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• WMA General Assembly, Montevideo
• The World Conference on the Social Determinants
of Health
vol. 57
MedicalWorld
JournalJournal
Official Journal of the World Medical Association, INC
G20438
Nr. 6, December 2011
Cover picture from Thailand
Editor in Chief
Dr. Pēteris Apinis
Latvian Medical Association
Skolas iela 3, Riga, Latvia
Phone +371 67 220 661
peteris@arstubiedriba.lv
editorin-chief@wma.net
Co-Editor
Dr. Alan J. Rowe
Haughley Grange, Stowmarket
Suffolk IP143QT, UK
Co-Editor
Prof. Dr. med. Elmar Doppelfeld
Deutscher Ärzte-Verlag
Dieselstr. 2, D-50859 Köln, Germany
Assistant Editor Velta Pozņaka
wmj-editor@wma.net
Journal design and
cover design by Pēteris Gricenko
Layout and Artwork
The Latvian Medical Publisher “Medicīnas
apgāds”, President Dr. Maija Šetlere,
Katrīnas iela 2, Riga, Latvia
Cover painting:
The third Lofting, 2002, Watercolour,
46 x 62 cm
Publisher
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Dr. José Luiz
GOMES DO AMARAL
WMA President
Associaçao Médica Brasileira
Rua Sao Carlos do Pinhal 324
Bela Vista, CEP 01333-903
Sao Paulo, SP Brazil
Dr. Leonid EIDELMAN
WMA Chairperson of the Finance
and Planning Committee
Israel Medical Asociation
2 Twin Towers, 35 Jabotinsky St.
P.O.Box 3566, Ramat-Gan 52136
Israel
Dr. Masami ISHII
WMA Vice-Chairman of Council
Japan Medical Assn
2-28-16 Honkomagome
Bunkyo-ku
Tokyo 113-8621
Japan
Dr. Wonchat SUBHACHATURAS
WMA Immediate Past-President
Thai Health Professional Alliance
Against Tobacco (THPAAT)
Royal Golden Jubilee, 2 Soi
Soonvijai, New Petchburi Rd.
Bangkok,Thailand
Sir Michael MARMOT
WMA Chairperson of the Socio-
Medical-Affairs Committee
British Medical Association
BMA House,Tavistock Square
London WC1H 9JP
United Kingdom
Dr. Guy DUMONT
WMA Chairperson of the Associate
Members
14 rue des Tiennes
1380 Lasne
Belgium
Dr. Cecil B. WILSON
WMA President-Elect
American Medical Association
515 North State Street
60654 Chicago, Illinois
United States
Dr.Torunn JANBU
WMA Chairperson of the Medical
Ethics Committee
Norwegian Medical Association
P.O. Box 1152 sentrum
0107 Oslo
Norway
Dr.Frank Ulrich MONTGOMERY
WMA Treasurer
Herbert-Lewin-Platz 1
(Wegelystrasse)
10623 Berlin
Germany
Dr. Mukesh HAIKERWAL
WMA Chairperson of Council
58 Victoria Street
Williamstown, VIC 3016
Australia
Dr. Otmar KLOIBER
WMA Secretary General
13 chemin du Levant
France 01212 Ferney-Voltaire
France
World Medical Association Officers, Chairpersons and Officials
Official Journal of the World Medical Association
Opinions expressed in this journal – especially those in authored contributions – do not necessarily reflect WMA policy or positions
www.wma.net
201
WMA newsUNITED STATES
As the year is coming to a close, it is time to look back at the
achievements and outline new tasks and new directions.The World
Medical Journal wishes to thank all the authors and readers for the
successful co-operation.
First of all, I want to thank the President of the WMA, Dr. Won-
chat Subhachaturas, for the support and interest in the journal.The
President made trips to all the continents, visited the medical as-
sociations and congresses of many countries and participated in im-
portant meetings, as well as found time to write articles and show
interest in the journal. Many thanks to the WMA Council which
provided themes for the articles; this year, Council worked harder
than ever, it could be best seen in Sydney when the Australian gov-
ernment aligned its anti-smoking activities with the work of the
WMA Council and Dr. Mukesh Haikerwal became the Chair of
Council.
Thanks to Dr.Otmar Kloiber for his tireless support for creating the
journal and forming its trend of development. In 2011, the World
Medical Journal was and, in 2012, it will be the main mouthpiece
of the World Medical Association’s ideas that publishes the docu-
ments, declarations and statements of our organisation. Today, the
General Assemblies of the World Medical Association and the Ex-
ecutive Committee meetings are so versatile and highly topical that
at least two of the six annual issues of the journal are filled with
WMA information. Thanks for this to Nigel Duncan, who docu-
ments everything precisely. Of course, the entire WMJ effectiveness
comes from the successful work of the staff, from which this time I
wish to mark out Joelle Balfe; parallel with her own work,she edited
many articles for the journal.
I wish to touch upon one, in my opinion, very significant turn of
events. With Professor Sir Michael Marmot joining the WMA
Council, the WMA has turned its face to the WHO activities, even
more so – the WMA stands at the head of the WHO ideas, espe-
cially regarding issues relating to socially determined medicine.
And many thanks to my teachers and friends – co-editors Alan
J. Rowe and Elmar Doppelfeld, who perused the journal by cor-
respondence this year, gave good advice and moral support. Let me
wish you good health, ALAN, so that we could meet face to face at
meetings next year!
Dr. Pēteris Apinis,
Editor-in-Chief of the World Medical Journal
Editorial
202
WMA news
Delegates from almost 50 national medical
associations met in Montevideo, Uruguay
for the 62nd
annual General Assembly of
the World Medical Association from 12 to
15 October. The meeting, which coincided
with celebrations for the 200th
anniversary
of Uruguay’s independence, was held in
the Grand Ballroom of the Radisson Plaza
Hotel, the venue of the last WMA meeting
held in Montevideo in 1998.
Dr.Mukesh Haikerwal,Chair of the WMA,
opened the proceedings on Wednesday with
the 189th
Council session.
The President, Dr.Wonchat Subhachaturas,
reported on his visits during the year to 19
medical associations and forums in every
continent except Africa.
The Secretary General, Dr. Otmar Kloiber,
in his report, said the issue of non com-
municable diseases had been an important
recent issue for the WMA. But it had been
an uphill task, both in ensuring the WMA’s
attendance at the recent United Nations
meeting in New York and in arguing for a
more horizontal approach to the diseases
included, beyond the four favoured by the
World Health Organisation – cardiovascu-
lar and lung diseases, cancer and diabetes.
In the end the WMA achieved its aims and
was quite happy with the final results of the
meeting, although it would still have liked a
stronger policy.
On another subject, Dr. Kloiber spoke
about the threat of attack which physicians
were facing in various parts of the world,es-
pecially in Bahrain, where a number of phy-
sicians and other health professionals had
been tried in a para military court and were
facing lengthy prison sentences. This was a
concern which the meeting would want to
discuss.
SOCIO-MEDICAL
AFFAIRS COMMITTEE
The Socio-Medical Affairs Committee
convened under the chairmanship of Sir
Michael Marmot (UK).
Armed Conflicts
Two papers relating to armed conflicts
were considered. The committee agreed
that against the background of alarming at-
tacks on health professionals worldwide the
first paper, a Statement on Protection and
Integrity of Medical Personnel in Armed
Conflicts, should be sent to the Assembly
for adoption. The second paper, the WMA
Regulations in Times of Armed Conflict,
was mainly about physicians’ duties and
conduct during an armed conflict. It was
agreed to circulate this to NMAs for com-
ment.
Violence in the Health Sector
The committee considered a proposed
Statement on Violence in the Health Sec-
tor, put forward by the Israel Medical As-
sociation. This suggested a zero-tolerance
attitude to threats and acts of violence in the
health sector, including the right to refuse
to treat violent offenders, except in emer-
gency situations.
Dr. Yoram Blachar (Israel) said there was a
growing problem of violence against health
personnel and it was important NMAs
were aware of this problem and worked to
reduce such occurrences. But Dr. Vivienne
Nathanson (UK) said the paper did not re-
ally deal with the patient who was violent
because of an illness, such as somebody
with a serious mental health problem where
WMA General Assembly
12–15 October,Montevideo
Wonchat Subhachaturas
Dana Hanson
Mukesh Haikerwal
Otmar Kloiber
Jose Luiz
Gomes do Amaral
Frank Ulrich
Montgomery Sir Michael Marmot
Yoram Blachar
Cecil B. Wilson
Masami Ishii
203
WMA news
violence was a part of that and where phy-
sicians in psychiatry had to manage that.
Dr. Heikki Pälve (Finland) said the same
trend of violence was being experienced in
Finland. He said all attacks should be pub-
licised and made known to the police and
possibly to the courts. The proposed State-
ment should mention such a procedure.
After further suggested amendments, it was
agreed to refer the document to an ad hoc
working group to report back to Council
later in the meeting.
Pain Relief
A proposed Resolution from the British
Medical Association on Access to Adequate
Pain Treatment was discussed, setting out a
series of proposals to improve patients’ ac-
cess to pain treatment.
It was agreed that the Resolution should be
forwarded to Council and the Assembly for
adoption.
Tobacco-Derived Products
(Protect Children)
The committee considered a proposed revi-
sion to the Statement on Health Hazards
of Tobacco and Tobacco-Derived Products
suggested by the American Medical Asso-
ciation, outlining measures to protect chil-
dren from tobacco. After discussion, it was
amended to include advice to NMAs to re-
fuse to invest in companies or firms produc-
ing or promoting the use or sale of tobacco.
It was agreed to forward the document as
amended to the Assembly for adoption.
Ethical Implications of
Physician Strikes
A proposed Statement on new guidelines
for physicians about taking strike action
was put forward by the Israel Medical As-
sociation.
Dr. Blachar introduced the document, say-
ing his Association had been involved in
several months of negotiations and indus-
trial action. Strikes were becoming more
common and it was important that clear
ethical guidelines were available. Dr. Peter
Carmel (USA) said the document would be
met with huge controversy, as in each coun-
try there were separate laws about physician
strikes. It was agreed that the document
should be circulated to NMAs for com-
ment.
Electronic Cigarettes
The American Medical Association intro-
duced a proposed Statement on Electronic
Cigarettes calling for a ban on the manufac-
ture and sale of e-cigarettes until they had
been fully researched, tested and regulated
as either a new form of a tobacco product or
as a drug delivery device.
It was agreed that the document should be
circulated to NMAs for comment.
Leprosy
The committee received a proposal from
the charity, the Nippon Foundation, for
the WMA to support its Global Appeal
on leprosy. The committee first consid-
ered a proposed WMA Declaration on
Leprosy Control Around the World and
Elimination of Discrimination Against
Persons Affected by Leprosy. The Dec-
laration from the Brazilian Medical As-
sociation called on physicians to lead the
way in combating all forms of prejudice
and discrimination against people af-
fected by leprosy and members of their
families.
It was agreed that both the new WMA
policy and the Global Appeal should beJón Snædal
Robert Ouellet
Torunn Janbu
Xavier Deau
Ajay Kumar
Roberto Luiz d’Avila
A.C. Nieuwenhuijzen
Kruseman
Alarico Rodriguez
de Leon
A. Hallmayr
Jeremy A. Lazarus
204
WMA news
sent to Council and to the Assembly for
adoption.
Advocacy
An oral report on the Advocacy Workgroup
was given by its chair, Dr. Dana Hanson
(Canada). The group had reviewed the ef-
fectiveness of the WMA’s relationship with
outside organisations. It said that advocacy
should be a key element of the Association’s
strategic plan in reaching out to NMAs.
COUNCIL
Council then reconvened to consider two
emergency resolutions relating to the recent
trial of physicians and other health profes-
sionals in Bahrain.
Bahrain trial of health
professionals
The first resolution declared that Bahrain
must prove to the watching world that the
retrial of 20 physicians, nurses and other
health professionals sentenced to prison in
September followed fair process.
Dr. Vivienne Nathanson, introducing the
resolution, said that those tried included 13
physicians, all of them senior doctors. They
had been found guilty and sentenced to five,
10 or 15 years imprisonment and the more
senior the person the longer the sentence.
The accusations against them included
helping enemies of the state who were seek-
ing regime change, stockpiling guns in the
hospital and making political statements.
Their lawyers said the physicians had been
abused during the time of arrest and tor-
tured while in detention. During the trial,
they were not allowed to give evidence in
their own defence, nor were their lawyers
allowed to question the state’s witnesses,
all contrary to international rules. The fi-
nal hearing had lasted just seven minutes.
The court was held under special powers
with a military judge. The doctors said the
only thing they did was to treat people who
came to their hospital,fulfilling their ethical
obligations to treat all those who presented
to them regardless of whether they were
friends or enemies of the government.
Independence of National
Medical Associations
The second resolution related to the inde-
pendence of medical associations and de-
nounced attempts by some governments to
silence medical associations. Council ap-
proved both emergency resolutions.
FINANCE AND PLANNING
COMMITTEE
In the absence of the committee Chair Dr.
Leonid Eidelman (Israel), the Finance and
Planning Committee convened under the
chairmanship of  Dr. Mukesh Haikerwal,
Chair of Council.
The Financial Advisor, Mr Adi Hällmayr,
presented the Audited Financial Statement
for 2010 and the Budget for 2012, both of
which were approved by the committee for
adoption by the Assembly.
The committee also received a report on
Membership Dues Payments for 2011 and
Dues Categories for 2012.
The Secretary General thanked those mem-
bers who had paid their dues promptly de-
spite the difficult situations in some coun-
tries.He explained the necessity of adopting
a new dues baseline for members.
Strategic Planning
Dr. Robert Ouellet (Canada), Chair of the
Workgroup on the WMA Strategic Plan,
reported on the group’s progress and in-
Vinay Aggarwal
Martin Rebella
Joshitake Yokokura
Daniel Johnson
Florentino Cardoso
Peter W. Carmel
Dongchun Shin
Ramin Parsa-ParsiJeff Blackmer
Vivienne Nathanson
205
WMA news
troduced Ms Emmanuel Morin from the Canadian Medical As-
sociation, who presented the results of a survey carried out among
NMAs and key stakeholders.
Following a discussion on the findings, there was general agreement
that:
• resource capacity and implications must be carefully considered in
developing the strategic objectives and the strategic plan;
• the needs of junior physicians should be represented in the new
plan as a priority area specific to networking and advocacy, and
the WMA should collaborate with existing stakeholders such as
the Junior Doctors Network;
• the WMA must take a proactive position in developing its new
objectives in order to solidify its role as the foremost international
leader in physician ethics and guidance, and in advocacy and rep-
resentation;
• given the regulatory role of many NMAs, the WMA needed to
continue its support and work in the area of quality and regula-
tion. However, this should not be a new core area, but rather be
integrated into the three existing core areas as a priority in the
new strategic plan;
• the focus on members, individual physicians and their patients
needed to be highlighted as this was critical to the unique value
the WMA provided globally;
• the strategic plan must continue to include goals that worked to
engage existing and new NMA members in order to build aware-
ness and capacity, and to strengthen the international voice of
physicians.
The committee recommended to Council that the workgroup
should draft a strategic plan for presentation to the Council meet-
ing in Prague in 2012.
MEDICAL ETHICS COMMITTEE
The Medical Ethics Committee convened under the chairmanship
of Dr.Torunn Janbu (Norway).
Organ Procurement
Dr. Nathanson, chair of the WMA’s workgroup on ethical organ
procurement, reported to the committee about its work on a new
draft document. She said it still needed major revision. Dr. Car-
mel said this issue represented a Pandora’s Box of troubles with the
moral, ethical and legal complexities surrounding this issue.
The committee recommended to Council that the workgroup be
authorised to continue work on a draft document.
206
WMA news
Ethics in Palliative Sedation
A proposed Statement was considered on the Ethics in Palliative
Sedation submitted by the Spanish Medical Association.
Dr. Janbu said as a result of the many comments received from
NMAs on the document, it was clear that they would not be
able to approve a new policy at the meeting. Some NMAs said
there should be no separate document on this topic because it
was already covered by existing policy statements. But only a few
NMAs had actually suggested changes to the proposed State-
ment.
Following a debate, the committee recommended the setting up of
a workgroup to review the proposed Statement alongside the three
existing WMA policies on euthanasia, terminal illness and end of
life medical care.
Use of Placebo in Medical Research
Dr. Ramin Parsa Parsi (Germany), chair of the workgroup on
placebo in medical research, reported on the activities of the past
year. The WMA’s Ethics Adviser, Prof. Urban Wiesing, then pre-
sented a summary of the discussion and the results of a confer-
ence held in São Paulo, Brazil in July. He said the conference
discussed new wording for the placebo paragraph (par. 32) of the
Declaration of Helsinki and suggested that the wording should
be broadened. It had also discussed the issue of international
clinical research and the use of interventions less effective than
the best proven one in resource poor settings. Although there
were disagreements about how to address this issue in the Decla-
ration, the discussion helped to identify common ground among
participants.
The committee recommended to Council that there should be a
complete revision of the Declaration of Helsinki and that the work-
group’s mandate should be extended to begin the process of revision.
Council was also asked to consider organising a satellite conference
on the Declaration of Helsinki in conjunction with the biannual
conference of the International Association on Bioethics in Rot-
terdam in June 2012.
Professional and Ethical Usage of Social Media
Dr. Jon Snaedal (Iceland), chair of the workgroup on social media,
reported to the committee on the development of a white paper by
the Junior Doctors Network examining the professional and ethi-
cal challenges of the increasing usage of social media by physicians,
207
WMA news
medical students and patients. Dr. Xaviour Walker, representing the
Junior Doctors Network, said the juniors had done a literature re-
view on the topic to produce the white paper.
