international
action is taken to support affected States to
contain the emergency, save lives and pre-
vent its spread.
WHO has already developed and built an
improved events management system to
manage potential public health emergen-
cies. WHO has also built strategic opera-
tions centres at its Geneva Headquarters
and in Regional Offices around the world,
which are available round-the-clock to
manage emergencies. WHO has also been
working with its partners to strengthen the
Global Outbreak Alert and Response
Network (GOARN), which brings together
experts from around the world to respond to
disease outbreaks.
Global health partners mobilize
to counter yellow fever
US$ 58 million GAVI contribution to prevent highly
contagious disease in 12 West African nations
16 MAY 2007 | GENEVA – The effort to
contain deadly yellow fever disease has
received a boost with the launch of a Yellow
Fever Initiative backed by a US$ 58 million
contribution from the GAVI Alliance.
Launched during the World Health
Assembly currently meeting in Geneva, the
new initiative will support special immu-
nization campaigns in a dozen West African
countries at high risk of yellow fever epi-
demics.
Between the 1940s and 1960s, widespread
mass vaccination campaigns in some
African countries had resulted in the
almost-complete disappearance of yellow
fever. However, as immunization cam-
paigns waned, a generation of people grew
up with no immunity to the disease, and by
the 1990s the number of annual cases had
risen to an estimated 200,000 per year, with
30,000 deaths, and urban outbreaks were
starting to occur.
Yellow fever had returned as a major
scourge and, as urbanization progresses
across Africa, the threat of a major epidem-
ic looms ever larger. WHO estimates, for
example, that this highly transmissible dis-
ease could infect around one third of the
urban population, or up to 4.5 million peo-
ple, in Lagos, Nigeria alone.
Now, thanks to the US$ 58 million GAVI
Alliance grant, immunization against yel-
low fever will be kick-started. Over the next
four years, the world’s 12 highest-burden
countries, all of which are in West Africa,
will be able to implement special vaccina-
tion campaigns to immunize more than 48
million people.
Groundbreaking initiative
“The Initiative is a groundbreaker from
many perspectives. Existing routine immu-
nization programmes target children. If we
were to do only routine child immunization
for yellow fever, we would need decades to
reduce the risk of epidemics and the inter-
national spread of the disease,“ said Dr.
David Heymann, WHO Assistant Director-
General for Communicable Diseases.
“Now, however, thanks to the generous
grant from GAVI, the Yellow Fever
Initiative will be able to vaccinate at-risk
populations and thus quickly reduce the risk
of devastating outbreaks that could other-
wise threaten the region and the world.
With this initiative, we will be working in
the short and long term to strengthen prima-
ry health care systems in the world’s most
vulnerable region – Africa,“ added Dr. Mike
Ryan, Director of the WHO Department of
Epidemic and Pandemic Alert and
Response (EPR) in Geneva.
“Yellow fever is a particularly dangerous
disease which kills up to 50% of those with
severe illness. Every age group is at risk,
and vaccination is our crucial weapon to
prevent cases and epidemics. With the
GAVI Alliance contribution, affected coun-
tries have an exceptional opportunity, and
responsibility, to protect their populations,“
said Michel Zaffran, Deputy Executive
“Implementing the IHR is a collective
responsibility and depends on the capacity
of all countries to fulfil the new require-
ments,“ said Dr. David Heymann, WHO
Assistant Director-General for Com-
municable Diseases. “WHO will help coun-
tries to strengthen the necessary capacities
to fully implement the Regulations. This is
our responsibility and we expect that the
entire international community is commit-
ted to the same goal of improving interna-
tional public health security.“
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WHO
52
highest risk from the disease – Benin,
Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire,
Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria,
Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo – and will
help create a stockpile of 11 million doses
of vaccine. Within the framework of the
Initiative, the 12 Member States and WHO
will identify specific target populations to
vaccinate, with the aim of both preventing
outbreaks and managing epidemics, and
consequently increasing immunization cov-
erage.
