Right To Health in India With Special Reference To District Udham Singh Nagar (Uttrakhand)
Right To Health in India With Special Reference To District Udham Singh Nagar (Uttrakhand)
Right To Health in India With Special Reference To District Udham Singh Nagar (Uttrakhand)
Summary
Submitted To
Kumaun University Nainital
For award of Ph.D. Degree
2015-2016
FACULTY OF LAW
S.S. JEENA CAMPUS KUMAUN UNIVERSITY,
NAINITAL
SUMMARY
Summary
T
he Purpose of this thesis The Right to Health in India with Special Reference
to District Udham Singh Nagar, Uttrakhand is to examine the status of right
to health as fundamental right as well as human right. The present work
organizes into eight chapters. The First chapter introduces the topic generally and
enumerate the problems concerning right to health and includes purpose of the study,
ranging from statement of the problem, selection of field site, objectives, methods of
analysis, sources of the data, chapter schemes of the thesis, limitations of the study.
The Second chapter traces the conceptual foundation of heath and right to health. It
describes the meaning and definition health and right to health. Historically, health
was dependent on income and environment, nutrition, food and employment, water,
sanitation rather than availability for health care system and services. With the model
of development now being pursued health is now related to more areas like accident
prevention and waste management, medical education and health insurance, town
planning and family planning and many other disparate issues. Health policy therefore
has become too complex and inter-related to a variety of other policies pursued in the
name of welfare and development. Hence law makes need to appreciate the health
dimension of every new development initiative they might undertake public health is
to be considered as a precondition for all development. Promoting the right to health
involves reorganization, reorientation and redistribution of health resources on a
societal scale. Enjoyment of the right to health is vital to all aspects of a person’s life
and well being, and is crucial to the realization of many others fundamental human
rights and freedom.
The Purpose of this thesis The Right to Health in India with Special
Reference to District Udham Singh Nagar, Uttrakhand is to examine the status of right
to health as fundamental right as well as human right. The present work organizes into
eight chapters. The First chapter introduces the topic generally and enumerate the
problems concerning right to health and includes purpose of the study, ranging from
statement of the problem, selection of field site, objectives, methods of analysis,
sources of the data, chapter schemes of the thesis, limitations of the study. The Second
chapter traces the conceptual foundation of heath and right to health. It describes the
meaning and definition health and right to health. Historically, health was dependent
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Summary
on income and environment, nutrition, food and employment, water, sanitation rather
than availability for health care system and services. With the model of development
now being pursued health is now related to more areas like accident prevention and
waste management, medical education and health insurance, town planning and family
planning and many other disparate issues. Health policy therefore has become too
complex and inter-related to a variety of other policies pursued in the name of welfare
and development. Hence law makes need to appreciate the health dimension of every
new development initiative they might undertake public health is to be considered as a
precondition for all development. Promoting the right to health involves
reorganization, reorientation and redistribution of health resources on a societal scale.
Enjoyment of the right to health is vital to all aspects of a person’s life and well being,
and is crucial to the realization of many others fundamental human rights and freedom.
The third chapter traces the right to health in international perspective and
Include treaties, declaration and covenants, customary international law relating to
right to health. Health is a basic human right and it’s positive aspect is achievement of
a socially and economically productive life. The citizens have a right to quality health
care, treatment and medication regardless of race, religion, social status and ability to
pay. The Declaration, Covenants, Conventions, Principles of International legal
instruments demand that the member nations secure the recognition and observance of
the said rights. India is a party of the international covenant on the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural rights also.
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The fifth chapter covers the human rights standards in health in Indian
scenario, delivery of health services in the public sector, organizational structure of the
public health delivery system, goal-setting and strategic interventions, and an
overview of the evolution of the health system in India and peoples’ perceptions and
responses to right to health. It also covers health as human right. This means that
human rights are so important that the international community has deemed that
everyone has them, regardless of where they live, etc. health as human right
recognized by many international instruments, i.e. Universal Declaration of Human
Right, International Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights etc. Thus,
health and human rights interconnected and their promotion fundamentally and
inextricably intertwined. Every country in the world is now party to at least one human
right treaty that addresses health related rights, to protect the human right, i.e. right to
health because the realization of other right is not possible if an individual cannot
maintain his/her own health.
Chapter six shall discuss right to health as fundamental right and leading
case law on right to health. The judicial pronouncements by the Indian Judiciary
suggest a potential role for a creative and sensitive judiciary to enforce constitutional
social rights. The deep analysis of the litigations reaching the Supreme Court has given
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rise to the Court articulating and recognizing the specific right to health. This is done
mainly due to the kind of petitions brought before the court, the campaigns behind
these petitions and the arguments of constitutional social rights that were raised before
the court. These judgments show that the Supreme Court has refashioned its
institutional role to readily enforce social rights and even impose positive obligation
on the state. There has been some concern about the legitimacy and accountability of
such overt judicial activism but the Court, however, continues to justify its
interventions by asserting that it is temporarily filling the void created by the lack of
strong executive and legislature branches.
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social rights justifiable and develop appropriate methods for their implementation and
enforcement.2. It also deals with the role of judiciary and National Human Right
Commission.