The committee then considered a proposed Statement urging
NMAs to establish guidelines for their physicians on the use of so-
cial media.There was a debate about whether physicians should ever
post identifiable patient information in any social media and the
meeting concluded that they should not.
Following a discussion, the committee agreed that the document
should be forwarded to Council and the Assembly for adoption. It
was also decided that the workgroup should review the white paper
and that the Executive Committee should decide if it should be
published on the WMA website.
Capital Punishment
Dr. Poul Jaszczak (Denmark), Chair of the
workgroup on capital punishment, reported
that the group had decided to develop a
white paper on the ethical and societal im-
plications of capital punishment. Whether
a policy based on the white paper could be
drafted would be subject to a separate deci-
sion in the future.
The committee authorised the workgroup
to continue its deliberations and recom-
mended to Council that the Executive
Committee should decide if the white paper
would be published on the WMA website.
Human Rights
Ms Clarisse Delorme, the WMA’s Advocacy Adviser, gave an oral
report on the WMA’s human rights activities during the year, in-
cluding its many efforts to address the growing number of assaults
on health personnel and health facilities in areas of armed conflict
and civil unrest. She said the WMA had joined other health or-
ganisations in signing a joint letter requesting the UN Security
Council to adopt a new resolution to include attacks on schools
and hospitals in the existing monitoring and reporting mechanism
that protected children in armed conflicts. This resolution had
been passed.
The WMA was also in discussion with the International Commit-
tee of the Red Cross about a possible partnership with the ICRC’s
208
WMA news
campaign to improve the security and de-
livery of healthcare in situations of armed
conflict.
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
MEETING
Dr. Guy Dumont (Belgium) was re-elected
Chair of the meeting on Thursday.
Organ Procurement in China
A Resolution on Human Organ Procure-
ment in the People’s Republic of China was
proposed on behalf of Dr. A. L. Halpern by
Dr.Alejandro Centurion.He explained that
in China organs were removed from prison-
ers, which was allowed by law. However, in
line with WMA policy on transplantation,
prisoners were not in a position to give free
and informed consent.There was strong ev-
idence that organs were still being removed
not only from executed prisoners but also
from individuals in detention centres, work
camps and hospitals.
Dr.Guoming Qi,Vice President of the Chi-
nese Medical Association,explained that the
Chinese Medical Association and the Chi-
nese Government were trying to change the
situation. The Chinese Vice Health Minis-
ter agreed with the Chinese Medical Asso-
ciation that removing organs from executed
prisoners was not acceptable. As the law was
revised, the medical association would advo-
cate for changes. He said the Chinese Gov-
ernment was about to establish allocation
as well as data collection systems to ensure
fair organ transplantation. Together with
the medical association, the government
had started investigating hospitals and other
venues in 18 provinces. Originally 600 hos-
pitals were enabled to carry out organ trans-
plantations. That number had been reduced
to 100 hospitals. Hospitals were about to be
subject to sanctions if they violated medical
ethics. Also, organ tourism was to be pro-
hibited by the government. Dr. Qi said the
Chinese Medical Association and the gov-
ernment would use their best efforts to meet
the standards of the WMA.
Dr. Daniel Johnson (USA), a Past President
of the WMA, commended the Chinese
Medical Association for its work in trying
to tackle this issue and suggested that the
meeting should adopt a less confrontational
statement. Dr. Nathanson said that there
were many countries where practices on
organ procurement were far from ideal. The
WMA had a workgroup revising policy on
ethical organ procurement and she hoped
its work would be finished in time for the
next Assembly.
Following further discussion, the meeting
amended the Resolution reiterating its op-
position to any involuntary organ removal,
not only from executed prisoners but also
from all individuals in detention centres,
work camps, hospitals and other places of
confinement.
Past Presidents
Dr. Dana Hanson (Canada), a Past Presi-
dent of the WMA, proposed setting up a
Past Presidents and Past Chairs Network
along the lines of the Junior Doctors Net-
work. It was agreed to recommend this to
the Assembly.
Junior Doctors Network
Dr. Xaviour Walker, Chair of the Junior
Doctors Network, reported on the inaugu-
ral meeting of the newly established Net-
work and its work on a white paper on so-
cial media.
SCIENTIFIC SESSION
The theme of the all-day session was ‘To-
bacco Cessation’, with speakers addressing
the issue of tobacco control policies.
209
WMA news
The session was introduced by Dr. Martín
Rebella, President of the Uruguyuan Medi-
cal Association, who spoke about the health
and economic damage caused by tobacco
smoking. This hindered economic develop-
ment, particularly of poorer countries. But
anti tobacco activities in his country had
achieved successful health effects and were
supported by public opinion.
The first speaker, Dr. Tom Glynn, Director,
Cancer Science and Trends and Director,
International Cancer Control at the Amer-
ican Cancer Society, gave a brief overview
of the tobacco pandemic and spoke about
what might be done to start to address it.
He said Asia and Australia had more than
half of the smokers in the world and tobac-
co was now moving from being a disease
of the industrialised western countries to
one of the middle and low income coun-
tries. But the good news was that the pan-
demic was preventable and reversible and
he referred to the actions proposed by the
WHO, including better monitoring and
protection, good treatment, more warnings,
the enforcement of advertising bans and
higher taxes.
Dr. Tabaré Vázquez, former President of
Uruguay, spoke about tobacco control in
Uruguay and the progress that had been
made.But a lot more needed to be done and
he referred to his country’s fight against the
multinational tobacco industry and vowed
that the companies would not triumph.
Dr. Suthat Rungruanghiranya, Assistant
Professor at the Medical Faculty of Srina-
karinth University in Bangkok, said that in
Thailand they had successfully implement-
ed tobacco control measures over 20 years,
reducing the prevalence rate from 32 per
cent to 21 per cent.Now they were trying to
deal with changes in taxation, more graphic
warnings on cigarette packets, tougher law
enforcement and a greater focus on teenage
smokers.
During the session on tobacco dependence
and treatment, Professor Richard Hurt
from the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, USA,
spoke about the neurobiology of tobacco
dependence, while Dr. Glynn, in his second
speech, explained article 14 of the Tobacco
Framework Convention which mandated
the development of treatment guidelines
for parties to the treaty.
Speakers from Uruguay and Australia re-
ported on actions being taken in their coun-
tries against Philip Morris International
about cigarette package designs. Dr. An-
drew Pesce from Australia referred to the
progress in his country to legislate for plain
packaging and Philip Morris’s response
in suing the Australian Government. He
urged all governments to continue to act to
decrease smoking and to introduce whatever
legislation was possible. Dr. Eduardo Cazap
from Argentina, President of the Oncology
Association of Latin America and the Ca-
ribbean, said the UN Non Communicable
Diseases High Level Meeting in New York
presented challenges to all national medical
associations.
In the final session, Uruguay’s anti-tobacco
activities were outlined by several speak-
ers. Dr. Eduardo Bianco, a member of the
Tobacco Commission of the Sindicato
Médico del Uruguay, said that among his
association’s aims was to reduce the preva-
lence of smoking among physicians in the
country to less than five per cent by 2015, a
goal he thought was achievable.The session
ended with a speech from Uruguay’s Min-
ister of Public Health, who spoke optimis-
tically about his country’s fight against the
tobacco industry, likening it to the struggle
between David and Goliath. But it was not
an isolated struggle. It included all of civil
society and he said the ethics were with
them.
COUNCIL
When the Council reconvened on Friday
to approve the reports from the commit-
tees, it discussed a Statement on Disaster
210
WMA news
Preparedness and Medical Response and
agreed to send it to the Assembly for adop-
tion.
It debated possible venues for future meet-
ings and recommended meeting in Brazil
for the 2013 Assembly. For the Council
meetings in the spring of 2013 and 2014,
both Japan and the UK were suggested, al-
though this remained to be decided.
The meeting heard a report from Dr. Mads
Hansen (Denmark) about the greening of
activities at the Assembly to reduce the
WMA’s environmental impact. This in-
cluded the move to organising a paperless
meeting and he said there had been a reduc-
tion of two thirds in the use of paper at this
Assembly.
An oral report was received from Mr Tony
Bourne (UK), Chair of the Business De-
velopment Group, outlining its work to
strengthen and diversify WMA revenue
sources and it was agreed that this work
should continue.
Following a workgroup report to Council,
further debate took place on amendments
to the proposed Statement on Violence in
the Health Sector and it was decided that
further work was needed on the document.
CEREMONIAL SESSION OF
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
At the ceremonial opening of the Assem-
bly, participants were welcomed by Dr.
Leonel Briozzo, Vice Minister for Health
in Uruguay. He spoke about the substan-
tial reform of the health system going on
in his country and the autonomy of the
medical profession. He also thanked the
WMA for its support on anti-tobacco ac-
tivities.
His Excellency João Carlos de Souza-
Gomes, Brazil’s ambassador to Uruguay,
welcomed the election as WMA President
for 2011/12 of Dr. Gomes do Amaral and
spoke about his work to improve the quality
of health in Brazil. He congratulated Uru-
guay on its reforming health policies and
spoke about the importance of international
co-operation and the exchange of ideas and
experiences.
Dr. Wonchat Subhachaturas, in his vale-
dictory address as WMA President for
2010/11, referred to the various natural and
manmade disasters that had happened dur-
ing his year of office, as well as the many
attacks on physicians around the world who
were simply carrying out their job caring for
the sick and injured.
During the past year, he had visited 19
medical associations and forums in every
continent except Africa.The three challeng-
es he identified were the political conflicts
among countries, which were impacting on
health provision, the economic crisis which
was proving to be a great barrier to the de-
velopment of medical care in many coun-
tries and the manmade disasters especially
around the Mediterranean. He listed those
factors which were essential to the provision
of healthcare – among them professional
unity, ethical practice, equitable provision
of health, global collaboration and indepen-
dence from politics.
Dr. José Gomes do Amaral, President of the
Brazilian Medical Association, was then
installed as the 62nd
WMA President for
2011/12. He said it was time for physicians
to reaffirm their leadership of the healthcare
process and to stand up for medicine. He
said physicians had to decide if they wanted
to be the key players in the healthcare pro-
cess or simply ‘mere spectators’.
‘This is no time to be vague. We cannot
be supporting actors in a play where the
people expect us to be protagonists. It is
time for us to reaffirm our leadership of
the healthcare process. This is what we
were educated to do. We were given the
privilege and responsibility to take care of
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the lives of our patients. This is our duty
and society trusts us to behave up to their
expectations.’
Dr. Gomes do Amaral said this was a pe-
riod of uncertainty and indecision for phy-
sicians around the world and he was taking
over the Presidency as the medical pro-
fession was facing formidable challenges.
Physicians found themselves surrounded
by a complex healthcare network, the pri-
mary purpose of which was to broaden ac-
cess to care. But the role of physicians in
this network was often misrepresented and
the medical profession could not accept
that. Under no circumstances could physi-
cians contemplate a retreat from their role
and responsibilities.
He said that in the field of health, immense
possibilities of diagnosis and treatment had
been brought about by science and techno-
logical development, unimaginable a few
decades ago. Physicians had played their
part in this and they would certainly do
more in this field. Specialisation and spe-
cialists were more necessary than ever and
doctors, who had helped to build and inte-
grate the health system, should not now be
disregarded. It was time for doctors to stand
up for medicine.
PLENARY SESSION
OF THE ASSEMBLY
When the Assembly reconvened on Satur-
day, an election was held for WMA Presi-
dent for 2012/13. Two nominations were
received, from Dr. Shamsuddin Ahmed
(Bangladesh) and from Dr. Cecil B. Wilson
(USA). After each candidate had addressed
the meeting, there was a vote and Dr. Wil-
son, past President of the American Medi-
cal Association, was elected. He will take
up office at the 2012 Assembly in Bangkok,
Thailand.
The Assembly then received a detailed re-
port from Council about its activities since
the last General Assembly in Vancouver in
2010.
Among the significant activities not being
discussed in Montevideo, were the WMA’s
work on the multidrug-resistant tuberculo-
sis project and its involvement in the imple-
mentation process of the WHO Frame-
work Convention on Tobacco Control. The
report referred to work in monitoring the
drafting process of the WHO strategy on
alcohol and collaboration with the World
Health Professions Alliance in stepping up
activities on counterfeit medicines. Other
issues included activities on climate change
and the forthcoming UN Conference in
Durban, South Africa in December and
the WMA’s continuing close involvement
in the positive practice environment cam-
paign.
The WMA Treasurer, Dr. Frank Ulrich
Montgomery, presented his financial report,
saying that the Association’s net income had
continued the positive trend it had shown
since the turnaround in 2005. In 2010 there
was a financial surplus of €60,000 which was
very reassuring for the future. Total income
for the year was €2,120,000 and expenses
totalled €2,060,000. The membership dues
had reached their highest level during 2010.
He said the Association’s money was safely
and solidly invested.
The Assembly approved the Financial
Statement for 2010 and the Budget for
2012.
The Assembly then adopted a number
of policy documents brought to it by the
Council.
From the Medical Ethics Committee it ad-
opted three documents:
• Recommendation on the Development
of a Monitoring and Reporting Mecha-
nism to Permit Audit of Adherence of
States to the Declaration of Tokyo (see
p. 215), which sets out ways to increase
support for physicians with dual loyalties
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WMA news
who are pressured to violate their profes-
sional ethics.
• Statement on End of Life Care (see
p.  215) which emphasises the need for
improved palliative care.
• Statement on Professional and Ethical
Usage of Social Media (see p. 217).
From the Socio-Medical Affairs Commit-
tee it adopted the following:
• Statement on the Global Burden of
Chronic Disease (see p. 218).
• Revision of the Declaration on Prison
Conditions and the Spread of Tubercu-
losis and other Communicable Diseases
(see p. 219).
• Statement on Social Determinants of
Health (see p. 221).
• Statement on Health Hazards of To-
bacco and Tobacco-Derived Products
(see p. 224).
• Statement on Protection and Integrity
of Medical Personnel in Armed Con-
flicts (see p. 222).
• Resolution on the Access to Adequate
Pain Treatment (see p. 223).
• Revision of the WMA Statement on
Health Hazards of Tobacco and To-
bacco-Derived Products (Protect Chil-
dren).
• Declaration on Leprosy Control
Around the World and Elimination of
Discrimination Against Persons Af-
fected by Leprosy (see p. 225).
• Endorsement of the Global Leprosy
Appeal 2012.
Social Determinants
In a short debate on the importance of so-
cial determinants, Dr. Vivienne Nathanson
spoke about the forthcoming summit on
the issue to be held in Rio de Janeiro. She
said this presented important opportunities
for the WMA to make sure that social de-
terminants was not only firmly on people’s
agendas but that the medical community
could offer help and expertise for health
ministers to understand the importance of
cross government working. After the sum-
mit meeting in Brazil, it was hoped that the
WMA would start to develop a bigger web
resource that listed the types of activities
that doctors had been involved in in differ-
ent countries. So many countries had done
remarkable things in changing health and
health outcomes by looking at social deter-
minants.
Dr.Gomes do Amaral said it was important
that the WMA developed a regional net-
work to implement this initiative.
From the Finance and Planning Commit-
tee the Assembly adopted:
• proposed Baseline of Membership
Dues.
• applications for membership of the WMA
from national medical associations from
Trinidad and Tobago, Uzbekistan and
Tanzania.
• This brought the total membership of the
WMA to 100 NMAs, the highest ever
recorded number.
• amendments on Bylaws relating to the
duties and responsibilities of the Trea-
surer.
• amendments to governance documents
relating to the termination of officers.
• Statement on Disaster Preparedness
and Medical Response (see p. 227).
Meetings
The Assembly agreed that the 2013 General
Assembly should be
held in Fortaleza in
Brazil.
Bahrain
The emergency resolu-
tions on Bahrain and
on the Independence
of National Medi-
cal Associations were
adopted (see  p.  226).
Organ Procurement
The Resolution from the Associate Mem-
bers Group on Human Organ Procure-
ment in the People’s Republic of China was
discussed. Dr. Nathanson said the WMA’s
current policy was that executed prisoners
should not be organ donors and that prison-
ers should not,other than in the most excep-
tional circumstances, be living donors. She
said the working party on organ procure-
ment would be looking at WMA advice and
revising it.The new document would contain
more details about the situation of prisoners
in different circumstances – prisoners who
had died naturally, prisoners who had been
executed and prisoners as living donors. She
hoped the working party’s report would be
ready for next year’s Assembly.
The Assembly agreed to remove from the
title of the Resolution the words ‘the People’s
Republic of China’and to send it to Council
for further consideration by the workgroup.
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WMA news
Past Presidents Network
The Assembly agreed to ask Council to
consider setting up a network of Past Presi-
dents and Chairs.
Disaster Preparedness
In a special session on disaster response,
Dr.  Masami Ishii (Japan), Vice Chair of
Council, spoke about the earthquake and
tsunami that struck Japan in March and their
aftermath. He said his hospital had been se-
verely damaged and he referred to the ways
in which medical help was organised and the
role played by the Japan Medical Association.
Dr. Jeremy Lazarus (USA) described the
American Medical Association’s work on
disaster medicine involving physicians. He
said every physician should have a second
speciality, that of disaster medicine and
preparedness. He referred to the National
Disaster Life Support Foundation,in which
the AMA was involved, and its network of
training centres.
Dr. Gomes do Amaral, the President, said
that the Statement on Disaster Prepared-
ness and Medical Response, which had
been adopted by the Assembly, would be
called the Declaration of Montevideo.