Background
The 12 countries taking part in the Yellow
Fever Initiative are Benin, Burkina Faso,
Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea,
Secretary at the GAVI Alliance, in announc-
ing the GAVI contribution. “GAVI is com-
mitted to working with all our partners,
both globally and in the field, to ensure the
success of the Yellow Fever Initiative in
Africa.”
Vaccine too expensive
Until now, vaccine has often been too
expensive for countries to afford when faced
with a host of competing health problems
and coverage rates in some West African
countries are critically low. In Nigeria, for
example, the coverage rate in 2005 was an
estimated 36%. However, it is recommend-
ed that, to stop yellow fever infections from
spreading into an epidemic, immunization
coverage must be at least 60–80%.
“Immunization against yellow fever is all
the more critical now because of increased
population movements in Africa. As we see
more people moving to cities for work, but
returning to their rural villages from time to
time, we also see the possibility of yellow
fever epidemics multiplying,“ said Dr.
Sylvie Briand, Project Manager of the
Yellow Fever Initiative in WHO’s EPR
Department.
A recent vaccination campaign in Togo has
shown how, under the umbrella of the
Yellow Fever Initiative, it is possible to
quickly and effectively reach even remote
populations and consequently prevent iso-
lated cases from spreading into an epidemic.
In December 2006, WHO received notifica-
tion of three cases of yellow fever in north-
ern Togo. As the last mass vaccination there
had taken place in 1987, the population was
considered to be highly susceptible. By
February 2007, the Togo Ministry of Health
and WHO, with financial support from
GAVI and from the Humanitarian Office of
the European Commission (ECHO), and
with the technical support of UNICEF and
various NGOs, had vaccinated more than
1.5 million people. A similar campaign was
then conducted in two districts in southern
Togo after two cases of yellow fever had
been reported there at the end of January.
GAVI’s grant to the Yellow Fever Initiative
will cover the 12 countries which are at the
Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra
Leone and Togo.
The Ministries of Health of these 12 coun-
tries are being supported financially and
technically by a Yellow Fever partnership
which was launched in February 2006 and
now includes WHO, UNICEF, GAVI,
Médecins Sans Frontières, the International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies, the Association pour la Médecine
Préventive (AMP), the Programme for
Appropriate Technology (PATH), the
European Union Humanitarian Aid Office
(ECHO), the United States Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the
Global Outbreak Alert and Response
Network (GOARN) and the Institut Pasteur.
The partnership continues to take on new
members.
6 JULY 2007 | NEW DELHI – The new
2006 estimates released today by the
National AIDS Control Organization
(NACO), supported by UNAIDS and
WHO, indicate that national adult HIV
prevalence in India is approximately
0.36%, which corresponds to an estimated
2 million to 3.1 million people living with
HIV in the country. These estimates are
more accurate than those of previous years,
as they are based on an expanded surveil-
lance system and a revised and enhanced
methodology.
As part of its continuing effort to know its
epidemic better, the Indian Government has
greatly expanded and improved its surveil-
lance system in recent years and increased
the number of population groups covered.
In 2006, the government created 400 new
sentinel surveillance sites and facilitated
National Family Health Survey-3, which is
a population-based survey.
2.5 million people in India living with HIV,
according to new estimates
Improved data from more sources gives better understanding
of AIDS epidemic in India
Launching the third phase of the National
Programme, Dr.Anbumani Ramadoss, Union
Minister for Health and Family Welfare said,
“Revision of estimates based on more data
and improved methodology marks a signifi-
cant improvement in systems and capabilities
to monitor the spread of HIV, a sign of the
progress we have made in understanding the
epidemic better. This is welcome progress.
