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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper explains the mission of the World Health Organization and its accomplishments. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVTheWHO.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the WHOs mission and contribution to the healthcare field. The Mission of the World Health Organization WHO is the "directing and coordinating authority for health within the United Nations system"
(About WHO, 2007). In that capacity, it provides leadership on "global health matters," helps shape the research agenda in matters of health, sets "norms and standards," articulates "evidence-based policy options"
and provides technical support to countries in order to help in "monitoring and assessing health trends" (About WHO, 2007). Because of the fact that the globe is rapidly shrinking, health
concerns are now worldwide, as diseases can be passed easily and quickly from one country to another. These functions are the "core" of the WHOs mission. Because of the increasingly
complex landscape of public health concerns, the WHO has developed a six point agenda it follows in order to perform its functions, as described above. Those six points are as
follows: promoting development, "fostering health security," "strengthening health systems," "harnessing research, information and evidence," enhancing partnerships and improving performance (The WHO agenda, 2007). The first, promoting development, addresses the inequality
in health care; specifically, that despite the fact that more money and resources than ever before are being invested in health care, large populations segments across the globe are poor,
both monetarily and in health (The WHO agenda, 2007). The WHO agenda addresses the unethical and unfair status that limits access to health care depending on the patients wealth;
WHO believes that access to "life-saving or health-promoting interventions should not be denied for unfair reasons, including those with economic or social roots" (The WHO agenda, 2007). By committing to
this principle, WHO programs "aimed at health development give priority to health outcomes in poor, disadvantaged or vulnerable groups" (The WHO agenda, 2007). "Fostering health security" refers to the fact
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