Non Communicable Diseases
Dr. Julia Seyer, WMA Medical Adviser, re-
ported on the toolkit on NCDs, the Health
Improvement Card, which had been put to-
gether with the World Health Professions
Alliance. This was an educational tool for
physicians and the public to empower the
individual to achieve a healthy lifestyle.
Open Session
During the final open session of the As-
sembly, delegates heard from several NMAs
Annabel SeebhomNigel Duncan
Sunny ParkLamine Smaali
Anne-Marie Delage
Clarisse Delorme
Julia Seyer
Roderic Dennett
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WMA news
about issues they were facing. Delegates
from Venezuela and Uruguay raised their
concerns about proposed legislation in
Bolivia penalising poor medical activi-
ties and said they proposed to discuss
this further at the next WMA Council
meeting.
Dr. Peter Carmel, President of the Amer-
ican Medical Association, reported on
two new AMA projects to tackle obesity,
physical inactivity, tobacco and alcohol
use.
Dr. Paul Ockelford (New Zealand) spoke
about the earthquake that struck New
Zealand in February. This led to 181
deaths and more than 6000 injuries. He
described the immediate emergency re-
sponse that took place.
COUNCIL
The week’s deliberations ended with
a brief Council meeting at which it
was agreed that the Resolution on Or-
gan Procurement should be sent to the
workgroup for consideration and that a
network of Past Presidents and Chairs
should be set up.
Nigel Duncan,
WMA Public Relations Consultant
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WMA news
WMA Recommendation
on the Development of
a Monitoring and Reporting
Mechanism to Permit Audit
of Adherence of States
to the Declaration of Tokyo
Adopted by the 62nd
General Assembly, Montevideo,
Uruguay, October 2011
The wma recommends that
1. Where physicians are working in situations of dual loyalties,
support must be offered to ensure they are not put in positions
that might lead to violations of fundamental professional eth-
ics, whether by active breaches of medical ethics or omission
of ethical conduct, and/or of human rights, as laid out in the
Declaration of Tokyo.
2. National Medical Associations (NMA’s) should offer support
for physicians in difficult situations, including, as feasible and
without endangering either patients or doctors, helping individ-
uals to report violations of patients’health rights and physicians’
professional ethics in custodial settings.
3. The WMA should review the evidence available, in cases
brought to it by its members, of the violation of human rights
codes by states and/or the forcing of physicians to violate the
Declaration of Tokyo, and refer as appropriate such cases to the
relevant national and international authorities.
4. The WMA should contact member associations and encour-
age them to investigate accusations of physician involvement in
torture and similar abuses of human rights reported to it from
reputable sources, and to report back in particular on whether
physicians are at risk and in need of support.The WMA should
provide support to the NMAs and their members to resist such
violations, and as far as realistically possible, stand firm in their
ethical convictions.
5. The WMA shall encourage and support NMAs in their calls for
investigations by the relevant special rapporteur (or other indi-
vidual or organization) when NMAs and their members raise
valid concerns.
Declaration on End-of-Life
Medical Care
INTRODUCTION
All people have the right to high-quality, scientifically-based, and
humane healthcare. Therefore, receiving appropriate end-of-life
medical care must not be considered a privilege but a true right,
independent of age or any other associated factors.The WMA reaf-
firms the principles articulated in the WMA Declaration on Termi-
nal illness and the WMA Declaration on Euthanasia. These Dec-
larations support and complement the Declaration on End of Life
Medical Care.
Palliative care at the end of life is part of good medical care. The
need for access to improved quality palliative care is great, espe-
cially in resource-poor countries.The objective of palliative care is to
achieve the best possible quality of life through appropriate pallia-
tion of pain and other distressing physical symptoms, and attention
to the social, psychological and spiritual needs of the patient.
Palliative care may be provided at home as well as in various levels
of health care institutions.
The physician must adopt an attitude to suffering that is compas-
sionate and humane, and act with empathy, respect and tact. Aban-
donment of the patient when he or she needs such care is unaccept-
able medical practice.
RECOMMENDATIONS
1. Pain and symptom management
1.1. It is essential to identify patients approaching the end of
life as early as possible so that the physician can perform
a detailed assessment of their needs. A care plan for the
patient must always be developed; whenever possible, this
care plan will be developed in direct consultation with the
patient.
For some this process may begin months or a year before
death is anticipated.It includes recognising and addressing
the likelihood of pain and other distressing symptoms and
providing for patients’ social, psychological and spiritual
needs in the time remaining to them.The primary aim is to
maintain patients’dignity and their freedom from distress-
ing symptoms. Care plans pay attention to keeping them
as comfortable and in control as possible and recognise the
importance of supporting the family and treating the body
with respect after death.
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1.2. Important advances in the relief of pain and other distress-
ing symptoms have been made.The appropriate use of mor-
phine, new analgesics, and other measures can suppress or
relieve pain and other distressing symptoms in the major-
ity of cases. The appropriate health authorities must make
necessary medications accessible and available to physicians
and their patients. Physician groups should develop guide-
lines on their appropriate use,including dose escalation and
the possibility of unintended secondary effects.
1.3. In a very limited number of cases, generally in the very
advanced stages of a physical illness, some symptoms may
arise that are refractory to standard therapy. In such cas-
es, palliative sedation to unconsciousness may be offered
when life expectancy is a few days, as an extraordinary
measure in response to suffering which the patient and cli-
nician agree is intolerable. Palliative sedation must never
be used to intentionally cause a patient’s death or without
the agreement of a patient who remains mentally compe-
tent. The degree and timing of palliative sedation must be
proportionate to the situation. The dosage must be care-
fully calculated to relieve symptoms but should still be the
lowest possible to achieve a benefit.
2. Communication and consent; ethics and values
2.1. Information and communication among the patient, their
family and members of the health care team is one of the
fundamental pillars of quality care at the end of life. The
patient should be encouraged to express his or her prefer-
ences regarding care, and his or her emotions and existen-
tial angst must be taken into consideration.
2.2. Ethically-appropriate care at the end of life should rou-
tinely promote patient autonomy and shared decision-
making, and be respectful of the values of the patient and
his or her family.
2.3. Physicians should directly discuss a patient’s preferences
with the patient and/or the patient’s substitute health care
decision maker, as appropriate. These discussions should
be initiated early and routinely offered to all patients and
should be revisited regularly to explore any changes pa-
tients may have in their wishes, especially as their clini-
cal conditions change. Physicians should encourage their
patients to formally document their goals, values and
treatment preferences and to appoint a substitute health
care decision maker with whom the patient can discuss in
advance his or her values regarding health care and treat-
ment. Patients who are in denial about the implications of
their condition may not want to engage in such discussion
at some stages of their illness, but should know that they
can change their minds. Because documented advance
directives are often not available in emergency situations,
physicians should emphasize to patients the importance of
discussing treatment preferences with individuals who are
likely to act as substitute health care decision makers.
2.4. If a patient is capable of giving consent, care should be
based on the patient’s wishes as long as preferences can be
justified medically, ethically and legally. Consent needs to
be based on sufficient information and dialogue, and it is
the physician’s obligation to make sure that the patient is
adequately treated for pain and discomfort before consent
is obtained in order to assure that unnecessary physical
and mental suffering do not interfere with the decision-
making process.
2.5. The patient’s next-of-kin or family should be informed
and involved in the decision-making process, provided the
patient is not opposed to this. If the patient is unable to
express consent and an advance directive is not available,
the views of the health care substitute decision maker, ap-
pointed by the patient on care and treatment,must be con-
sidered.
3. Medical records and medico-legal aspects
3.1. Physicians caring for a patient in the final stages of life
must carefully document treatment decisions and the
reasons for choosing particular procedures, including the
patient’s and family’s wishes and consent, in the progress
notes of the medical records. An adequate medical record
is of the utmost importance for continuity and quality of
medical care in general and palliative care in particular.
3.2. The physician must also take into account that these notes
may serve a medico-legal purpose, e.g., in determining the
patient’s decision-making capacity.
4. Family members
It is necessary to acknowledge the importance of the family and
the emotional environment of the patient.The needs of the fam-
ily and other close caregivers throughout the course of the illness
must be recognized and attended to.The heath care team should
promote collaboration in the care of the patient and provide
bereavement support, when required, after the patient’s death.
Children’s and families’ needs may require special attention and
competence, both when children are patients and dependents.
5. Teamwork
Palliative care is usually provided by multiprofessional and inter-
disciplinary teams of healthcare and non-healthcare professions.
The physician must be the leader of the team, being responsible,
amongst other obligations, for diagnosis and medical treatment.
Continuity of care is very important. The team should do all it
can to facilitate a patient’s wish to die at home, if applicable and
possible.
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6. Physician training
The increasing number of people who require palliative
care and the increased availability of effective treatment
options mean that end-of-life care issues should be an im-
portant part of undergraduate and postgraduate medical
training.
7. Research and education
More research is needed to improve palliative care.This in-
cludes, but is not limited to, general medical care, specific
treatments, psychological implications and organization.
The WMA will support efforts to better educate physi-
cians in the skills necessary to increase the prevalence and
quality of meaningful advance care planning.
Conclusion
The care that a people give to dying patients, within available re-
sources, is an indication of their degree of civilisation. As physicians
representing the best humanitarian tradition, we should always
commit ourselves to delivering the best possible end-of-life care.
The WMA recommends that all National Medical Associations
develop a national policy on palliative care and palliative sedation
based on the recommendations in this declaration.
Statement on the Professional and
Ethical Usage of Social Media
DEFINITION
Social Media is generally understood to be a collective term for the
different platforms and applications that allow user-generated con-
tent to be created and shared electronically.
PREAMBLE
The objectives of the proposed policy are to:
• Examine the professional and ethical challenges related to the
increasing usage of social media by physicians, medical students
and patients.
• Establish a framework that protects their respective interests.
• Ensure trust and reputation by maintaining high professional and
ethical standards.
The use of social media has become a fact of life for many millions
of people world wide including physicians, medical students and
patients.
Interactive, collaborative tools such as wikis, social networks, chat
rooms and blogs have transformed passive Internet users into active
participants.They are means for gathering, sharing and disseminat-
ing personal information, including health information, socializing
and connecting with friends, relatives, professionals etc.They can be
used to seek medical advice, and patients with chronic diseases can
share their experiences with each other. They can also been used in
research, public health, education and direct or indirect professional
promotion.
The positive aspects of social media should be recognized such as in
promoting healthy life style, in empowering patients and in reduc-
ing patients’ isolation.
Areas, which may require special attention:
• Sensitive content, photographs, other personal materials posted
on online social forums often exists in the public domain and
have the capacity to remain on the internet permanently. Indi-
viduals may not have control over the ultimate distribution of
material they post on-line.
• Patient portal, blogs and tweets are not a substitute for one on
one consultation with physicians but may widen engagement
with health services amongst certain groups. Online “friendships”
with patients may also alter the patient-physician relationship,
and may result in unnecessary,possibly problematic physician and
patient self-disclosure.
• Each party’s privacy may be compromised in the absence of ad-
equate and conservative privacy settings or by their inappropri-
ate use. Privacy settings are not absolute; social media sites may
change default privacy settings unilaterally, without the user’s
knowledge. Social media sites may also make communications
available to third parties.
Interested stakeholders such as current/prospective employers, in-
surance companies and commercial entities may monitor these In-
ternet web sites for various purposes such as to better understand
their customer’s needs and expectations, to profile job candidates or
to improve a product or a service.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The WMA urges their NMA´s to establish guidelines for their phy-
sicians addressing the following issues:
1. To maintain appropriate boundaries of the patient-physician re-
lationship in accordance with professional ethical guidelines just
as they would in any other context.
2. To study carefully and understand the privacy provisions of so-
cial networking sites, bearing in mind their limitations.
3. For physicians to routinely monitor their own Internet presence
to ensure that the personal and professional information on
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WMA news
their own sites and, to the extent possible, content posted about
them by others is accurate and appropriate.
4. To consider the intended audience and assess whether it is tech-
nically feasible to restrict access to the content to pre-defined
individuals or groups.
5. To adopt a conservative approach when disclosing personal
information as patients can access the profile. The professional
boundaries that should exist between the physician and the pa-
tient can thereby be blurred. Physicians should acknowledge the
potential associated risks of social media and accept them, and
carefully select the recipients and privacy settings.
6. To provide factual and concise information,declare any conflicts
of interest and adopt a sober tone when discussing professional
matters.
7. To ensure that no identifiable patient information be posted in
any social media by their physician. Breaching confidentiality
undermines the public’s trust in the medical profession, impair-
ing the ability to treat patients effectively.
8. To draw the attention of medical students and physicians to the
fact that online posting may contribute also to the public per-
ception of the profession.
9. To consider the inclusion of educational programs with relevant
case studies and appropriate guidelines in medical curricula and
continuing medical education.
10. To bring their concerns to a colleague when observing his or her
clearly inappropriate behaviour. If the behaviour significantly
violates professional norms and the individual does not take ap-
propriate action to resolve the situation, physicians should re-
port the conduct to appropriate authorities.
WMA Statement on the Global
Burden of Chronic Disease
Adopted by the 62nd
General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay,
October 2011
INTRODUCTION
Chronic diseases, including cardiovascular and circulatory diseases,
diabetes, cancer, and chronic lung disease are the leading cause of
death and disability in both the developed and developing world.
Chronic diseases are not replacing existing causes of disease and
disability (infectious disease and trauma), but are adding to the dis-
ease burden. Developing countries now face the triple burden of
infectious disease, trauma and chronic disease. This increased bur-
den is straining the capacity of many countries to provide adequate
health care services. This burden is also undermining these nations’
efforts to increase life expectancy and spur economic growth.
Ongoing and anticipated global trends that will lead to more
chronic disease problems in the future include an aging population,
urbanization and community planning, increasingly sedentary life-
styles, climate change and the rapidly increasing cost of medical
technology to treat chronic disease. Chronic disease prevalence is
closely linked to global social and economic development, global-
ization and mass marketing of unhealthy foods and other products.
The prevalence and cost of addressing the chronic disease burden is
expected to rise in coming years.
Possible Solutions
The primary solution is disease prevention. National policies that
help people achieve healthy lifestyles and behaviours are the foun-
dation for all possible solutions.
Increased access to primary care combined with well designed and
affordable disease-control programs can greatly improve health care.
Partnerships of national ministries of health with institutions in de-
veloped countries may overcome many barriers in the poorest set-
tings.Effective partnerships currently exist in rural Malawi,Rwanda
and Haiti. In these settings where no oncologists are available, care
is provided by local physicians and nurse teams.These teams deliver
chemotherapy to patients with a variety of treatable malignancies
Medical education systems should become more socially account-
able. The World Health Organization (WHO) defines social ac-
countability of medical schools as the obligation to direct their
education, research and service activities towards addressing the
priority health concerns of the community, region, or nation they
have a mandate to serve. The priority health concerns are to be
identified jointly by governments, health care organizations, health
professionals and the public. There is an urgent need to adopt ac-
creditation standards and norms that support social accountability.
Educating physicians and other health care professionals to deliver
health care that is concordant with the resources of the country
must be a primary consideration. Led by primary care physicians,
teams of physicians, nurses and community health workers will pro-
vide care that is driven by the principles of quality, equity, relevance
and effectiveness. [see WMA Resolution on Medical Workforce]
Strengthening the health care infrastructure is important in caring
for the increasing numbers of people with chronic disease. Com-
ponents of this infrastructure include training the primary health
care team, improved facilities, chronic disease surveillance, public
health promotion campaigns, quality assurance and establishment
of national and local standards of care. One of the most important
components of health care infrastructure is human resources; well-
trained and motivated health care professionals led by primary care
physicians are crucial to success. International aid and development
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WMA news
programs need to move from “vertical focus” on single diseases or
objectives to a more sustainable and effective primary care health
infrastructure development.
Note: Depending on the country, different stakeholders will assume
greater or lesser responsibility for change.
For World Governments:
1. Support global immunization strategies;
2. Support global tobacco and alcohol control strategies;
3. Promote healthy living and implement policies that support
prevention and healthy lifestyle behaviours;
4. Set aside a fixed percentage of national budget for health infra-
structure development and promotion of healthy lifestyles.
5. Promote trade policy that protects public health;
6. Promote research for prevention and treatment of chronic disease;
7. Develop global strategies for the prevention of obesity.
For National Medical Associations:
1. work to create communities that promote healthy lifestyles and
prevention behaviours and to increase physician awareness of
optimal disease prevention behaviours;
2. offer patients smoking cessation, weight control strategies, sub-
stance abuse counselling, self-management education and sup-
port, and nutritional counselling;
3. promote a team-based approach to chronic disease management;
4. advocate for integration of chronic disease prevention and con-
trol strategies in government-wide policies;
5. invest in high quality training for more primary care physicians
and an equitable distribution of them among populations;
6. provide high quality accessible resources for continuing medical
education;
7. support establishing evidence-based standards of care for chro-
nic disease;
8. establish, support and strengthen professional associations for
primary care physicians
9. promote medical education that is responsive to societal needs;
10. promote an environment of support for continuity of care for
chronic disease, including patient education and self-manage-
ment;
11. advocate for policies and regulations to reduce factors that pro-
mote chronic disease such as smoking cessation and blood pres-
sure control;
12. support strong public health infrastructure; and
13. support the concept that social determinants are part of preven-
tion and health care.