Unfortunately, the new figures still point
towards a serious epidemic with potential to
expand if the prevention efforts identified in
the NACP III are not scaled up rapidly and
implemented in the desired manner. We must
remember that India has nearly 3 million peo-
ple living with HIV. These are people facing
stigma, discrimination and irrational preju-
dice everyday of their lives and need all our
support and understanding.” The Minister
called upon his colleagues in the medical pro-
fession and civil society organizations to fight
stigma and discrimination.
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53
Resulting from a more robust and enhanced
methodology, the revised estimates will be
used to improve planning for prevention,
care and treatment efforts. “While it is good
news that the total number of HIV infec-
tions is lower than previously thought, we
cannot be complacent. The steady and slow
spread of the HIV infection is a worrying
factor. The better understanding of India’s
epidemic has certainly enabled us to have
more focused HIV prevention and treatment
strategies and more effective deployment of
resources,” said Mr. Naresh Dayal,
Secretary of Health and Chair of the
National AIDS Control Board.
The new methods developed for the revised
estimates have also been used to “back-cal-
culate” the prevalence for years since 2002
based on the new set of assumptions and
measures. These figures allow a fair com-
parison of year-on-year trends in HIV preva-
lence. They show an epidemic that is stable
over time with marginal decline in 2006.
Commenting on the new estimates and
guarding against their misinterpretation,
Sujatha Rao, Additional Secretary and
Director General, National AIDS Control
Organization said, “The calculation of fig-
ures for several years using the new model
helps us understand that the new lower esti-
mates do not mean a sharp decline in the
epidemic.” Cautioning against an easing-off
the momentum of the HIV response she
added, “Using a similar methodology led to
downward revision in estimates in some
countries such as Zambia and Rwanda. We
will convince all stakeholders to stay ener-
gized and to retain the hard-fought gains of
the last decade.”
Showing confidence in the commitment of
the Indian leadership, Dr. Denis Broun,
UNAIDS Country Coordinator said, “The
trends evident from the latest estimates val-
idate India’s national AIDS strategy. Taking
encouragement from the new lower esti-
mates, the national authorities should
increase the strength of their HIV pro-
grammes. We must scale up efforts to reach
universal access to HIV prevention, care
and treatment. Though the proportion of
people living with HIV is lower than previ-
ously estimated, India’s epidemic continues
to be substantial in numbers. Despite the
lower prevalence estimate, the cost of pre-
vention efforts required to control the epi-
demic remains the same.”
WHO Representative, Dr. Salim Habayeb
commended the vision of the Government
of India in the last 15 years for addressing
the HIV epidemic. He also commended the
efforts of the states, civil society, partner
agencies as well as the valuable role of the
media in facilitating the creation of an
enabling environment. “The HIV burden
remains substantial. India’s efforts, espe-
cially those in prevention, are noteworthy
and should be further scaled up along with
provision of universal access to treatment
for those who need it.”
HIV prevalence shows signs of slight
decline among general population
While overall the HIV epidemic shows a
stable trend in the recent years, there is vari-
ation between states and population groups.
The good news is that in Tamil Nadu and
other southern states with a high HIV bur-
den, where effective interventions have
been in place for several years, HIV preva-
lence has begun to decline or stabilize.
New pockets of high HIV prevalence identi-
fied
HIV continues to emerge in new areas. The
2006 surveillance data has identified select-
ed pockets of high prevalence in the north-
ern states. There are 29 districts with high
prevalence, particularly in the states of West
Bengal, Orissa, Rajasthan and Bihar.
HIV prevalence continues to be high among
vulnerable groups
The 2006 surveillance figures show an
increase in HIV infection among several
groups at higher risk of HIV infection, such
as people who inject drugs and men who
have sex with men. The HIV positivity
among injecting drug users (IDU) has been
found to be significantly high in cities of
Chennai, Delhi, Mumbai and Chandigarh.
In addition, the states of Orissa, Punjab,
West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and Kerala also
show high prevalence among this group.