The seventh chapter shall trace the real status of right to health in Udham
Singh Nagar, Uttrakhand. It shall incorporate an empirical study of the problem in
Sitarganj block District Udham Singh Nagar, Uttrakhand.
The last chapter summarize the whole study and make relevant suggestions
to enrich and enlarge the horizons of knowledge on all aspect of the problem of the
right to health.
The monograph has been prepared using the descriptive and analytical
methods based on both primary and secondary sources. The primary sources include
published report (census, education, health and other) proceeding, contemporary
newspaper etc. These are collected from various libraries and record rooms of various
national and state level institutions and organization. The secondary sources which
comprise books and papers written on different aspect of health, right to health and
various socio-cultural, economic and political issues related to health have been used
in this monograph. The data collected have been critically analyzed and corroborated
from other sources to reach at an objective analysis free any bias and prejudices.
The objective of this study is to find out whether the law is adequate or not
for promoting health.
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The study also aims to evaluate the extent to which the court has safeguarded
and has imported right to health the masses and deprived class.
The purpose of the study is also to explore the extent to which universal
standards of right to health, health care or health protection are being shaped—and to
some degree and level, recognized—under the rubric of a social or entitlement within
the law of human rights. It also examines the issues of indeterminacy, justifiability and
progressive realization of present serious roadblocks to the goal of codifying and then
implementing the right to health. While measured progress in meeting these first two
challenges is occurring, the most contentious impediment remains: namely,
determining the extent to which a sustained level of economic stability must be
attained, in the first instance, before a state can seek to recognize, enforce and observe
the standards of right to health at any minimal and maximal level.
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will cease to be law as the India, has the power to declare this ultra virus. Article 21
affirms protection of life and personal liberty. Here protection of life includes right to
health which means medical aid in government hospital-failure on the part of the
government hospital to provide timely medical treatment to the patient in need of such
treatment, amounts to violation of the right to life. ‘Directive Principles of State
Policy’, article 47 stipulates that ‘the state shall regard the raising of the level of
nutrition and the standard of living of its people and the improvement of public health
as among its primary duties’, article 39 calls on the state to protect the health and
strength of workers, men, women, and to prevent the abuse of the ‘tender age of
children’. Article 41 and 42 call upon the state to make effective provision for public
assistance in case of old age, sickness, disability and for maternity relief. Is it to be
realized at grass-root level? Is state withdrawing from public health sector? What then
happens to article 47 of the constitution of India read with article 21 and health
provisions of United Nation resolution 2200, (calls for member states to ensure among
others ‘the highest attainable standards of physical and mental health’ under
international covenant on economic social and cultural rights approved by the United
Nations General Assembly on 16th Dec 1996.
Further, using human rights approach also implies that the entitlement is
universal. This means there is no exclusion from the provisions made to assure
healthcare on any grounds whether purchasing power, employment status, residence,
religion, caste, gender, disability, or any other basis of discrimination. But this does
not discount the special needs of disadvantaged and vulnerable groups who may need
special entitlements through affirmative action to rectify historical or other inequities
suffered by them.
Thus, establishing universal healthcare through the human rights route is the
best way to fulfil the obligations mandated by international standards which influence
the domestic constitutional provisions. International law, specifically International
Convent on Economic Social and Cultural Rights, the Alma Ata Declaration among
others, provide the basis for the core content of right to health and healthcare.
However, country situations are very different and hence there should be sensitivity to
the specificity of each country. Country specific thresholds should be developed by
indicators measuring nutrition, infant mortality, disease frequency, life expectancy,
income, unemployment and underemployment, and by indicators relating to adequate
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food consumption. States should have an immediate obligation to ensure the fulfilment
of this minimum threshold. However, in the long run we should realize the
international standards set through several United Nations declarations and covenants
and World Health Organization indicators. The study also aims to evaluate the extent
to which the court has safeguarded and has imported right to health the masses and
deprived class.
In a social welfare state like India, it is the obligation of the state to ensure
the creation and the sustaining of conditions congenital to good health. The preamble
of the constitution of India promises to secure all its citizens, inter-alia, “Justice social,
economic and political". If socio-economic justice is to be ensured to all, it requires
interaction of many social and economic factors including just and favorable condition
of work, periodical treatment and prevention of other disabilities. Social justice an
arch of the constitution which ensure life to be meaningful and livable with human
dignity. In a developing society like ours steeped with unbridgeable and ever widening
gaps of inequality is status and opportunity, law is catalyst, Rubicon to the poor to
reach the ladder of social justice. Article 14 ensures "equality before the law" and
3 INSC91L1995)3SSC42
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"equal protection of the laws" to all persons with in the territory of India. There can be
no valid law which arbitrarily denies to persons right to health. Article 19(1) provides
six fundamental freedoms to all its citizens which can be restricted only on grounds
mentioned in clauses (2) to (6) of article 19 of the constitution. These fundamental
freedoms can be effectively enjoyed only if a person has a healthy life to live with
dignity and free from any kind of disease or exploitation which is further ensured by
the mandate of article 21 of the constitution.