For Medical Schools:
1. develop curriculum objectives that meet societal needs; e.g., so-
cial accountability;
2. focus on providing primary care training opportunities that
highlight the integrative and continuity elements of the primary
care specialties including family medicine;
3. provide community-oriented and community-based primary
care educational venues so that students become acquainted
with the basic elements of chronic care infrastructure and con-
tinuity care provision;
4. create departments of family medicine that are of equal aca-
demic standing in the university; and
5. promote the use of interdisciplinary and other collaborative
training methodologies within primary and continuing educa-
tion programs.
6. Include instruction in prevention of chronic diseases in the gen-
eral curriculum.
For Individual Physicians:
1. work to create communities that promote healthy lifestyles and
prevention behaviours;
2. offer patients smoking cessation, weight control strategies, sub-
stance abuse counselling, self-management education and sup-
port, and nutritional counselling;
3. promote a team-based approach to chronic disease manage-
ment;
4. ensure continuity of care for patients with chronic disease;
5. model prevention behaviours to patients by maintaining per-
sonal health;
6. become community advocates for positive social determinants
of health and for best prevention methods;
7. work with parents and the community to ensure that the par-
ents have the best advice on maintaining the health of their
children.
8. Physicians should collaborate with patients’ associations in de-
signing and delivering prevention education.
Revision of WMA Declaration
of Edinburgh on Prison
Conditions and the Spread
of Tuberculosis and other
Communicable Diseases
Prisoners enjoy the same health care rights as all other people. This
includes the right to humane treatment and appropriate medical
care. The standards for the treatment of prisoners have been set
down in a number of Declarations and Guidelines adopted by vari-
ous bodies of the United Nations.
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The relationship between physician and prisoner is governed by the
same ethical principles as that between the physician and any other
patient. There are specific tensions within the patient/physician re-
lationship, which do not exist in other settings, in particular the re-
lationship of the physician with his/her employer,the prison service,
and the general attitude of society to prisoners.
There are also strong public health reasons for reinforcing the im-
portance of these rules.The high incidence of tuberculosis amongst
prisoners in a number of countries reinforces the need for consid-
ering public health as an important element when designing new
prison regimens, and for reforming existing penal and prison sys-
tems.
Individuals facing imprisonment are often from the most margin-
alised sections of society, may have had limited access to health care
before imprisonment, may suffer worse health that many other citi-
zens and may enter prison with undiagnosed, undetected and un-
treated health problems.
Prisons can be breeding grounds for infection. Overcrowding,
lengthy confinement within tightly enclosed, poorly lit, badly
heated and consequently poorly ventilated and often humid spaces
are all conditions frequently associated with imprisonment and all
of which contribute to the spread of disease and ill-health. Where
these factors are combined with poor hygiene, inadequate nutrition
and limited access to adequate health care, prisons can represent a
major public health challenge.
Keeping prisoners in conditions, which expose them to substantial
medical risk,poses a humanitarian challenge.An infectious prisoner
is a risk to other prisoners,prison personnel,relatives and other pris-
on visitors and the wider community – not only when the prisoner
is released, but also because prison bars do not keep Tuberculosis
bacilli from spreading into the outside world. The most effective
and efficient way of reducing disease transmission is to improve the
prison environment, by putting together an efficient medical service
that is capable of detecting and treating the disease,and by targeting
prison overcrowding as the most urgent action.
The increase in active Tuberculosis in prison populations and the
development within some of these populations of resistant and es-
pecially “multi-drug”and “extremely-drug”resistant forms of TB, as
recognised by the World Medical Association in its Statement on
Drug Treatment of Tuberculosis, is reaching very high prevalence
and incidence rates in prisons in some parts of the world.
Other conditions, such as Hepatitis C and HIV Disease, do not
have as high a risk of person-to- person communicability as TB but
pose transmission risks from blood to blood borne spread, or shar-
ing and exchange of body fluids. Overcrowded prison conditions
also promote the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. Intrave-
nous drug use will also contribute to the spread of HIV as well as
the more contagious Hepatitis B and C. These need specific solu-
tions that are not dealt with in this statement. However the prin-
ciples set out below will also be helpful in reducing the risk from
such infective agents.
Actions Required
The World Medical Association considers it essential both for pub-
lic health and humanitarian reasons that careful attention is paid to:
1. Protecting the rights of prisoners according to the various UN
instruments relating to conditions of imprisonment. Prisoners
should enjoy the same rights as other patients, as outlined in the
WMA Declaration of Lisbon;
2. Not allowing the rights of prisoners to be ignored or invalidated
because they have an infectious illness;
3. Ensuring that the conditions in which detainees and prisoners
are kept, whether they are held during the investigation of a
crime, whilst waiting for trial, or as punishment once sentenced,
do not contribute to the development, worsening or transmis-
sion of disease.
4. Ensuring that persons being held while going through immi-
gration procedures, are kept in conditions which do not encour-
age the spread of disease, although prisons should not normally
be used to house such persons;
5. Ensuring the coordination of health services within and out-
side prisons to facilitate continuity of care and epidemiological
monitoring of inmate patients when they are released;
6. Ensuring that prisoners are not isolated, or placed in solitary
confinement, as a response to their infected status without ad-
equate access to health care and the appropriate medical treat-
ment of their infected status;
7. Ensuring that, upon admission to or transfer to a different pris-
on, inmates’ health status is reviewed within 24 hours of arrival
to assure continuity of care;
8. Ensuring the provision of follow-up treatment for prisoners
who, on their release, are still ill, particularly with TB or any
other infectious disease. Because erratic treatments or inter-
ruptions of treatment may be particularly hazardous epide-
miologically and to the individual, planning for and providing
continuing care are essential elements of prison health care
provision;
9. Recognising that the public health mechanisms, which may in
the rarest and most exceptional cases involve the compulsory
detention of individuals who pose a serious risk of infection to
the wider community must be efficacious, necessary and justi-
fied, and proportional to the risks posed. Such steps should be
exceptional and must follow careful and critical questioning of
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the need for such constraints and the absence of any effective al-
ternative.In such circumstances detention should be for as short
a time as possible and be as limited in restrictions as feasible.
There must also be a system of independent appraisal and pe-
riodic review of any such measures, including a mechanism for
appeal by the patients themselves. Wherever possible alterna-
tives to such detention should be used;
10. This model should be used in considering all steps to prevent
cross infection and to treat existing infected persons within the
prison environment.
11. Physicians working in prisons have a duty to report to the health
authorities and professional organisations of their country any
deficiency in health care provided to the inmates and any situ-
ation involving high epidemiological risk. NMAs are obliged
to attempt to protect those physicians against any possible re-
prisals.
12. Physicians working in prisons have a duty to follow national
public health guidelines, where these are ethically appropriate,
particularly concerning the mandatory reporting of infectious
and communicable diseases.
13. The WMA calls upon member associations to work with na-
tional and local governments and prison authorities to address
health promotion and health care in their institutions, and to
adopt programmes that ensure a safe and healthy prison envi-
ronment.
WMA Statement on Social
Determinants of Health
Adopted by the 62nd
WMA General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay,
October 2011
The social determinants of health are: the conditions in which peo-
ple are born, grow, live, work and age; and the societal influences
on these conditions. The social determinants of health are major
influences on both quality of life, including good health, and length
of disability-free life expectancy. While health care will attempt to
pick up the pieces and repair the damage caused by premature ill
health,it is these social,cultural,environmental,economic and other
factors that are the major causes of rates of illness and, in particular,
the magnitude of health inequalities.
Historically, the primary role of doctors and other health care pro-
fessionals has been to treat the sick – a vital and much cherished
role in all societies.To a lesser extent, health care professionals have
dealt with individual exposures to the causes of disease – smoking,
obesity, and alcohol in chronic disease, for example. These familiar
aspects of life style can be thought of as ‘proximate’causes of disease.
The work on social determinants goes far beyond this focus on prox-
imate causes and considers the “causes of the causes”. For example,
smoking, obesity, alcohol, sedentary life style are all causes of ill-
ness. A social determinants approach addresses the causes of these
causes; and in particular how they contribute to social inequalities
in health. It focuses not only on individual behaviours but seeks
to address the social and economic circumstances that give rise to
premature ill health, throughout the life course: early child devel-
opment, education, work and living conditions, and the structural
causes that give rise to these living and working conditions.In many
societies, unhealthy behaviours follow the social gradient: the lower
people are in the socioeconomic hierarchy, the more they smoke,
the worse their diet, and the less physical activity they engage in.
A major, but not the only, cause of the social distribution of these
causes is level of education. Other specific examples of addressing
the causes of the causes: price and availability, which are key drivers
of alcohol consumption; taxation, package labelling, bans on adver-
tising, and smoking in public places, which have had demonstrable
effects on tobacco consumption.The voice of the medical profession
has been most important in these examples of tackling the causes
of the causes.
There is a growing movement, globally, that seeks to address gross
inequalities in health and length of life through action on the so-
cial determinants of health.This movement has involved the World
Health Organisation, several national governments, civil society or-
ganization, and academics. Solutions are being sought and learning
shared. Doctors should be well informed participants in this debate.
There is much that can happen within the practice of medicine that
can contribute directly and through working with other sectors.The
medical profession can be advocates for action on those social con-
ditions that have important effects on health.
The WMA could add significant value to the global efforts to ad-
dress these social determinants by helping doctors, other health
professionals and National Medical Associations understand what
the emerging evidence shows and what works, in different circum-
stances. It could help doctors to lobby more effectively within their
countries and across international borders, and ensure that medical
knowledge and skills are shared.
The WMA should help to gather data of examples that are working,
and help to engage doctors and other health professionals in trying
new and innovative solutions. It should work with national associa-
tions to educate and inform their members and put pressure on na-
tional governments to take the appropriate steps to try to minimise
these root causes of premature ill health. In Britain, for example, the
national government has issued a public health white paper that has
at its heart reduction of health inequalities through action on the so-
cial determinants of health; several local areas have drawn up plans of
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action; there are good examples of general practice that work across
sectors improve the quality of people’s lives and hence reduce health
inequalities. The WMA should gather examples of good practice
from its members and promote further work in this area.
WMA Resolution reaffirming the
WMA Resolution on Economic
Embargoes and Health
Adopted by the 62nd
General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay
The World Medical Association is deeply concerned about reports
of potential serious health impacts resulting from economic sanc-
tions imposed by the European Union against Ivory Coast leader,
Laurent Gbagbo, and numerous individuals and entities associated
with his regime, including two major ports linked to Gbagbo’s gov-
ernment. The sanctions aim to severely restrict EU-registered ves-
sels from transacting business with these ports, which could inhibit
the delivery of necessary and life-saving medicines.
The WMA General Assembly reiterates the following position
from the WMA Resolution on Economic Embargoes and Health:
• All people have the right to the preservation of health; and,
• the Geneva Convention (Article 23, Number IV, 1949) requires the
free passage of medical supplies intended for civilians;
The WMA therefore urges the European Union to take steps im-
mediately to ensure the delivery of medical supplies to the Ivory
Coast, in order to protect the life and health of the population.
WMA Statement on the
Protection and Integrity of
Medical Personnel in Armed
Conflicts and Other Situations
of Violence
Adopted by the 62nd
General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay,
October 2011
PREAMBLE
1. During wars and armed conflicts hospitals and other medical
facilities have often been attacked and misused and patients and
medical personnel have been killed or wounded. Such attacks
are a violation of the Geneva Conventions (1949), Additional
Protocols to the Geneva Conventions (1977) and WMA regu-
lations in times of war (2006).
2. The World Medical Association (WMA) has been active in
condemning documented attacks on medical personnel and fa-
cilities in armed conflicts. The International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC) Geneva Conventions and their Additional
Protocols shall protect medical personnel in international and
non-international armed conflicts. The warring parties have
duty not to interfere with medical care for wounded or sick
combatants and civilians, and not attack, threaten or impede
medical functions. Physicians and other health care personnel
must be considered as neutral and must not be prevented from
fulfilling their duties.
3. The lack of systematic reporting and documentation of vio-
lence against medical personnel and facilities creates threats
to both civilians and military personnel. The development of
strategies for protection and efforts to improve compliance
with the laws of war are impeded as long as such information
is not available.
STATEMENT
4. The World Medical Association condemns all attacks on and
misuse of medical personnel, facilities and vehicles in armed
conflicts. These attacks put people in need of help in great dan-
ger and can lead to the flight of physicians and other health
personnel from the conflict areas with a lack of available medical
personnel as a result.
5. Currently no party is responsible for collecting data regarding
assaults on medical personnel and facilities. Data collection af-
ter attacks is vital to identify the reasons why medical person-
nel and facilities are attacked. Such data are important in order
to understand the nature of the attacks and to take necessary
steps to prevent attacks in the future. All attacks must also be
properly investigated and those responsible for the violations
of the Geneva Conventions and Protocols must be brought to
justice.
6. The WMA requests that appropriate international bodies
establish mechanisms with the necessary resources to collect
and disseminate data regarding assaults on physicians, other
health care personnel and medical facilities in armed conflicts.
Such mechanisms could include the establishment of a new
United Nations post of Rapporteur on the independence and
integrity of health professionals. As stated in the WMA pro-
posal for a United Nations Rapporteur on the Independence
and Integrity of Health Professionals (1997), “The new rap-
porteur would be charged with the task of monitoring that
doctors are allowed to move freely and that patients have ac-
cess to medical treatment, without discrimination as to na-
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tionality or ethnic origin, in war zones or in situations of po-
litical tension”.
7. When a reporting system is established the WMA will recom-
mend to their member organisations reporting armed conflicts
which they become aware of.
WMA Resolution on the
Access to Adequate Pain
Treatment
Adopted by the 62nd
WMA General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay,
October 2011
PREAMBLE
1. Around the world, tens of millions of people with cancer and
other diseases and conditions experience moderate to severe
pain without access to adequate treatment. These people face
severe suffering, often for months on end, and many eventually
die in pain, which is unnecessary and almost always preventable
and treatable. People who may not be able to adequately express
their pain – such as children and people with intellectual dis-
abilities or with consciousness impairments – are especially at
risk of receiving inadequate pain treatment.
2. It is important to acknowledge the indirect consequences of in-
adequate pain treatment, such as a negative economic impact, as
well as the individual human suffering directly resulting from
untreated pain.
3. In most cases, pain can be stopped or relieved with inexpensive
and relatively simple treatment interventions, which can dra-
matically improve the quality of life for patients.
4. It is accepted that some pain is particularly difficult to treat and
requires the application of complex techniques by, for example,
multidisciplinary teams. Sometimes, especially in cases of severe
chronic pain,psycho-emotional factors are even more important
than biological factors.
5. Lack of education for health professionals in the assessment
and treatment of pain and other symptoms, and unnecessarily
restrictive government regulations (including limiting access to
opioid pain medications) are two major reasons for this treat-
ment gap.
PRINCIPLES
6. The right to access to pain treatment for all people without dis-
crimination, as laid down in professional standards and guide-
lines and in international law, should be respected and effec-
tively implemented.
7. Physicians and other health care professionals have an ethical
duty to offer proper clinical assessments to patients with pain
and to offer appropriate treatment, which may require prescrib-
ing medications – including opioid analgesics – as medically
indicated. This also applies to children and other patients who
cannot always adequately express their pain.
8. Instruction on pain management, including clinical training
lectures and practical cases, should be included in mandatory
curricula and continuing education for physicians and other
health professionals. Such education should include evidence-
based therapies effective for pain, both pharmacological and
non-pharmacological. Education about opioid therapy for pain
should include the benefits and risks of the therapy. Safety con-
cerns regarding opioid therapy should be emphasized to allow
the use of adequate doses of analgesia while mitigating detri-
mental effects of the therapy. Training should also include rec-
ognition of pain in those who may not be able to adequately
express their pain, including children, and cognitively impaired
and mentally challenged individuals.
9. Governments must ensure the adequate availability of controlled
medicines, including opioids, for the relief of pain and suffering.
Governmental drug control agencies should recognize severe
and/or chronic pain as a serious and common health care issue
and appropriately balance the need to relieve suffering with the
potential for the illegal use of analgesic drugs. Under the right
to health, people facing pain have a right to appropriate pain
management, including effective medications such as morphine.
Denial of pain treatment violates the right to health and may be
medically unethical.
10. Many countries lack necessary economic, human and logistic
resources to provide optimal pain treatment to their population.
The reasons for not providing adequate pain relief must there-
fore be fully clarified and made public before accusations of vio-
lating the right to health are made.
11. International and national drug control policies should balance
the need for adequate availability and accessibility of controlled
medicines like morphine and other opioids for the relief of pain
and suffering with efforts to prevent the misuse of these con-
trolled substances. Countries should review their drug control
policies and regulations to ensure that they do not contain pro-
visions that unnecessarily restrict the availability and accessibil-
ity of controlled medicines for the treatment of pain. Where
unnecessarily or disproportionately restrictive policies exist,they
should be revised to ensure the adequate availability of con-
trolled medicines.
12. Each government should provide the necessary resources for the
development and implementation of a national pain treatment
plan, including a responsive monitoring mechanism and process
for receiving complaints when pain is inadequately treated.