While data does suggest that HIV prevalence
levels are declining among sex workers in
the southern states, overall prevalence levels
among this group continue to be high, neces-
sitating a scaling-up of focused prevention
efforts among these groups. “Only by con-
trolling the epidemic among the vulnerable
groups can the dynamic of the epidemic be
broken,” said Sujatha Rao, Additional
Secretary and Director General, NACO.
Regulatory authority on safe blood being
established
Underscoring the priorities, the Minister of
Health called for strong measures to regu-
late the blood collection and distribution
system in the country to make it world
class. He stated that the Ministry of Health
is establishing a regulatory authority which
will regulate access to safe blood at afford-
able prices.
For further information, please contact:
Iqbal Nandra
WHO Geneva
Tel.: +41 22 791 5589
E-mail: nandrai@who.int
WHO publishes key world health statistics
18 MAY 2007 | GENEVA – WHO has pub-
lished World health statistics 2007, the most
complete set of health statistics from its 193
Member States. This edition also highlights
trends in 10 of the most closely watched
global health statistics. It is the authoritative
annual reference for a set of 50 health indi-
cators in countries around the world.
In her speech to the World Health
Assembly, the WHO Director-General, Dr.
Margaret Chan, focussed on the need for
accurate evidence and up-to-date statistics
as the basis for policy decisions. “Reliable
health data and statistics are the foundation
of health policies, strategies, and evaluation
and monitoring,“ she said. “Evidence is also
the foundation for sound health information
for the general public… I regard the genera-
tion and use of health information as the
most urgent need.“
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54
• Gaps in reliable information, and how
estimates of maternal mortality are
made;
• The diseases that are killing people, and
those that make them sick;
• The extent to which people can access
treatment, the major risk factors for ill-
health, the human resources underpinning
health systems; and
This volume, also available as an online
database, should be on the shelves or the
desktop of every health policy maker,
researcher and journalist. It shows:
• How much money is currently spent on
health in comparison to regional burdens
of disease;
• Projected patterns of major causes of
death for 2030;
• Health outcomes in the context of demo-
graphic and socioeconomic status of indi-
vidual countries.
World health statistics 2007 is the official
record of data produced by WHO’s technical
programmes and regional offices. In pub-
lishing these statistics, WHO provides the
global evidence base for improvements and
continued challenges in global public health.
World Health Statistics 2007 can be accessed
online at http://www.who.int/whosis.
Road traffic crashes are the leading cause of death for 10-24 olds
New WHO report marks First UN Global Road Safety Week
GENEVA – Road traffic crashes are the
leading cause of death among young people
between 10 and 24 years, according to a
new report published by World Health
Organization. The report, Youth and Road
Safety, says that nearly 400 000 young peo-
ple under the age of 25 are killed in road
traffic crashes every year. Millions more are
injured or disabled.
The vast majority of these deaths and
injuries occur in low- and middle-income
countries. The highest rates are found in
Africa and the Middle East. Young people
from economically disadvantaged back-
grounds are at greatest risk in every country.
Young males are at higher risk for road traf-
fic fatalities than females in every age
group under 25 years.
Unless more comprehensive global action is
taken, the number of deaths and injuries is
likely to rise significantly. Road traffic col-
lisions cost an estimated US$ 518 billion
globally in material, health and other
expenditure. For many low- and middle-
income countries, the cost of road crashes
represents between 1-1.5 % of GNP and in
some cases exceeds the total amount the
countries receive in international develop-
ment aid.
Youth and Road Safety stresses that the bulk
of these crashes are predictable – and pre-
ventable. Many involve children playing on
the street, young pedestrians, cyclists,
motorcyclists, novice drivers and passen-
gers of public transport.
The report points out that children are not
just little adults. Their height, level of matu-
rity, their interests, as well as their need to
play and travel safely to school, mean that
they require special safety measures. Also,
the report says, protecting older youth
requires other measures such as lower blood
alcohol limits for young drivers and gradu-
ated license programmes.
