63 A WHO guide for planners, implementers and managers
Annex 2 Sixty-second World Health Assembly resolution WHA62.12 on Primary health care, including health system strengthening 22 May 2009
The Sixty-second World Health Assembly,
Welcoming the efforts of the Director-General, and recognizing the pivotal role that WHO plays in
promoting primary health care globally; Having considered the report on primary health care, including
health system strengthening; Reaffirming the Declaration of Alma-Ata (1978) and the United Nations
Millennium Declaration (2000); Recalling the Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion (1986) and subsequent
relevant resolutions of WHO regional committees and health assemblies; Recalling also the discussions at
the series of summits and global, regional and national conferences that have reaffirmed the commitment
of Member States to primary health care and strengthening health systems; Noting the growing consensus
in the global health community that vertical approaches, such as disease-specific programmes, and
integrated health systems approaches are mutually reinforcing and contribute to achieving the health-
related Millennium Development Goals; Recognizing the need to draw on the experiences, both positive
and negative, of primary health care in the years since the Declaration of Alma-Ata and the Millennium
Declaration;
Welcoming the World health report 2008, published on the thirtieth anniversary of the international
conference of Alma-Ata, that identifies four broad policy directions for reducing health inequalities and
improving health for all: tackling health inequalities through universal coverage, putting people at the
centre of care, integrating health into broader public policy, and providing inclusive leadership for health;
and also welcoming the final report of the Commission on Social Determinants of Health;
Reaffirming the need to build sustainable national health systems, strengthen national capacities, and
honour fully financing commitments made by national governments and their development partners, as
appropriate, in order to better fill the resource gaps in the health sector;
Reaffirming also the need to take concrete, effective and timely action, in implementing all agreed
commitments on aid effectiveness and to increase the predictability of aid, while respecting recipient
countries’ control and ownership of their health system strengthening, more so given the potential effects
on health and health systems of the current international financial and food crises and of climate change;
Strongly reaffirming the values and principles of primary health care, including equity, solidarity, social
justice, universal access to services, multisectoral action, decentralization and community participation as
the basis for strengthening health systems;