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WMA Statement on Health
Hazards of Tobacco Products and
Tobacco-Derived Products
Adopted by the 40th
World Medical Assembly, Vienna, Austria, Septem-
ber 1988 and amended by the 49th
WMA General Assembly, Hamburg,
Germany, November 1997 the 58th
WMA General Assembly, Copenha-
gen, Denmark, October 2007 and the 62nd
General Assembly, Montevi-
deo, Uruguay, October 2011
PREAMBLE
More than one in three adults worldwide (more than 1.1 billion
people) smokes, 80 percent of whom live in low- and middle-in-
come countries. Smoking and other forms of tobacco use affect ev-
ery organ system in the body, and are major causes of cancer, heart
disease, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, fetal damage,
and many other conditions. Five million deaths occur worldwide
each year due to tobacco use. If current smoking patterns continue,
it will cause some 10 million deaths each year by 2020 and 70 per-
cent of these will occur in developing countries.Tobacco use was re-
sponsible for 100 million deaths in the 20th
century and will kill one
billion people in the 21st
century unless effective interventions are
implemented. Furthermore, secondhand smoke – which contains
more than 4000 chemicals, including more than 50 carcinogens and
many other toxins – causes lung cancer, heart disease, and other ill-
nesses in nonsmokers.
The global public health community, through the World Health
Organization (WHO), has expressed increasing concern about the
alarming trends in tobacco use and tobacco-attributable disease. As
of 20 September 2007, 150 countries had ratified the Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), whose provisions call
for ratifying countries to take strong action against tobacco use by
increasing tobacco taxation, banning tobacco advertising and pro-
motion, prohibiting smoking in public places and worksites, imple-
menting effective health warnings on tobacco packaging, improv-
ing access to tobacco cessation treatment services and medications,
regulating the contents and emissions of tobacco products, and
eliminating illegal trade in tobacco products.
Exposure to secondhand smoke occurs anywhere smoking is per-
mitted: homes, workplaces, and other public places. According to
the WHO, some 200,000 workers die each year due to exposure
to smoke at work, while about 700 million children, around half
the world’s total, breathe air polluted by tobacco smoke, particularly
in the home. Based on the evidence of three recent comprehensive
reports (the International Agency for Research on Cancer’s Mono-
graph 83, Tobacco Smoke and Involuntary Smoking; the United
States Surgeon General’s Report on The Health Consequences of
Involuntary Exposure to Tobacco Smoke; and the California Envi-
ronmental Protection Agency’s Proposed Identification of Environ-
mental Tobacco Smoke as a Toxic Air Contaminant), on May 29,
2007, the WHO called for a global ban on smoking at work and in
enclosed public places.
The tobacco industry claims that it is committed to determining the
scientific truth about the health effects of tobacco, both by conduct-
ing internal research and by funding external research through jointly
funded industry programs.However,the industry has consistently de-
nied, withheld, and suppressed information concerning the deleteri-
ous effects of tobacco smoking. For many years the industry claimed
that there was no conclusive proof that smoking tobacco causes dis-
eases such as cancer and heart disease. It has also claimed that nico-
tine is not addictive.These claims have been repeatedly refuted by the
global medical profession, which because of this is also resolutely op-
posed to the massive advertising campaigns mounted by the industry
and believes strongly that the medical associations themselves must
provide a firm leadership role in the campaign against tobacco.
The tobacco industry and its subsidiaries have for many years sup-
ported research and the preparation of reports on various aspects of
tobacco and health. By being involved in such activities, individual
researchers and/or their organizations give the tobacco industry an
appearance of credibility even in cases where the industry is not able
to use the results directly in its marketing. Such involvement also
raises major conflicts of interest with the goals of health promotion.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The WMA urges the national medical associations and all physi-
cians to take the following actions to help reduce the health hazards
related to tobacco use:
1. Adopt a policy position opposing smoking and the use of to-
bacco products, and publicize the policy so adopted.
2. Prohibit smoking, including use of smokeless tobacco, at all
business, social, scientific, and ceremonial meetings of the Na-
tional Medical Association, in line with the decision of the
World Medical Association to impose a similar ban at all its
own such meetings.
3. Develop, support, and participate in programs to educate the
profession and the public about the health hazards of tobacco
use (including addiction) and exposure to secondhand smoke.
Programs aimed at convincing and helping smokers and smoke-
less tobacco users to cease the use of tobacco products and pro-
grams for non-smokers and non-users of smokeless tobacco
products aimed at avoidance are both important.
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WMA newsUNITED STATES
4. Encourage individual physicians to be role models (by not using to-
bacco products) and spokespersons for the campaign to educate the
public about the deleterious health effects of tobacco use and the
benefits of tobacco-use cessation.Ask all medical schools,biomedi-
cal research institutions, hospitals, and other health care facilities
to prohibit smoking, use of smokeless tobacco on their premises.
5. Introduce or strengthen educational programs for medical stu-
dents and physicians to prepare them to identify and treat to-
bacco dependence in their patients.
6. Support widespread access to evidence-based treatment for to-
bacco dependence – including counselling and pharmacother-
apy – through individual patient encounters, cessation classes,
telephone quit-lines, web-based cessation services, and other
appropriate means.
7. Develop or endorse a clinical practice guideline on the treat-
ment of tobacco use and dependence.
8. Join the WMA in urging the World Health Organization to
add tobacco cessation medications with established efficacy to
the WHO’s Model List of Essential Medicines.
9. Refrain from accepting any funding or educational materials
from the tobacco industry, and to urge medical schools, research
institutions, and individual researchers to do the same, in order
to avoid giving any credibility to that industry.
10. Urge national governments to ratify and fully implement the
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in order to protect
public health.
11. Speak out against the shift in focus of tobacco marketing from
developed to less developed nations and urge national govern-
ments to do the same.
12. Advocate the enactment and enforcement of laws that:
• provide for comprehensive regulation of the manufacture,sale,
distribution, and promotion of tobacco and tobacco-derived
products, including the specific provisions listed below.
• require written and pictorial warnings about health hazards to
be printed on all packages in which tobacco products are sold
and in all advertising and promotional materials for tobacco
products. Such warnings should be prominent and should
refer those interested in quitting to available telephone quit-
lines, websites, or other sources of assistance.
• prohibit smoking in all enclosed public places (including
health care facilities, schools, and education facilities), work-
places (including restaurants, bars and nightclubs) and public
transport. Mental health and chemical dependence treatment
centers should also be smoke-free. Smoking in prisons should
not be permitted.
• ban all advertising and promotion of tobacco and tobacco-
derived products.
• encourage the development of plain packaging legislation
• prohibit the sale, distribution, and accessibility of cigarettes,
and other tobacco products to children and adolescents. Ban
the production, distribution and sale of candy products that
depict or resemble tobacco products.
• prohibit smoking on all commercial airline flights within
national borders and on all international commercial airline
flights, and prohibit the sale of tax-free tobacco products at
airports and all other locations.
• prohibit all government subsidies for tobacco and tobacco-
derived products.
• provide for research into the prevalence of tobacco use and the
effects of tobacco products on the health status of the popula-
tion.
• prohibit the promotion, distribution, and sale of any new
forms of tobacco products that are not currently available.
• increase taxation of tobacco products, using the increased rev-
enues for prevention programs, evidence-based cessation pro-
grams and services, and other health care measures.
• curtail or eliminate illegal trade in tobacco products and the
sale of smuggled tobacco products.
• help tobacco farmers switch to alternative crops.
• urge governments to exclude tobacco products from interna-
tional trade agreements.
13. Recognize that tobacco use may lead to pediatric disease be-
cause of the harm done to children caused by tobacco use and
second-hand smoke exposure, the relationship of tobacco use by
children and exposure to adult tobacco use, and the existence
of effective interventions to reduce tobacco use. Special efforts
should be made by physicians to:
• provide tobacco-free environments for children
• target parents who smoke for tobacco cessation interventions
• promote programs that contribute to the prevention and de-
crease of tobacco use by youth
• control access to and marketing of tobacco products, and
• make pediatric tobacco-control research a high priority
14. Refuse to invest in companies or firms producing or promoting
the use or sale of tobacco.
WMA Declaration on Leprosy
Control around the World and
Elimination of Discrimination
against Persons affected by Leprosy
Adopted by the 62nd
WMA General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay,
October 2011
Leprosy is a widespread public health problem, with approximately
250,000 new cases diagnosed annually worldwide. It is a curable
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WMA news UNITED STATES
disease and after starting treatment, the chain of transmission is
interrupted. Leprosy is a disease that have been inadequately ad-
dressed from the point of view of investments in research and medi-
cal treatment.
The World Medical Association recommends to all National Medi-
cal Associations to defend the right of the people affected with
leprosy and members of their families, that they should be treated
with dignity and free from any kind of prejudice or discrimination.
Physicians, health professionals and civil society should be engaged
in combating all forms of prejudice and discrimination. Research
centres should acknowledge leprosy as a major public health prob-
lem, and continue to research this disease since there are still gaps
in understanding its patho-physiological mechanisms.These gaps in
knowledge may be overcome through the allocation of resources to
new research, which will contribute to more efficient control world-
wide. Medical schools, especially in countries with high prevalence
of leprosy, should enhance its importance in the curriculum. The
public, private, and civil sectors should unify their best efforts in
order to disseminate information that would counteract prejudice
towards leprosy and that acknowledges its curability.
WMA Resolution on Bahrain
Adopted by the 62nd
General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay,
October 2011
The WMA General Assembly notes that
A number of doctors, nurses and other health care professionals in
the Kingdom of Bahrain were arrested in March 2011 after the civil
unrest in that country and tried under emergency powers before
a special court, led by a military judge. Twenty of this group were
found guilty of a number of charges, on 29 September 2011 and
sentenced to fifteen, ten or five years’ imprisonment.
These trials failed to meet international standards for fair trials, in-
cluding the accused not being allowed to make statements in their
own defence, and their lawyers not being allowed to question all the
witnesses. Allegations from the accused and their lawyers of mis-
treatment, abuse and other human right violations during arrest and
while in detention have not been investigated.
While various criminal charges were brought it appears that the
major offence was treating all the patients who presented for care,
including leaders and members of the rebellion. Other charges ap-
pear to be closely related to providing such treatment and were, in
any case, not proven to the standard expected in court proceedings.
In treating patients without considering the circumstances of their
injury these health care professionals were honouring their ethical
duty as set out in the Declaration of Geneva.
The WMA welcomes the announcement by the government of
Bahrain of 6 October 2011 that all twenty will be re-tried before
a full civil court.
Therefore, the WMA requires that no doctor or other health care
professional be arrested, accused or tried for treating patients, re-
gardless of the origins of the patient’s injury or illness.
The WMA demands that all states understand, respect and honour
the concept of medical neutrality. This includes providing working
conditions which are as safe as possible, even under difficult circum-
stances, including armed conflict or civil unrest.
The WMA expects that if any individual, including health care pro-
fessionals, are subject to trial that there is due process of law in-
cluding during arrest, questioning and trial in accordance with the
highest standards of international law.
The WMA demands that states investigate any allegations of torture
or cruel and inhumane treatment by prisoners against its agents,and
act quickly to stop such abuses.
The WMA recommends that independent international assessors
are allowed to observe the trials and meet privately with the accused,
so that the state of Bahrain can prove to the watching world that the
future legal proceedings follow fair process.
The WMA recognises that health care workers and health care fa-
cilities are increasingly under attack during wars, conflicts and civil
unrest. We demand that states throughout the world recognise, re-
spect and honour principles of medical neutrality and their duty
to protect health care institutions and facilities for humanitarian
reasons.
WMA Resolution on the
Independence of National
Medical Associations
Adopted by the 62nd
WMA General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay,
October 2011
National medical associations are established to act as representa-
tives of their physicians, and to negotiate on their behalf, sometimes
as a trade union or regulatory body but also as a professional asso-
227
WMA newsUNITED STATES
ciation, representing the expertise of medical doctors in relation to
matters of public health and wellbeing.
They represent the views of the medical profession, including at-
tempting to ensure the practice of ethical medicine, the provision of
good quality medical care, and the adherence to high standards by
all practitioners.
These associations may also campaign or advocate on behalf of their
members, often in the field of public health. Such advocacy is not
always welcomed by governments who may consider the advocacy
to have oppositional politics attached, when in reality it is based
upon an understanding of the medical evidence and the needs of
patients and populations.
The WMA is aware that because of those advocacy efforts some
governments attempt to silence the medical association by placing
its own nominated representatives into positions of authority, to
subvert the message into one they are better able to tolerate.
The WMA denounces such action and demands that no govern-
ment interferes with the independent functioning of national medi-
cal associations.It encourages governments to understand better the
reasons behind the work of their national medical association, to
consider the medical evidence and to work with physicians to im-
prove the health and well being of their populations.
WMA Declaration of Montevideo
on Disaster Preparedness and
Medical Response
Adopted by the 62nd
WMA General Assembly, Montevideo, Uruguay,
October 2011
In the last decade, the attention of the world has been drawn to a
number of severe events which seriously tested and overwhelmed
the capacity of local healthcare and emergency medical response
systems. Armed conflicts, terrorist attacks and natural distasters
such as earthquakes, floods and tsunamies in various parts of the
world have not only affected the health of people living in these
areas but have also drawn the support and response of the interna-
tional community. Many National Medical Associations have sent
groups to assist in such disaster situations.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO) Center for
Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED),the frequency,
magnitude,and toll of natural disasters and terrorism have increased
throughout the world. In the previous century, about 3.5 million
people were killed worldwide as a result of natural disasters; about
200 million were killed as a result of human-caused disasters (e.g.,
wars, terrorism, genocides). Each year, disasters cause hundreds of
deaths and cost billions of dollars due to disruption of commerce
and destruction of homes and critical infrastructure.
Population vulnerability (e.g., due to increased population density,
urbanization, aging) has increased the risk of disasters and pub-
lic health emergencies. Globalization, which connects countries
through economic interdependencies, has led to increased interna-
tional travel and commerce. Such activity has also led to increased
population density in cities around the world and increased move-
ment of people to coastal areas and other disaster-prone regions.
Increases in international travel may speed the rate at which an
emerging infectious disease or bioterrorism agent spreads across the
globe. Climate change and terrorism have emerged as important
global factors that can influence disaster trends and thus require
continued monitoring and attention.
The emergence of infectious diseases, such as H1N1 influenza A
and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), and the recent ar-
rival of West Nile virus and monkey pox in the Western hemisphere,
reinforces the need for constant vigilance and planning to prepare
for and respond to new and unexpected public health emergencies.
The growing likelihood of terrorist-related disasters affecting large
civilian populations affects all nations. Concern continues about the
security of the worldwide arsenal of nuclear, chemical, and biologi-
cal agents as well as the recruitment of people capable of manufac-
turing or deploying them. The potentially catastrophic nature of a
“successful” terrorist attack configures an event that may demand
a disproportionate amount of resources and healthcare profession-
als preparedness.. Natural disasters such as tornadoes, hurricanes,
floods, and earthquakes, as well as industrial and transportation-re-
lated catastrophes, are far more common and can also severely stress
existing medical, public health, and emergency response systems.
In light of recent world events, it is increasingly clear that all physi-
cians need to become more proficient in the recognition, diagnosis,
and treatment of mass casualties under an all-hazards approach to
disaster management and response. They must be able to recognize
the general features of disasters and public health emergencies, and
be knowledgeable about how to report them and where to get more
information should the need arise. Physicians are on the front lines
when dealing with injury and disease-whether caused by microbes,
environmental hazards, natural disasters, highway collisions, terror-
ism, or other calamities. Early detection and reporting are critical
to minimize casualties through astute teamwork by public- and
private-sector health and emergency response personnel.
228
Social Determinants of Health WHO
When the Global Commission on the
Social Determinants of Health (Closing
the Gap in a Generation) reported to the
WHO in 2009, one of its recommendations
was that a global conference should be held
to take forward its recommendations, to de-
liver commitments from governments and
to ensure that learning from the commis-
sion report and subsequent actions in differ-
ent countries became embedded in govern-
mental strategies.
In October, the conference was held in Rio
de Janeiro. Hosted by the government of
Brazil working with the WHO, the confer-
ence was an opportunity for activists, health
care professionals and governments to come
together and share this important agenda.
The conference was the largest WHO
has pulled together since Alma Ata. Over
120 countries were present with ministers
from the majority attending the ministe-
rial “stream”. The question is whether Rio
will become as seminal an event and the
Rio Declaration as much of a “must read”
for generations of health workers and policy
advisers.
There could be no doubt from the opening
of the conference that the government of
Brazil “got it”. The various ministers, gov-
ernors and the acting President (or their
respective speech writers) understood that
this is not about simple inequities in health
care access, but in the fundamental bases of
health, wellbeing and prosperity. Poverty,
education, access to education, housing, and
work all matter; equitable access to health
care complements these elements.
As Sir Michael Marmot states in his report,
it is the conditions into which we are born
and in which we grow, learn, live, work and
age, that shape our expectation of health.
It is by action within areas including the
environment, housing and transport poli-
cies, access to employment, education, to
food, clean water and sanitation that we
can have an impact on children not yet
born, and from their birth throughout their
lives. Medicine and the delivery of health
care can pick up some of the pieces, make
good some elements of loss or damage but it
cannot remove the differences these factors
make to the lifelong expectations of health
in people born into different circumstances.
In Brazil, we heard of work to raise tens of
millions of people out of poverty; an essen-
tial step in securing the environmental and
other factors that will promote health rather
than cause illness. Reducing poverty means
an improvement in living conditions every
day for individuals, families and communi-
The WMA, representing the doctors of the world, calls upon its
members to advocate for the following:
• To promote a standard competency set to ensure consistency
among disaster training programs for physicians across all special-
ties. Many NMAs have disaster courses and previous experiences
in disaster response. These NMAs can share this knowledge and
advocate for the integration of some standardized level of training
for all physicians, regardless of specialty or nationality.