As part of the First United Nations Global
Road Safety Week (23-29 April 2007),
WHO launched the report to draw attention
to the high global rates of death, injury and
disability among young people caused by
road traffic crashes. Youth and Road Safety
highlights examples in countries where
improved measures such as lowering speed
limits, cracking down on drink-driving, pro-
moting and enforcing the use of seat-belts,
child restraints, and motorcycle helmets, as
well as better road infrastructure and creat-
ing safe areas for children to play have sig-
nificantly reduced the number of deaths and
injuries.
“The lack of safety on our roads has
become an important obstacle to health and
development,“ said Dr. Margaret Chan,
WHO Director-General. “Our children and
young adults are among the most vulnera-
ble. Road traffic crashes are not ‘accidents’.
We need to challenge the notion that they
are unavoidable and make room for a pro-
active, preventive approach.“
Youth and Road Safety is accompanied by a
second and more personal document, Faces
behind the figures: voices of road traffic
crash victims and their families. Developed
jointly by WHO and the Association for
Safe International Road Travel, this book
presents first-hand accounts of the experi-
ences of victims, their families and friends
following road crashes. The stories place a
highly moving human face on the statistics
provided by many road safety reports
around the world. They reveal the physical,
psychological, emotional and economic
devastation that occurs during the aftermath
of road traffic deaths and injuries. In partic-
ular, these accounts deepen our understand-
ing of the enormous suffering that occurs
behind each death and injury every year.
They also highlight some of the initiatives
undertaken by groups and individuals to
improve road safety by sharing their con-
cern, frustration and anger in order to pre-
vent the same from happening again.
Faces behind the figures include:
• On 16 September 2002, Jane Njawe, 42,
was travelling by car with two other peo-
ple from Yaounde, the capital of
Cameroon, to Douala in the north. An
hour into the journey, a bus driving in the
opposite direction tried to overtake a truck
on a curve at high speed. Unable to see
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any oncoming traffic, the driver smashed
into the car, injuring everyone in it. While
Jane’s companions were taken to a nearby
hospital, she was inexplicably driven to a
poorly equipped bush clinic. A mother of
four children, including a three-year-old
son, Jane died five hours later from lack of
blood. Jane’s husband, Pius Njawe,
formed an organization called Justice and
Jane to keep her memory alive and to pro-
mote road safety.
• On 29 August 2003, Balazs Geszti, a 24-
year-old Hungarian butcher, returned
home with his step-brother, Peter, in the
early hours of the morning from a wed-
ding. Both had been drinking heavily.
Shortly after arriving home, Balazs
received a phone call from his girlfriend
asking him to attend another party. Racing
over in his car, he smashed into a concrete
barrier at 140 km an hour in a 50 km zone.
Balazs was killed on impact. Peter is now
a volunteer coordinator for Habitat for
Humanity. He believes that if Balazs had
not been drinking – or speeding – he
might still be alive today.
• In May 2002, Sateni Luangpitak, a motor-
cycle taxi driver in Thailand, collided into
another vehicle. Sateni, now 28, was dri-
ving at 80 km per hour. The collision threw
him on to the pavement, where he hit his
head and left shoulder. Despite wearing a
helmet, Sateni lost consciousness. When
Prayoon Muangme, a friend, realized it
would take too long for the emergency ser-
vices to come, he evacuated Sateni to a
nearby hospital. On arrival, however, he
learned that no trauma facilities were
available. Prayoon took his friend to yet
another clinic. Sateni was lucky his helmet
had protected his head and had suffered
only light injuries. Nevertheless, his colli-
sion kept him out of work and reduced his
ability to earn a living.
