Integrating palliative care and symptom relief into primary health care
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2. addresses the main health problems in the community, providing promotive, preventive, curative and
rehabilitative services accordingly;
3. includes at least: education concerning prevailing health problems and the methods of preventing and
controlling them; promotion of food supply and proper nutrition; an adequate
supply of safe water
and basic sanitation; maternal and child health care, including family planning; immunization against
the major infectious diseases; prevention and control of locally endemic diseases; appropriate treat-
ment of common diseases and injuries; and provision of essential drugs;
4. involves, in addition to the health sector, all related sectors and aspects of national and community
development, in
particular agriculture, animal husbandry, food, industry, education, housing, public
works, communications and other sectors; and demands the coordinated efforts of all those sectors;
5. requires and promotes maximum community and individual self-reliance and participation in the plan-
ning, organization, operation and control of primary health care, making fullest use of local, national
and other available resources; and to this end develops through appropriate education the ability of
communities to participate;
6. should be sustained by integrated, functional and mutually supportive referral systems, leading to the
progressive improvement of comprehensive
health care for all, and giving priority to those most in
need;
7. relies, at local and referral levels, on health workers, including physicians, nurses, midwives, auxiliaries
and community workers as applicable, as well as traditional practitioners as needed, suitably trained
socially and technically to work as a health team and to respond to the expressed health needs of the
community.
VIII All governments should formulate national policies, strategies and plans of action to launch and
sustain primary health care as part of a comprehensive national health system and in coordination with
other sectors. To this end, it will be necessary
to exercise political will, to mobilize the country’s resources
and to use available external resources rationally.
IX All countries should cooperate in a spirit of partnership and service to ensure primary health care for all
people since the attainment of health by people in any one country directly concerns and benefits every
other country. In this context the joint WHO/UNICEF report on primary health care constitutes a solid basis
for the further development and operation of primary health care throughout the world.
X An acceptable level of health for all the people of the world by the year 2000 can be attained through
a fuller and better use of the world’s resources, a considerable part of which is now spent on armaments
and military conflicts. A genuine policy of independence, peace, détente and disarmament could and should
release additional resources that could well be devoted to peaceful aims and in particular to the acceleration
of social and economic development of which primary health care, as an essential part, should be allotted its
proper share. The International Conference on Primary Health Care calls for urgent
and effective national and
international action to develop and implement primary health care throughout the world and particularly in
developing countries in a spirit of technical cooperation and in keeping with a New International Economic
Order. It urges governments, WHO and UNICEF, and other international organizations, as well as multilateral
and bilateral agencies, nongovernmental organizations, funding agencies, all health workers and the whole
world community to support national and international commitment to primary health care and to channel
increased technical and financial support to it, particularly in developing countries. The
Conference calls on
all the aforementioned to collaborate in introducing, developing and maintaining primary health care in
accordance with the spirit and content of this Declaration.