• To work with national and local governments to establish or up-
date regional databases and geographic mapping of information
on health system assets, capacities, capabilities, and logistics to
assist medical response efforts,domestically and worldwide,when
needed.This could include information on local response organi-
zations, the condition of local hospitals and health system infra-
structures, endemic and emerging diseases, and other important
public health and clinical information to assist medical response
in the event of a disaster. In addition, systems for communicating
directly with physicians and other front line health care providers
should be identified and strengthened.
• To work with national and local governments to ensure the devel-
oping and testing of disaster management plans for clinical care
and public health including the ethical basis for delivering such
plans.
• To encourage governments at national and local levels to work
across normal departmental and other boundaries in developing
the necessary planning.
The WMA could serve as a channel of communication for NMAs
during such times of crisis, enabling them to coordinate activities
and work together.
Report on the World Conference on the
Social Determinants of Health
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 19–21 October 2011
Vivienne Nathanson
229
WHO Social Determinants of Health
ties. But financial, power and resource dif-
ferences remain in every society.
The gradients seen in every health and well-
being measurement between the richest and
poorest, the best and least well educated,
those employed and those under or unem-
ployed, the powerful and the powerless all
remain. In countries where such social dif-
ference are relatively small, such as Finland,
the differences between those with power,
resources, money, education and so on and
those without are relatively small. In most
countries, where such differences can be
very large, the differences can be enormous.
The conference heard examples of differ-
ences within countries; in Glasgow, Scot-
land a 28 year difference in male life expec-
tancy for those born a mere five kilometres
apart. Similar pictures exist everywhere, but
not always this extreme, and disparities also
exist between countries. The North/South
divide is seen in social determinants terms,
with the poorest countries showing the low-
est life and health expectancies. As well as
the gradients between countries, even the
poorest country has gradients within it.
Concentrating efforts to improve health and
wellbeing on the poorest means missing out
on the opportunity to help those just a little
higher up the income, social class and other
ladders, who are also falling far short of the
best. This means either we tailor many dif-
ferent plans to deal with people in different
groups or we work in a different manner to
deal first with the underpinning causes of
the causes of ill health.
If, in all our countries, we could not only re-
duce absolute poverty but ensure that the in-
equitable distribution of wealth, power and
resources was lessened, producing a flatter
curve on all these variables, we would be go-
ing a long way towards producing better dai-
ly living conditions for all our populations.
If that work looked not only at our own
countries but considered global resources,
we would be able to affect the inequities be-
tween countries as well as within them.
But these interventions are not things that
can be undertaken by one group alone.
Time after time throughout the conference,
speakers referred to working across disci-
plines, across government departments and
across natural boundaries. The silo mental-
ity of thinking will not and cannot work.
For doctors this is an interesting challenge.
We are amongst the best educated members
of our societies. Our education is focused
on health and illness; thinking about well-
being requires changing our mind-frames
and normal spheres of reference. But our
strength is that we are trained to examine
the evidence, to consider trends, statistics,
evidence bases and information and to criti-
cally appraise it. We are also well versed in
the importance of evidence and of testing,
monitoring and reviewing actions and ac-
tivities.This will be essential as policy shifts
strategically. If we fail to measure and to
critically appraise and evaluate actions, we
will fail to make effective policies.
So what was said at
the conference?
Firstly, and of course, every speaker recog-
nised the importance of SDH, and of a so-
cial determinants based approach to health.
Equally, however, it was clear that many of
the speakers, especially those representing
health ministries, were struggling with the
concept, and were too willing to revert to
discussing methods of dealing with inequi-
ties in access to health care.
One interesting technique used at the con-
ference was to have a journalist interview
speakers, rather than having too many
“talking heads”.Zeinab Badawi of the BBC,
who hosts their daily World News and the
series Hard Talk, filled several linked roles.
On the opening day, immediately after the
formal opening session, she chaired a panel
in which she asked questions of a number of
speakers. Her questions were incisive, dem-
onstrated a real knowledge of the subject,
and as with good journalism attempted to
get real answers from the politicians on the
panel.
At the opening of the second day, she
showed a film she had made in Rio and else-
where talking to the public and highlight-
ing the huge differences in life and health
expectancy within and between countries.
Based as she is in the UK, she picked up
the Glasgow example where life expectan-
cy in men can vary by 28 years depending
upon where they are born, live, work and
age. There are many factors that adversely
affect boys born into this part of Glasgow.
They include the greatly increased risks of
premature death due to violence, suicide
and drug use, including alcohol and tobac-
co. There are also other factors common in
the poorest populations in developed world
countries, such as low educational attain-
ment, poor employment prospects leading
to insecure employment, and poorly paid
employment. Housing is also worse for this
cohort. So there are many factors which can
in and of themselves lead to, for example,
little hope for a better future, and therefore
an increased risk of involvement in high risk
activities such as drug and alcohol abuse.
These factors seen in poverty are the causes
of the causes of ill health,and even the most
equitable health care system in the world
cannot deal with these factors and their
consequences.
The interesting experiment in Brazil, to
bring millions out of poverty, giving fami-
lies money and tokens to use to buy food,
household cleaners,and education,may well
make a difference that passes through gen-
erations.
The Brazilian minister emphasised that this
programme did not ignore the economic
context. Policies are holistic and consider
poverty and family allowances and seek to
ensure no back slipping in social policies.
They try to link human development with
230
Social Determinants of Health WHO
new jobs. Redistribution of resources has,
in Brazil, brought 28 million out of poverty
and into the middle classes. They have used
financial interventions to build up and un-
derpin minimum wages and family finances.
There is universal access to social and health
care services. Specific schemes include a
family tax credits schemes (conditional tax
allowances) for 50 million Brazilians, and
a programme which helps three million el-
derly. These schemes help to keep children
in school, and better nourished. They are
also still working to increase the minimum
wage and other social benefits. Brazil ac-
cepts that it cannot eradicate poverty, but it
is trying to improve incomes, opportunities,
education, social welfare and security and to
provide universal access, not least by target-
ing areas where poverty is rampant. Gains
are emblematic and practical.
There are still problems. As Ms Badawi
asked the minister, “Is there not a danger
that a male family member might take the
tokens by force to use to support, for exam-
ple, his alcohol habit?”, the reply was wor-
ryingly complacent, “This never happens.”
As doctors we know that even in the best
regulated system such abuses are inevitable;
the question for those running the system is
what you can do to minimise that risk,espe-
cially as it carries an increased level of risk to
the woman given the tokens, with the state
essentially increasing her likelihood of be-
ing a victim of abuse.
Soundbites from the opening
session included the following
from Margaret Chan
Margaret Chan of WHO stressed that
there are elements in what needs to be
done that stretch through all areas of life.
We must embed social equity into mindsets
and actions; if we succeed, we may have an
effect. Millions of lives are cut short as the
right policies are not in place. Governments
worldwide could lift more than a billion
people out of poverty. All governments have
a responsibility for the health of popula-
tions, which includes dealing with social
issues. How many do not have a safety net
to stop people from falling into poverty be-
cause of catastrophic medical bills?
Globalisation has benefits but has no rules
to ensure fair dispersal of those benefits.The
goal of advocates of globalisation is to pro-
duce benefits; consideration of the fair dis-
tribution is rarely an aim. The world is out
of balance in health terms. This also means
it is neither stable nor secure.
She went on to stress that there had been
two momentous events in 2011: the Arab
Spring and the UN conference on Non
Communicable Diseases. Left unchecked,
NCDs cancel out the benefits of moderni-
sation and break the bank.It is essential that
we tackle NCDs in all parts of the world. In
the less developed world, such diseases are
often diagnosed late. This can lead to cata-
strophic medical expenses for individuals
and their families, and cause billions of lost
incomes in terms of tax, as well as pushing
millions below the poverty line.
Big tobacco’s attempts to derail tobacco
policies continue and, in Dr. Chan’s view,
the tobacco industry has reached a new low.
The challenges are enormous. Will govern-
ments put the health of all people ahead of
the health of corporations? There are com-
pelling personal and economic reasons for
acting and, in many cases, we know what
works. The benefits of real success in re-
ducing the Social Determinants are a prize
worth fighting for.
Soundbites from Andreas
Laverdos, Health and Social
Solidarity Minister in Greece
He spoke about trying to maintain better so-
cial equity at a time of huge social and eco-
nomic pressures.It is widely known how bad
the economic problems in Greece are.There
is no time to hesitate; it is essential that the
government get it right, and lower the cost
of health care services while improving qual-
ity and equity. The health care system deals
with 30% more cases than before 2009, with
20% less resources.It is essential that Greece
decreases salaries and presses for better use
of human and physical resources. They are
seeking to assure the best buying of mate-
rials. They are also undertaking structural
reforms, merging hospitals and departments
within them, and upgrading the role of pri-
mary health care services.
They are also looking at who gets access to
the health care system and seeking to im-
prove public health. One practical example
is that the waiting list for drug detoxifica-
tion treatment used to be seven years and is
now one month.
An excellent question from Ms Badawi on
mental health in times of economic cri-
sis led to a brief discussion of the lack of
discussion of mental health at the NCD
summit. While all accept that time and
therefore the agenda was limited, there was
certainly concern in the hall that this essen-
tial area was omitted.
Soundbites from Kathleen
Sebbelius, Secretary for
Health in the USA
She explained that they are active in the
US at trying to improve health coverage for
marginalised peoples, including the elderly.
They are working to promote inter-sectoral
collaboration.
USA believes that working together we
can produce a better world. Social causes
of disease cost people and economies dear.
Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease cost
billions but very few health care dollars are
spent on prevention. The current trend is
231
Social Determinants of HealthWHO
that one in three children born in the USA
will suffer from diabetes; higher rates are
seen in Hispanic and African communities.
This is imposing an economic burden on us
all. The cost of poor health is continuing to
grow.
It is essential to have a broad agenda to
make sure every citizen has a chance to live
well. She went on to say that we must rec-
ognize that health is not a health care issue.
We must design neighbourhoods to make it
easier to walk and cycle. Every government
department is involved; every government
decision should be considered to establish
what the health consequences will be; an es-
sential tool for Health in All Policies.
Soundbites from Rebecca
Greenspan of UN
development agency
She identified some important areas for
understanding and action including that
poor people pay more for water, power
supplies, etc. She also stressed that women
are poor in terms of income and of time,
which is itself an important driver of poor
health.
During the discussion a number of other
important points were raised. Societal and
cultural influences are very important. Is-
sues such as access by women to reproduc-
tive and health rights are very important,
but no one seems to want to deal with this
topic.
The second session opened with
Ms Badawi’s film
and then interviews with
Sir Michael Marmot and
Kathleen Sebbelius
The discussion with Michael Marmot ad-
dressed the issue of prioritisation. With so
much needing to be done what do you do
first? How do you set priorities? What is the
most important action?
Sir Michael said we must first look at the
problem, and consider doing things such as
empowering and educating women, chang-
ing their life expectancy. We should recog-
nise that all differences in life expectancy
are preventable.
As a priority we must first determine to take
a life course approach, and then there are
priorities for all areas of that life course.
Ms Badawi asked how you do this in the
current global economic crisis. Sir Michael
commented that currently income inequali-
ties are increasing almost everywhere. But
governments can save money if they im-
prove early child development and educa-
tion. Giving all children better education
increases happiness, and, for example, leads
to less civil disruption including riots. Ev-
ery dollar spent on early child development
saves seven; this is good news economically.
We cannot afford not to do this.
We are at a time of dramatic change. We
now recognise this is not only about pov-
erty and absolute deprivation. We are also
seeing the gradient in health. The nature
and content of our discussions has changed
dramatically, hence the agenda for the
global commission. Individuals must be at
the centre of our considerations. We must
seek to empower people and create the con-
ditions for individual to have control over
their lives, which requires changes to social
conditions.
In a second interview setting the scene for
the day of workshops, Kathleen Sebbelius
was interviewed.
The main determinants in US are poverty
and education. While poverty crosses all
racial and ethnic groups, leading are native
Americans, African Americans and His-
panic people. They have more poverty with
worse health outcomes. 1/3 of white chil-
dren are obese, 40% of African Americans
and Hispanic people are obese. In response
to a question as to what health problems
have arisen from neglect of NCDs, Secre-
tary Sebbelius stated that as well as health
costs there are workplace costs associated
with absenteeism. These costs amount to
two and a half trillion dollars a year. Presi-
dent Obama cannot fix the US economy
without first fixing health and health care.
The major cause of personal bankruptcy in
the USA is health care costs. 2 1/2 trillion
dollars on health are each year. Obama can-
not fix the economy without fixing health
and health care. Major reason for bankrupt-
cy is health care costs.
Her department is now working in this
area. One major focus is on prevention,
wellness, etc recruiting more providers
with cultural competency in barrio culture
to access those traditionally hard to reach
with health promotion interventions.There
is a new focus on health and wellness in
schools, reintroducing exercise classes and
changing school diets. Identification of this
strategy to improving health is now better
resourced.
The conference then broke into different
streams, with workshop presentations and
discussions.
Although the conference was meant to be
inclusive, it was noticeable that at each of
Dr. Margaret Chan,
WHO Director –
General
Prof. Sir Michael
Marmot
232
WHOSocial Determinants of Health
the workshops a wide panel of presenters
each spoke, followed by questions clearly
flagged up in advance; many respondents
reading out pre-prepared answers. Few if
any questions were taken from the floor,
leaving the large numbers from civil society
organisations and non-governmental or-
ganisations frustrated at the lack of interest
in their views.
It was also noticeable that in answering
questions, even those partially or wholly
scripted, some speakers slipped into the old
concept and reverted to discussing equitable
access to health care, not equitable access
to health. One minister was asked about
whether educating women was important
and responded, that it was at that made
them better able to understand hygiene in
the home! While we have come a long way
in getting governments to speak about and
espouse the cause of SDH, it is clear that
many still fail to understand the core con-
cepts. On the final morning, Ms Badawi
opened with a short film of interviews with
people attending the conference and then
interviews with a panel.
During this and a subsequent high level
panel session chaired by Riz Khan of Al
Jazeera, groups representing public and
calling for a stronger voice for people made
their voices heard.
A few short soundbites are set out below.
• Good governance brings transparency for
public participation and leadership.
• Why is there a ten year gap in life expec-
tancy between indigenous people and the
rest of the population of Canada?
• We must deal with inequities. Health eq-
uity is a justice issue. And it is one that is
cost effective to deal with.
• If countries addressed global commis-
sion’s recommendations, they would
improve the equity issue. A life cycle
approach is at the centre of UNFPA ap-
proach.
• 50% of maternal deaths happen in Africa
which has just 14% of world population.
Why?
• Why are trade and food insecurity not in
the Rio declaration? Agricultural subsi-
dies are rampant and hugely increase food
insecurity.
• We must consider unfair trade in health
personnel. Africa and Asia are being
stripped of their skilled personnel. We
should look at compensation for brain
robbery.
• Migration is an underconsidered issue.
There are 214 million international mi-
grants and 740 million internal migrants,
eg in China. Migrants almost always ig-
nored including in global commission on
SDH. Since 1980s has been a feminisa-
tion of migrants.
At this point, there were some few ques-
tions from the floor, including a sideswipe
at politicians, accused of being corrupt and
bought off by commercial organisations
such as tobacco and alcohol industries.
During the final session, another element
that arose was the needs of indigenous
peoples. These groups are, in every country,
likely to be those at the bottom of the gra-
dient in health and wellbeing. The reasons
are often very similar; they are often in the
worst housing, with the highest rates of
poor educational achievement and therefore
poor employment opportunities. In addi-
tion, in many countries they may have a far
higher than average rate of alcohol or other
drug dependence, which in addition to dire
health consequences further reduces their
opportunity to get and keep well paid em-
ployment. As a group, they are often seri-
ously distanced from the wishes and aspira-
tions of the rest of society,leading to further
social distancing and isolation. Their social
and cultural values may be dismissed by the
larger society. To our shame, many societies
do not care about this distancing,and rather
than seeing it as something that the whole
society should address, seeking a solution
that works for all social and cultural groups,
President of WMA Dr. José Luiz Gomes Do Amaral (first from the right) during the discussion
233
Psychological TherapiesGREAT BRITAIN
It is well known that both new diagnoses
of psychiatric disorders and the suicide rate
have gone up alarmingly since the recent
world financial crisis began, but the back-
ground psychiatric morbidity in most of
Europe was already of concern. This paper
looks at a previously relatively poorly served
part of South London, which developed
comprehensive psychological therapies ser-
vices over the last decade. Comparisons are
drawn with potential service development
in Latvia and other similar states.
Currently about 18% of the adult popula-
tion of England has at least one common
mental disorder. A similar proportion expe-
riences “subthreshold symptoms” [1]. An-
other survey found that 27% of the adult
EU population had a mental disorder in the
last year [2].
The King’s Fund,an organisation in England
which researches important questions of
funding, did a large survey of costs to soci-
ety of mental health problems in 2006.They
looked at what might be described as “service
costs”which included direct health and social
care expenses.They added in, where possible,
the expenses related to other “informal care”,
and the criminal justice system. They also
estimated costs to the state, especially the
costs of lost employment.The current service
costs for treating mental health disorders is
around £22.5 billion pounds per year, whilst
the cost of lost employment currently is £26
billion per year. There are estimates which
add in other costs (e.g. time lost to work by
family members looking after their unwell
relatives). These estimates put the true total
costs many times higher.In the EU,other re-
searchers have found that the vast majority of
the cost of mental ill health is not treatment.
These studies looked at indirect costs marked
by the loss of productivity due to early death,
premature death or early retirement all of
which mount up. The low direct costs of
treatment contrast to the typical picture for
somatic disorders.