The First United Nations Global Road
Safety Week was organized by WHO, the
UN Regional Commissions and partners in
a bid to promote greater awareness of road
traffic incidents and to give young people a
voice. Spearheading the global campaign, a
World Youth Assembly will be held in
Geneva, Switzerland, where young dele-
gates from over 100 countries will gathered
on to share their experience and plan joint
activities for better road safety. World lead-
ers including the UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon, the British Prime Minister
Tony Blair and stars including Moby gave
messages to the opening of the World Youth
Assembly.
WHO and UNAIDS issue new guidance on HIV testing
and counselling in health facilities
New recommendations aim for wider
knowledge of HIV status and greatly
increased access to HIV treatment and pre-
vention
LONDON – WHO and UNAIDS have
issued new guidance on informed, volun-
tary HIV testing and counselling in the
world’s health facilities, with a view to sig-
nificantly increasing access to needed HIV
treatment, care, support and prevention ser-
vices. The new guidance focuses on
provider-initiated HIV testing and coun-
selling (recommended by health care
providers in health facilities).
Today, approximately 80% of people living
with HIV in low- and middle-income coun-
tries do not know that they are HIV-posi-
tive. Recent surveys in sub-Saharan Africa
showed on average just 12% of men and
10% of women have been tested for HIV
and received their test results.
Increased access to HIV testing and coun-
selling is essential to promoting earlier
diagnosis of HIV infection, which in turn
can maximize the potential benefits of life-
extending treatment and care, and allow
people with HIV to receive information and
tools to prevent HIV transmission to others.
“Scaling up access to HIV testing and coun-
selling is both a public health and a human
rights imperative,“ said WHO HIV/AIDS
Director Dr Kevin De Cock. “We hope that
the new guidance will provide an impetus to
countries to greatly increase availability of
HIV testing services in health care settings,
through realistic approaches that both
improve access to services and, at the same
time, protect the rights of individuals.
Without a major increase in HIV testing and
counselling in health facilities, universal
access to HIV prevention, treatment and
care will remain just a noble goal.“
Additional approaches needed
to expand access
Until recently, the primary model for pro-
viding HIV testing and counselling has
been client-initiated HIV testing and coun-
selling – also known as voluntary coun-
selling and testing (VCT) – in which indi-
viduals must actively seek an HIV test at a
health or community-based facility. But
uptake of client-initiated HIV testing and
counselling has been limited by low cover-
age of services, fear of stigma and discrim-
ination, and the perception by many people
– even in high prevalence areas – that they
are not at risk.
Current evidence also suggests many
opportunities to diagnose HIV in clinical
settings are being missed, even in places
with serious HIV epidemics. While, there-
fore, expanded access to client-initiated
HIV testing and counselling is still neces-
sary, other approaches are also required if
coverage of HIV testing and counselling is
to increase and, ultimately, universal access
to HIV prevention, treatment, care and sup-
port is to be achieved.
The new WHO/UNAIDS guidance was pre-
pared in the light of increasing evidence
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56
that provider-initiated testing and coun-
selling can increase uptake of HIV testing,
improve access to health services for people
living with HIV, and may create new oppor-
tunities for HIV prevention. Provider-initi-
ated HIV testing and counselling involves
the health care provider specifically recom-
mending an HIV test to patients attending
health facilities. In these circumstances,
once specific pre-test information has been
provided, the HIV test would ordinarily be
performed unless the patient declines.
Provider-initiated HIV testing and coun-
selling has already been implemented in a
range of clinical settings in several low- and
middle-income countries, including
Botswana, Kenya, Malawi, Uganda and
Zambia, as well as in pre-natal settings in
parts of Canada, Thailand, the United
Kingdom, and the United States.
“If we are going to get ahead of this epi-
demic, rapidly scaled up HIV treatment and
prevention efforts are critical – and
increased uptake of HIV testing will be fun-
damental to making this a reality,“ said Dr
Paul De Lay, Director of Monitoring and
Evaluation, UNAIDS. “At the same time,
and in all cases of HIV testing and coun-
selling, the 3 Cs – that is consent, confiden-
tiality and counselling – must be respect-
ed,“ he added.