Fundamental rights are enforceable by and large only against the state. The
chapter of fundamental rights prescribes the duty and the obligations of the state vis-a-
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vis the citizens. Thus when one is talking about right to health and health care as a
fundamental right we are speaking of the state obligation and not the obligation of
private players-either individual practitioners or private hospitals or nursing homes.
This does not mean that private player do not have an obligation to their patients or
can behave in a negligent manner. But these players have no obligation to have a
ceiling on their professional charges and so no obligation to provide free, subsidized or
even cheap treatment. There are certain exceptions to this principle that will be
discussed later on in this volume. It is in this context that privatization of health care
needs to be viewed. To be able to appreciate the tasks ahead, one may look at the
legislative record under articles 42 and 47 in the last six decades and the scheme being
implemented at the instance of the Health Ministry in the context of the political
economy now in place and the constitutional mandate in response of public health.
Till the 1970s the court, by and large, had interpreted 'life' literally i.e. Right
to exist - right not to be killed. In late 1970s, the Supreme Court began to give an
expanded meaning to the term 'life' appearing in article-21. Over the years it has come
to be accepted that life does not only mean animal existence but the life of a dignified
human being with all its concomitant attributes. This would include a healthy
environment and effective health care facilities. Today therefore, the fundamental right
of life is seen in a broad context. Right to life is not only fundamental right but also
right to lead a decent life and to enjoy fresh air and water by using parks and
greeneries, which is meant for public at large5. The Supreme Court Further held that
the right to health and medical care is a fundamental right under article 21 of the
constitution of India. Right to life encodes protection of health and strength of a
person. Public interest petitions have been founded on this provision for providing
special treatment to children in jail, against health hazards due to pollution, against
health hazard from harmful drugs, for redress against failure to provide immediate
medicals aid to injured persons, against starvation death, against inhuman conditions
in after care home and on scores of other aspects which make life meaningful and not
a mere vegetative existence.
5 R.V. Chandran Vs. State Of Tamil Nadu (AIR 2010 Mad. 189).
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of the people, who become the victims of health hazardous activities, are either so
poor or ignorant of law that they hardly approach the courts for remedy and as a result
of that the offences against health are not checked6. In M.C. Mehta V/s Union of
India7, the Supreme Court held that in any case where there is an environmental
pollution that hazards public health would amount to a violation of fundamental rights
of an individual. Water pollution, Air pollution or any type of other pollution, which is
injurious to public health, will amount to violation of constitutional right of every
person. In Subhash Kumar Vs. State of Bihar8, the Supreme Court held that right to
pollution-free water and air is an enforceable fundamental right guaranteed under
Article 21.
The Court has been satisfied with giving certain directions so as to see that
people do not die for the want of food. The right to food includes the right to health
and Health-care and it is not merely the right to receive food in terms of minimum
calories, but, it includes the Right to Adequate food. The adequacy will then be
measured by not only what is necessary for survival, but by a person’s health or by his
ability to pursue a normal active existence. The concept of adequate food for the
maintenance of health, not only requires a minimum calorific intake but also a certain
balance of nutrients. The right to food should be understood together with a range of
other rights-access to health care, medical facilities, drinking water and sanitary
facilities. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court has not yet laid down the interrelationship
between right to food and right to health.
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In the legal order the affirmation of the right to health has established as a
cardinal principle to guide the action of political decision makers and the
characteristics of its normative status has become the subject of analysis that give rise
to a theoretical controversy. Health is a common theme in most cultures, but all
communities have their own concepts of health, as part of their culture. Health and
illness are conceived differently in different societies and in different historical periods
depending upon the prevailing healthiness of the population, its longevity, its
effectiveness and availability of treatment, the social situations of individuals within
the society and the dominant theories, epistemologies or cosmologies of the society. 10
Since the doctrine of Human Rights has clearly outlined the fields that are proper to
such rights and has separated the negative from the positive aspects, the right to health
has something of the nature of both categories. It includes a negative aspect in that the
beneficiaries have a right to expect the state to abstain from any act that might
jeopardize their health. In this respect, it is similar to traditional fundamental rights.
The right to health interpreted as a social right, has a programmatic nature or a positive
aspect in that it commits states to adopt the necessary measures for the prevention and
treatment of diseases, as well as committing them to set up the appropriate structures
and services for the protection or rehabilitation of the health of the persons entitled to
the right. Without the contribution of mechanisms to incorporate international
standards into national law, the right to health does not create a claim within the usual
meaning of the term, but it nevertheless constitutes a social duty to which the State
subscribes and for which it is responsible beyond the principles of political
responsibility. Now the idea has been mooted that the approach that distinguishes the
negative aspect from the positive aspect of human rights, could reconcile the
protagonists of the theoretical debate. Such reconciliation has not yet taken place,
since the question of the legal implications of the right to health is not an issue
exclusively with the international order, thus it would have the effect of limiting it to
the interactions between the international order and the domestic legal order. 11 An
10 Suresh Kulkarni, “Health For Peace”. (New Delhi : Institute Of Peace Research & Action 1992)
At 9.
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increasing number of States have incorporated the right of health into their domestic
legal order converge to the concept into action and to affirm the health as Human
Right.
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