The King’s Fund estimated various costs as-
sociated with depression, anxiety and per-
sonality disorders [8]. Something like 1.24
million people have a diagnosis of depres-
What can be Gained by
Developing Psychological Therapies
for the General Public?
Anita Timans
societies may further reject their indigenous
people.
And then, in the final session, the Rio Dec-
laration was adopted. It is remarkably quiet
in its references to the Global Commission
report which led to the conference; perhaps
the leadership is not ready to take on vested
interests, including those of the 1% who
control so much of global resources. Those
of us who were not part of national delega-
tions came away revitalised and reinvigorat-
ed, with new contacts, new role models and
renewed hope that we can make a difference.
As Peter Carmel of the American Medical
Association says of Michael Marmot, he
is a quiet revolutionary. The need for that
revolution is real and profound. Unless we
change the way in which all our societies
consider the rights of all, and then act on
those values to produce systems in which
every person has an opportunity to thrive
throughout their life, then we will continue
to see gradients in health and wellbeing.
These gradients are worsening in many
countries where new techniques, knowledge
and actions that improve the likelihood of
achieving a good health outcome are the
advantage most often taken by the educated
élites. They therefore enjoy the best health
improvements. To reduce the gradients, we
must get the least well educated,the least af-
fluent to aspire to better health, to demand
educational and employment opportunities
and to follow that with improved access to
health promotion and ill health prevention
as well as treatment for existing illness.
There are elements of good news. As Mar-
mot told Zeinab Badawi, every dollar spent
on child health improvement reaps a seven
dollar reward so even the most reluctant
politician may see the financial sense, if not
the moral imperative. But the best news is
that social movements to change the world,
to give everyone a vice and an opportuni-
ty are spreading like wildfire. Change will
happen, with or without governments. The
people will make sure that we do “Close the
Gap” in a generation. Michael Marmot’s
quiet revolution is underway.
Prof. Vivienne Nathanson
Director of Professional
activities in Health,
British Medical Association
234
Psychological Therapies GREAT BRITAIN
sion. The costs for treatment for depression
in England in 2007 were approximately £1.7
billion. Lost employment brings the total
cost to £7.5 billion. This doesn’t include all
the other associated costs. The number of
people with anxiety disorders is estimated
to be 2.3 million.The costs of treatment and
for lost employment are about £8.9 billion.
The prevalence of personality disorders in
the community is estimated to be at least
5.8%. Thus at least 2.5 million people have
a significant personality disorder. With lost
employment,the costs come up to £8 billion
for 2007.
In 2000,it was estimated that mental health
could cost as much as 3 to 4% of the GNP
of the EU states [3]. In 2006, the cost of
depression corresponded to 1% of the total
economy of Europe (GDP) [4]. Typically
the early onset, high prevalence, persistence,
and low treatment rates lead to high levels
of disability in most EU countries.
Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) are
a measure of overall disease burden, and
the number of years lost due to ill health,
disability or early death. DALYs combine
mortality and morbidity into a single com-
mon measure.The WHO (2008) figures for
the UK in percentages are for cancer 16%,
cardiovascular disease 16.2% and mental
disorder 23%.
It has been found that mental health prob-
lems occupy at least one third of family
doctor’s time. In the UK no other health
condition matches mental ill health in the
combined extent of prevalence, persistence
and breadth of impact. The reach of poor
mental health is very wide [6]. It is not only
on the patient, but the patients’families and
community in general. For instance, chil-
dren of parents with mental health prob-
lems can become young carers, and damage
their own future mental health prospects.
The effects also include poor educational
outcomes for adults, and school dropouts
among the children of those with mental
health disorders.
Of course, there can be serious problems
with employment. Sickness absence and
chronic underperformance build up to a
very significant matter for both patients
and their employer. There is an association
between poor mental health and poor diet,
less exercise,more smoking,and alcohol and
drug misuse which all have further conse-
quences. Then there are the impacts on
physical health. Patients with mental health
difficulties in general suffer from reduced
life expectancy. Depression is, for instance,
associated with 50% increased mortal-
ity from all deaths. Anti-social behaviour
of various types can be a consequence. Of
course, there is the stigma and discrimina-
tion suffered by many with psychiatric dis-
orders, which can become prolonging fac-
tors themselves.
In June 2006, the London School of Eco-
nomics (LSE) produced a major report on
depression and anxiety in the general popu-
lation. This stated, “Crippling depression
and chronic anxiety are the biggest causes of
misery in Britain today… They are the great
submerged problem which shame keeps out
of sight.In Britain,only one in four of those
who suffer from depression or chronic anxi-
ety receives any kind of help.This is a waste
of people’s lives, and it is also costing a lot
of money. The depression and anxiety make
it difficult or impossible to work and drive
people onto benefits” [7].
In Britain, it is noted we now have a mil-
lion people on Incapacity Benefits because
of mental illness. Whilst there are patients
who have a diagnosis of schizophrenia,
the great majority of the claimants have
depression, anxiety disorders, and mixed
depression and anxiety. There is another
group of people not covered directly by the
LSE report. These are the patients with a
diagnosis of personality disorder or diffi-
culties. It seems likely that many patients
with chronic depression and anxiety may
have elements of personality difficulties
“hidden behind” the primary diagnosis.
It is this which sometimes makes them
harder to treat. Of course, the costs of
psychosomatic disorders should not be
forgotten.
Whilst depression and anxiety account for
a third of all disability in mental health dis-
orders, they attract only a small percentage
of health expenditure. Most finance usually
goes to patients who suffer from schizo-
phrenia or bipolar affective disorder and, of
course, dementia.
There is also a great deal of evidence on how
depression/anxiety in particular effect the
quality of life in the Primary Care popula-
tion [9]. Anxiety and depressive symptoms
have been found to be significantly associ-
ated with difficulties in all domains of qual-
ity of life. As anxiety or depressive symp-
toms increase, the quality of life decreases.
Furthermore, patients with moderate to se-
vere anxiety or depressive symptoms suffer
greater impairments in most quality of life
domains than those with congestive heart
failure or diabetes.
Mental well-being has increasingly been
used as another way to look at mental
health.There are numerous ways of describ-
ing mental well-being. The simplest defini-
tion of wellness is as an absence of mental
ill health and thus the absence of the conse-
quences noted earlier.
A well-known model is that of Myers,
Sweeney and Witmer [10]. After review-
ing literature from multiple disciplines, they
concluded that wellness is:
a way of life oriented toward optimal health
and well-being, in which body, mind, and
spirit are integrated by the individual to live
life more fully within the human and natu-
ral community. Ideally, it is the optimum
state of health and well-being that each in-
dividual is capable of achieving.
They divided the characteristics, which have
been noted in good mental health, into
twelve domains. These are having a sense
235
Psychological TherapiesGREAT BRITAIN
of worth, sense of control, realistic beliefs,
emotional awareness and coping, problem
solving and creativity abilities, a sense of
humour, balanced nutrition, adequate exer-
cise, appropriate self-care, ability to manage
stress, a sense of gender identity, and a sense
of cultural identity.
Studies on well-being in Europe give fas-
cinating insights into the different cultural
environments, the wealth and the history
of individual countries. Improving mental
well-being has been shown to improve re-
silience to a broad range of adversity, reduce
physical and mental illness plus health care
use and mortality [11,12].
As one might expect, the benefits outside
health include improved educational out-
comes, reduced anti-social behaviour and
substance misuse, healthier lifestyle/re-
duced risk factors plus increased produc-
tivity in work and elsewhere and stronger
social relationships.
There is an increasing understanding that
we need to have wider mental health strate-
gies, which emphasises good mental health
is essential for everyone [13]. It is hoped
that more people will have good mental
and physical health and recover if they have
been ill, plus experience less stigma and dis-
crimination.
Many governments have been looking at
a variety of ways to improve services for
mental health patients. This has generated
considerable work on evidence bases for the
psychological therapies, their cost-effective-
ness and outcomes of therapy at local and
wider levels.
The United Kingdom government are in-
tending to improve mental health services,
and in particular psychological therapy ser-
vices by trying to put patients at the centre
in shared decision making, giving choice
and information to patients and by making
sure there is quality at the centre of the psy-
chological therapies service. Patient choice
is taken seriously in the United Kingdom.
Emphasis is given to aspects of care such
as easy access to services, and special re-
quirements of minority groups of various
descriptions. It has, for instance, proven
harder for men to take their mental health
seriously, and indeed for service provid-
ers to take men’s mental health seriously
enough.
This is not to dismiss other important as-
pects of care especially for patients with
depression. These are notably medication
and for more complex patients in particu-
lar – social care. This important work is al-
ready done in the UK, by psychiatrists and
their teams at the more complex level, and
by family doctors and nurses plus others at
primary care level.
Of course, depression can be well treated
by medication. For many patients, that is
an essential or an important part of the
treatment, and, of course, it is cost-effective.
Certainly there is excellent evidence of
medication being extremely useful for many
patients with psychiatric disorders. Some
patients want this and nothing else.
However, for many patients, the addition
of a psychological therapy to medication is
vital. There is also increasing evidence that
this is the case. For other patients, medica-
tion is not helpful, or makes a minimal im-
pact. Some find the side effects intolerable
or for some other reason find it impossible
to take it.
A substantial group of patients with de-
pressive, anxiety-related or psychosomatic
disorders have symptoms that are clearly
linked to previous history or current life
problems. The taking of medication is just
not a long-term solution to their difficul-
ties. There is increasing evidence that a va-
riety of psychotherapies are useful in treat-
ing such symptoms and disorders. Patients
with personality disorders rarely respond to
medication, except for some symptomatic
relief.Medication is actively discouraged for
patients with a diagnosis of personality dis-
order, according to recent United Kingdom
government guidance [14].
Setting up comprehensive psychological
therapies service for all who might want or
need them has got to be balanced against a
reality of what a country can afford at any
one time. Of course, not everything can
be done at the same time. However, cur-
rently the British Government is rolling
out a programme of services called “Im-
proving Access to Psychological Therapies”
(IAPTS) for the patients with primary care
level depression and anxiety disorders [15].
This is a service which works with general
practitioners. IAPTS treats all those who
need relatively brief psychological therapy
at Primary Care level. In our circumstanc-
es, Cognitive Behavioural Therapy and
Interpersonal Therapy initially formed the
great majority of this service. This comple-
mented the psychodynamic psychotherapy
available in the voluntary sector in the
United Kingdom. Interpersonal Therapy
can most conveniently be described as a
“relative” of Psychodynamic Psychothera-
py, though in a rather specialised focused
format. The remit of IAPTS has now ex-
panded to health-related and somewhat
more complex conditions. IAPTS has
added counselling of a short-term nature,
short-term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy,
couple work and a variety of problem solv-
ing type interventions to its portfolio. It is
set up to be closely linked to employment
services and involves the voluntary sector
to help people begin to think about a re-
turn to work or vocational training. De-
spite the current economic problems in
the United Kingdom, this continues to be
funded.
Traumatic events and losses are closely
linked to all the above mentioned condi-
tions, particularly personality and psycho-
somatic disorders. Attachment theorists
know that broken and disturbed early life
attachments can lead to lifelong difficul-
ties, but not only for those who suffer the
236
Psychological Therapies GREAT BRITAIN
traumas and losses.The effects can be trans-
generational, and thus can be passed to the
children of those who experienced them
originally. There is therefore a special need
in many highly traumatised states, given
their history, for the possibility to access
somewhat longer- term Psychodynamic
Psychotherapy, which particularly effective-
ly tackles such difficulties.There is,of course
now, a developing evidence base with excit-
ing prospects. A newer form of brief psy-
chodynamic psychotherapy, currently being
researched in the USA and Canada, looks
as if it will be particularly useful in treating
patients with medically unexplained symp-
toms [16]. The cost savings of such inter-
ventions could be massive if a significant
percentage of patients could improve their
functioning and, for instance, be less depen-
dent on relatives or even in the longer-term
return to work.
Psychodynamic Psychotherapy can also
make considerable changes to patients with
a wide variety of complex presentations at
secondary care level especially with trau-
matic, abusive or emotionally neglectful
backgrounds [17].
A good example of the changes brought
about by the government policies in the last
decade is that of Croydon, a large borough
in South London. Croydon has a popula-
tion of about 330,000 which is ethnically
and economically very diverse. It would be
unrealistic to say that everything is perfect
now or that anything has been achieved
without considerable work. Ten years ago,
there were relatively few psychological
therapy services for patients who had what
might be broadly called by the old-fash-
ioned term “neurotic disorders”, psychoso-
matic disorders and personality disorders
within the National Health Service. Some
psychologists covered parts of general
psychiatry, which in the main were rather
dated. There were some Primary Care level
therapists and opportunities for a number
of patients to find therapy in the voluntary
and private sectors.
The last decade has brought numerous de-
velopments at various levels of care. The
Croydon services now cover all levels of
psychological therapies from mild depres-
sion, anxiety and associated disorders, to
those suitable for extremely complex multi-
diagnostic patients with personality disor-
ders.There is a developing IAPTS.
A Croydon-wide department covers the
psychological therapy needs of secondary
care level patients who come mostly but not
solely from the general psychiatric services.
There is also an all-encompassing service
for patients with a diagnosis of personality
disorder or difficulty, with “built-in easy ac-
cess”. The work carried out by psychiatrists
and managers re-structuring the general
psychiatric services should not be mini-
mised, nor should the increasing volume of
work, mainly of psychodynamic nature
done in the voluntary sector. The voluntary
sector is, paradoxically, extensively support-
ed by the government. In Croydon, there is,
for instance, a particularly effective volun-
tary sector service for teenagers and young
adults up to the age of 25.
To achieve major change,however,adequate
funding was needed. This is essential if the
wider population is to be reached. Strong
leadership and excellent management skills
were also vital to ensure that services were
set up efficiently and remained highly com-
petent, but also cost-effective.
Outcome measuring is carried after treat-
ment, and for instance, within the psycho-
logical therapies service in Croydon signifi-
cant improvements in levels of depression,
anxiety and personality disorder have been
recorded. These are fed individually to pa-
tients and in collated form to patient rep-
resentative groups and those who fund the
services.
An area, which was often neglected in the
past, is that of the patients’ own wishes
about what would be particularly useful for
their problems in their particular locality.
The involvement of patients and their car-
ers or families has been invaluable. A wide
range of ways has been used to try and help
to obtain their views. There are, of course,
many complications with getting genuine
feedback from an appropriately wide range
of people. However, matters such as the
physical location of services and having ap-
propriate access for ethnic minorities have
been influenced for the benefit of the local
people.
However, some of the best expressions of
the change can be obtained from patients
themselves. The Croydon mental health
services run forums for patients to give
feedback, both good and bad, to those run-
ning the services. A patient recently talked
about how things had changed for her. She
began by saying that she had woken up next
to her husband, peeped in at her sleeping
child before going downstairs, having an
orange juice and some toast. As she ate, she
thought about her day’s work schedule. The
former patient noted that this was ordinary
for most people in the room, but for her
a few years before it would have been un-
imaginable. She had been a chaotic young
woman whose life was risky, and who se-
riously self- harmed on a regular basis, for
which she frequently attended the emer-
gency service at our local general hospi-
tal. She had significant mood swings, and
vicious arguments with anyone she knew
including boyfriends. She binge drank al-
cohol and her physical health was already
deteriorating. She had a significant Border-
line Personality Disorder. The chances of
her having a husband, let alone a child that
would not be taken into care by social ser-
vices,had seemed remote.The author of this
article was also involved in her psychologi-
cal treatment. She had come to the conclu-
sion that things just could not go on the way
they were. Most of the people at the patient
forum were deeply moved by what she said.
Of course, job insecurity, indebtedness and
unemployment have a major part to play
in the mental health of a nation’s people.
237
Tobacco HazardsTAIWAN
The amended Tobacco Hazards Prevention
Act in Taiwan was promulgated by the pres-
ident on July 11, 2007 and after 18 months
of grace period, it was put into effect on
January 11, 2009. It represents a revolution-
ary advance for Taiwan’s Tobacco Hazards
Prevention Act, and put Taiwan at the fore-
front of global tobacco control.
The amended Act focuses on enlarging the
scope of smoke free environments to include
indoor public places,indoor workplaces with
three or more people, public transportation
and even some outdoor place. Venues are
responsible for posting no smoking signs at
all entrances and other places as appropri-
ate, and ensuring that smoking parapher-
nalia is not installed. Violators can be fined
from NT$10,000 to 50,000 (approximately
US$ 350 to US$ 1,750). In addition to test
warnings, tobacco products are required to
carry one of six graphic warnings and smok-
ing cessation related information, and shall
not use words like “low tar”,“light”,or “mild”
A New Milestone for the Tobacco Hazards
Prevention Act
Bureau of Health Promotion, Department of Health, R.O.C. (Taiwan)
There is a well-known long-term associa-
tion between the wealth of a country and
broad mental health. As one would expect,
a higher level of wealth is associated with
a higher level of good mental health [18].
But, of course, this is not the entire picture.
More than the right economic changes are
needed to improve mental health.
The current economic pressures, signifi-
cant as they are, also reveal major un-
derlying problems. As Robert Kennedy
somewhat cheekily said in 1968, “Gross
National Product measures everything,
except that which makes life worthwhile”.
The main resource of any nation, of course,
is its people. The quality of their mental
health plays a vital part in the functioning
of the state.
Of course, there will be some people who
are either unwilling or unable to take on
any form of psychotherapy or indeed any
kind of treatment. There will be people on
whom it will have minimal effect. This is
true of all treatments in medicine.However,
if it is not possible to help ordinary citizens
who wish to change, and are brave enough
to want to attempt it, if it proves impossible
to help these people become more compas-
sionate adults who are satisfied with their
lives, then other changes seem really rather
pointless. Too many have been lost already.