Guidance tailored to different
types of epidemics and health
facilities
The new WHO/UNAIDS guidance advises
that health care providers globally should
recommend HIV testing and counselling to
all patients who present with conditions that
might suggest underlying HIV disease.
Additional guidance is tailored to local cir-
cumstances. In generalized HIV epi-
demics1
, HIV testing and counselling
should be recommended to all patients
attending all health facilities, whether or not
the patient has symptoms of HIV disease
and regardless of the patient’s reason for
attending the health facility. In concentrat-
ed2
and low-level3
HIV epidemics,
depending on the epidemiological and
social context, countries should consider
recommending HIV testing and counselling
to all patients in selected health facilities
(e.g. antenatal, tuberculosis, sexual health,
and health services for most-at-risk popula-
tions). The guidance also includes special
considerations for HIV testing and coun-
selling for adolescents and children.
WHO and UNAIDS recognize that resource
and other constraints may prevent immedi-
ate implementation of the guidance. The
document therefore provides advice about
how to prioritize implementation in differ-
ent types of health facilities.
The new guidance builds on previous poli-
cy positions of WHO and UNAIDS and
responds to a growing demand from coun-
tries for more detailed policy and opera-
tional advice in this area. Its recommenda-
tions were developed following a review of
available evidence and a broad consultative
process with experts and implementers,
including submissions received from over
150 organizations and individuals.
Other key recommendations
Other key WHO/UNAIDS recommenda-
tions for provider-initiated HIV testing and
counselling in health facilities include:
• All HIV testing must be voluntary, confi-
dential, and undertaken with the patient’s
consent.
• Patients have the right to decline the test.
They should not be tested for HIV against
their will, without their knowledge, with-
out adequate information or without
receiving their test results.
• Pre-test information and post-test coun-
selling remain integral components of the
HIV testing process.
• Patients should receive support to avoid
potential negative consequences of know-
ing and disclosing their HIV status, such
as discrimination or violence.
• Testing must be linked to appropriate HIV
prevention, treatment, care and support
services.
• Decisions about HIV testing in health
facilities should always be guided by what
is in the best interests of the individual
patient.
• Provider-initiated HIV testing and coun-
selling is not, and should not be construed
as, an endorsement of coercive or manda-
tory HIV testing.
• Implementation of provider-initiated HIV
testing and counselling should be under-
taken in consultation with key stakehold-
ers, including civil society groups,
acknowledging that what works and is eth-
ical will inevitably differ across countries.
• When implementing provider-initiated
HIIV testing and counselling, equal
efforts must be made to ensure that a sup-
portive social, policy and legal framework
is in place to maximize positive outcomes
and minimize potential harms to patients.
• A system that monitors and evaluates the
implementation and scale-up of provider-
initiated testing and counselling should be
developed and implemented concurrently.
As countries work towards universal access
to HIV prevention, treatment, care and sup-
port, the new guidance on provider-initiated
HIV testing and counselling offers an
important opportunity to introduce new
approaches and improve the standards of
HIV testing and counselling in both public
and private health facilities. Together with
their partners, WHO and UNAIDS will con-
tinue to help countries expand access to the
full range of HIV testing and counselling
services, as well as to other needed health
sector interventions against HIV/AIDS.
For further information, please contact:
London
WHO, Anne Winter, Tel.: +41 79 440 6011
E-mail: wintera@who.int
Cathy Bartley, Tel.: +44 20 8694 9138
Mobile: +44 7958 561 671
E-mail: cathy.bartley@bartley-robbs.co.uk
Geneva
WHO, Iqbal Nandra, Tel.: +41 22 791 5589
Mobile: +41 79 509 0622,
E-mail: nandrai@who.int
UNAIDS, Yasmine Topor, Tel.: +41 22 791
3501, Mobile: +41 76 512 8853, E-mail:
topory@unaids.org
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