As the patient said, “It really is time things
changed”.
References
1. McManus, S., Meltzer, H., Brugha, T., Beb-
bington, P., Jenkins, R. (2009) Adult Psychi-
atric Morbidity in England, 2007: results of a
household survey, National Centre for Social
Research.
2. Wittchen H U. Size and Burden of mental dis-
orders in Europe Official press Conference- 20th
ECNP Congress for Neuropsychopharmacol-
ogy in Vienna (Oct 13–17 2007).
3. Gabrielk P, Liimatainen, Mental Health in the
Workplace- International Labour Organization
Study (2000).
4. Sobocki P,Jonsson B,Angst J,Rehnberg C.Cost
of depression in Europe.J Mental Health Policy
Econ, 2006 Jun; 9(2):87–98.
5. WHO (2008) The Global Burden of Disease:
2004 update, available at:
www.who.int/healthinfo/ global_burden_dis-
ease
6. HM Government United Kingdom. No health
without Mental Health. A cross-government
mental health outcomes strategy for people of
all ages. (2011) 5–15.
7. The Centre for Economic Performance’s Mental
Health Policy Group The Depression Report. A
New Deal for Depression and Anxiety Disor-
ders. London School of Economics (2006).
8. McCrone P, Dhanasasiri S, Patel A, Knapp M,
Lawton-Smith S.The cost of mental health care
in England to 2026. The King’s Fund (2008)
xvii–xviii.
9. Brenes, G. Anxiety, Depression and Quality of
life in Primary Care Patients Prim Care Com-
panion J Clin Psychiatry 2007; 9: 437–443.
10. Myers J E, Sweeney T J Wellness in Counsel-
ling: An Overview. Professional Counselling
Digest 2007:1–2.
11. HM Government, United Kingdom. No health
without Mental Health. A cross-government
mental health outcomes strategy for people of
all ages (2011) 18–29.
12. Campion J. Mental Health Strategy and Public
Health White Paper-presentation (2011).
13. Michaelson J, Abdullah S, Steuer N, Thompson
S, Marks N. National Accounts of well being.
(2009). – www.nationalaccountsofwellbeing.org
and well-being@neweconomics.org
14. National Institute for Health and Clinical Ex-
cellence. Borderline Personality Disorder. Treat-
ment and Management (2009).
15. Improving access to psychological therapy: Ini-
tial evaluation of two UK demonstration sites.
Behaviour Research and Therapy. Clark D M,
Layard R, Smithies R, Richards D A, Suckling
R, Wright B 2009; 1-11.
16. Abbass A A, The cost-effectiveness of short-
term dynamic psychotherapy-Special report,
The Centre for Emotions and Health, Dalhou-
sie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. (Originally
Abbass, A (2003) Cost Effectiveness of Short-
term Dynamic Psychotherapy: Expert Rev.
Pharmacoeconomics Outcomes Res. 3(5), 2003,
535–539).
17. LeichsenringF,RabungS.EffectivenessofLong-
term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy. A Meta-
analysis. JAMA. 2008;300(13): 1551–1565.
18. http://www.eurofound.europa.eu/pubdocs/2008/
52/en/1/EF0852EN.pdf The Second Euro-
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Anita Timans,
MB BS, MRCPsych,
Member of Society
of Analytical Psychology
238
Tobacco Hazards TAIWAN
that might implicate less harmful health ef-
fects. To protect children and fetuses, preg-
nant women will not be allowed to smoke,
and people who provide tobacco products
to minors will face fines of NT$10,000 to
50,000 (approximately US$ 350 to US$
1,750). Tobacco hazards education will also
be provided to minors. Regulations govern-
ing tobacco promotions, advertising and
sponsorship have been strengthened as well.
Vendors are restricted on tobacco displays,
and fines have been greatly increased. Pen-
alties for illegal tobacco advertising have
been increased from NT$100,000–300,000
to NT$5 million–25 million (approxi-
mately US$ 3,500–10,500 to US$ 175,000–
875,000). In addition, tobacco manufac-
turers and distributors are now required to
disclose tobacco product contents, additives,
emissions, and their toxicity. People caught
smoking in non-smoking areas can be fined
NT$2,000–10,000 (approximately US$
70–350). The regulations governing the col-
lection and use of the Tobacco Health and
Welfare Surcharge have been amended,with
the surcharge now being used to fund ser-
vices for the underprivileged.
To carry out the new Tobacco Hazards
Prevention Act that took effect on Janu-
ary 11, 2009, schools, governmental agen-
cies, workplaces, and public places all must
be smoke-free. In order to accomplish this,
we have used education (law enforcement
and hotline staff training, FAQs, and in-
formation meetings) and promotional ma-
terials in a wide variety of media including
TV, radio, print, outdoor media (signs, TV
walls, public transport, public displays),
LED displays, websites, and banners. The
Smoke Free Public Places, 25 County and
Municipal Leaders Go All Out educational
film was also released on May 30, the eve of
World No Smoking Day. In order to secure
county and municipal support for the new
regulations,the Director General of the Bu-
reau of Health Promotion has visited eight
county and municipal leaders and held three
meetings with county and municipal health
officials. We have also conducted in-depth
investigations and training with local com-
panies in 25 counties and municipalities.
Role play exercise helped train personnel in
how to deal with potential issues that may
arise. In December 2008, 22 county and
municipal health bureaus hired 665 tempo-
rary workers to post no smoking signs and
hand out promotional materials. 485 tobac-
co control volunteer training sessions were
held and attended by 13,549 people, and a
total of 31,517 promotional activities were
held. Community organizations were also
enlisted to help hang signs and undertake
promotional activities.
58.558.858.859.8 61 62.6
60.4
62.9
61
54.754.8
59.4
55.354.855.1
47.348.2
42.9
40 39.6 39 38.6
35.4
31.331.331.532.232.433.331.8
33.933.4
28.228.7
32.5
29.5
27
24.122.722.122.321.9
20
4.3 4.2 4.6 4.1 4 4.1 3.4 4.2 3.3 2.3 2.9 3.8 3.2 3.3 3.3
5.2 5.3 4.5 4.8 4.1 5.1 4.8 4.2
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
1971
1972
1973
1974
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1999
2002
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Male Female Overall
1997 tobacco
hazards
prevention
act passed
2002 health
and weifare
surcharge of
NT$5/pack levled
2006
surcharge
increase to
NT$10/pack
2009 new
regulations
raise surcharge
to NT$20/pack
Figure 1. Smoking rates in Taiwan among adults, from 1971
Table 1. Perception of the New Law by Telephone Survey
ITEM Jun 2008 Dec 2008 Mar 2009
Improve-
ment
Public transportation: Train
(Bus) Station
58.5 82.1 92.9 ↑ 34.4
Restaurant, Mall, Online-game
Cafe, KTV
58.8 87.0 95.4 ↑ 36.6
Indoor Workplace 32.9 87.9 93.7 ↑ 60.8
Ban of children, adolescent and
pregnancy smoking
53.0 66.4 88.5 ↑ 35.5
Smoking violation fine $60–300 28.7 73.4 90.8 ↑ 62.1
Non-smoking labeling violation
fine $300–1,500
16.4 56.7 83.0 ↑ 66.6
239
Tobacco HazardsTAIWAN
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
10-20
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
21-25 26-30 31-35 36-40 41-45 46-50 51-55 56-60 61-65 65+ AGE
%
Figure 2. Line graph of smoking rates among males 18 and above.
A telephone survey conducted one month
after the implementation of the new To-
bacco Hazards Prevention Act found that
over 90% of people are aware that public
places are now smoke-free; awareness of
regulations for smoking in workplaces of
three people or more has risen over 60%
since the regulations were announced in
July 2008; and awareness of regulations
governing public transportation, restau-
rants, hotels, and stores has risen by 35%
(see Table 1).
Smoking Rate
A review at recent smoking levels among
people 18 years of age and above shows
that in 1980, 60.4% of males and 3.4% of
females smoked. In 2002, the rate among
males dropped to 48.2% while it rose to
5.3% among females, and in 2008, it fell
further to 38.6% among males and 4.8%
among females. After January 11, 2009,
when the amended Tobacco Hazards
Prevention Act took effect, changes in-
clude expanding the range of places where
smoking is not permitted; prohibiting to-
bacco advertising, promotions and spon-
sorship deals; modifying health warning
pictures and test on tobacco packaging,
including info about quitting smoking;
putting greater oversight on tobacco ven-
dors; and raising the health and welfare
surcharge on cigarettes. After these new
regulations came into effect, the smoking
rate among men dropped to 35.4% and
females experienced a slight drop to 4.2%
(see Figure 1).
There were about 3.61 million smokers 18
years of age and above in 2009, 3.23 million
of whom were male and 380,000 of whom
were female, representing a drop of 330,000
from the previous year. Data suggest, how-
ever, that the smoking rate increased dra-
matically among young males when they
were between the ages of 18 and 25. Start-
ing at age 18, the smoking rate for men in-
creased as the age increased,reaching a peak
in the 36 to 40 age category. In fact, of every
two young-to-middle-aged adult males,one
is a smoker (see Figure 2). For women, the
smoking rate likewise rose with each in-
crease in age, starting at 18 and reaching a
peak in the 31 to 35 age category. For every
14 adult females, there was one who smokes
(see Figure 3).The data reveal that planners
and policymakers need to place their focus
on the problem of smoking among young
males and females.
1. The Taiwan Tobacco and Wine Monop-
oly Bureau gathered the data from 1973–
1996.
2.Professor L. Lan gathered the data from 1999.
3. The data from 2002 were found in the
Bureau of Health Promotion’s 2002 Survey
of Knowledge, Attitude, and Behavior to-
ward Health in Taiwan.
4. The Bureau of Health Promotion gath-
ered the data from 2004–2009 in the Adult
Smoking Behavior Survey.
5. For results from 1999–2009, a smoker
was defined as a person who has smoked
more than 100 cigarettes (five packs) and
who smoked within the past 30 days.
0
10
10-20
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
21-25 26-30 31-35 36-40 41-45 46-50 51-55 56-60 61-65 65+ AGE
%
Figure 3 Line graph of smoking rates among females 18 and above.
240
Tobacco Hazards TAIWAN
Try to Quit Smoking
An investigation from 2009 showed a de-
crease in the smoking rate among adults
and an increase over the past year in efforts
to quit smoking (see Figure 4).
1. Data gathered from the Bureau of Health
Promotion Adult Smoking Behavior Survey.
2. We defined a person who tried to quit
smoking as a smoker who gave up cigarettes
for one day or more over the past 12 months
because he or she wanted to quit.
Exposure to Secondhand Smoke
In a 2009 survey that asked people about
their exposure to secondhand smoke
over the previous week, 20.8% of respon-
dents said they were exposed to second-
hand smoke in their households, 14.0%
said someone smoked in front of them in
an enclosed workplace or office and 7.8%
said they were exposed in indoor public
places. Ever since the range of places where
smoking is banned was expanded in 2009,
there has been a decrease in secondhand
smoke exposure in the household and at the
workplace (see Figure 5).
1. Exposure to secondhand smoke at home
was defined as having someone smoke in
front of you at your home within the pre-
vious week. Data source: Bureau of Health
Promotion,Adult Smoking Behavior Survey.
2. Exposure to secondhand smoke in the
workplace indoors was defined as the rate at
which the worker smelled cigarette smoke
in enclosed spaces at the workplace. Data
source: Bureau of Health Promotion, Na-
tional Occupational Health Workplace
Environment Investigation. Those surveyed
were full-time employees aged 15 and above.
3. Exposure to secondhand smoke in pub-
lic places was defined as having someone
smoke in front of you during the previous
week in an indoor public place, not includ-
ing home or workplace. Data source: Bu-
reau of Health Promotion, Adult Smoking
Behavior Telephone Survey.Those surveyed
were adults aged 18 and above. Since sur-
veys on exposure to secondhand smoke
from 2008 and 2009 subdivided indoor and
outdoor locations, it is not easy to make a
direct comparison between the results from
these two years and previous years.
After nearly one year of promotion, a sur-
vey indicated that 94.6% of the population
was aware of regulations related to banning
smoking in certain locations and 92% was
satisfied with the smoke-free environment
created after the promulgation of the regu-
lation. In addition, the proportion of en-
tirely smoke-free workplaces increased from
55.8% in 2008 to 80.5% in 2009. Refusing
tobacco is becoming a social norm.
Taiwan Medical Association
35.2
33
30.7
27.2
20.8
29.9
28.6
29.4
25.9 26
14
34 35
27.8
7.8
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
House Indoor Public
Figure 5. Exposure to secondhand smoke among adults
44.3
40.5
45.8 44.8
35.8
42.8
54.2
45.9
41.2
40.8
43.2
47.545.8
41
40.3
44.3
36.6
43.4
0
30
40
50
60
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Male Female Overall
Figure 4. Percentage of adult smokers who tried quitting smoking, from 2004
iii
His life began with tragedy and hardship.
Born in 1940 in Torun, his family had to
flee from their home and a young boy’s life
started as that of a refugee and displaced
person. Toward the end of World War II,
at the age of four, he lost an eye from an
exploding grenade and his memory of that
time was strongly impressed by the starva-
tion he suffered.
He wanted to help make this world a bet-
ter place. So he became a doctor in 1966
and engaged in politics early on. Although
a very non-dogmatic thinker from a strong
Catholic background, he was active in the
Christian Democrat Party. But they could
not relate to the young man with these in-
novative ideas about social issues, working
conditions and the environment.They never
really understood him. He was decades
ahead of them in his thinking.
His superior, Professor Ulrich Kanzow, a
physician activist himself, became his initial
mentor and brought him to organized med-
icine. In the physician trade union, Mar-
burger Bund, his natural leadership began
to reveal itself and in 1970-only four years
into his medical career – he became one of
the co-organizers of the first (and for a long
only) post-war physician strike in Germany.
In 1975 he qualified as specialist in pathol-
ogy and family practice. He decided to stay
in pathology where he built an extraordi-
nary successful career.
Neither the success in his clinical work (he
later became a Professor at the University of
Cologne) nor his early success as a leader in
organized medicine (he became chairman
of the Marburger Bund in 1979), affected
his ego-as positions of influence and power
often do. He never pretended to have all the
answers; instead he was constantly asking
questions. He understood his work as a ser-
vice to community and so he behaved. His
authority was based on a sharp mind com-
bined with a humble character and a strong
commitment to philanthropy. It may have
been his personal experience that made him
so careful not to look down on anybody. His
interest in medical ethics was always driven
from a humanistic view, rather than a deon-
tological perspective. His aim was to help,
not to judge. To make him your foe was a
very difficult exercise.
Jörg-Dietrich Hoppe was perceived as quiet
but very efficient advocate for his profession.
Indeed his ultimate interest always was that
patients would receive the right care. That
no group or individuals would be left be-
hind was his concern, regardless of whether
they were poor, asylum seekers, or just chil-
dren. He was a truly caring physician.
In 1989 he became Vice-President of the
Federation of the Bundesärztekammer, the
German Medical Association, and he re-
tired from his position as chairman of the
Marburger Bund. Ten years later the An-
nual Assembly elected him President, suc-
ceeding his friend and mentor, Karsten Vil-
mar. He held the office of President of the
German Medical Association for 12 years,
until this past June when he retired. During
the last Annual Assembly, it was visible that
something was taking his life away. The tall
and always very slim man now was cachec-
tic and his voice was frail.
On November 7th, 2011, Jörg-Dietrich
Hoppe died at the age of 71 after severe ill-
ness.
With Jörg-Dietrich we lose a strong sup-
porter of the World Medical Association, a
Council member for decades, and Treasurer
from 2005 to 2011. To many of us he was
a friend and teacher and foremost an out-
standing person and inspirational leader.
Otmar Kloiber with Joelle Balfe
In memoriam Jörg-Dietrich Hoppe
24 October 1940 — 7 November 2011
In memoriam
iv
Contents
Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 201
WMA General Assembly 12–15 October, Montevideo . . . . . 202
WMA Recommendation on the Development of a
Monitoring and Reporting Mechanism to Permit Audit
of Adherence of States to the Declaration of Tokyo . . . . . . . . 215
Declaration on End-of-Life Medical Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215
Statement on the Professional and Ethical Usage
of Social Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 217
WMA Statement on the Global Burden of Chronic
Disease . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218
Revision of WMA Declaration of Edinburgh on Prison
Conditions and the Spread of Tuberculosis and other
Communicable Diseases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219
WMA Statement on Social Determinants of Health . . . . . . . 221
WMA Resolution reaffirming the WMA Resolution on
Economic Embargoes and Health . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
WMA Statement on the Protection and Integrity
of Medical Personnel in Armed Conflicts and Other
Situations of Violence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
WMA Resolution on the Access to Adequate Pain
Treatment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
WMA Statement on Health Hazards of Tobacco Products
and Tobacco-Derived Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
WMA Declaration on Leprosy Control around the World
and Elimination of Discrimination against Persons affected
by Leprosy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
WMA Resolution on Bahrain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 226
WMA Resolution on the Independence of National
Medical Associations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 226
WMA Declaration of Montevideo on Disaster Preparedness
and Medical Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227
Report on the World Conference on the Social
Determinants of Health . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
What can be Gained by Developing Psychological Therapies
for the General Public? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233
A New Milestone for the Tobacco Hazards Prevention
Act . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 237
In memoriam Jörg-Dietrich Hoppe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii