Abstract

Special Issue Advisory Team:
Distinguished Professor Jon Adams, University of Technology Sydney, School of Public Health, Director of Australian Research Centre in Complementary and Integrative Medicine
Associate Professor Vincent Chung, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Head of Development of School of Chinese Medicine, Convenor of the Hong Kong Institute of Integrative Medicine
Professor Olufunmilayo Fawole, University of Ibadan / University College Hospital, College of Medicine, Ibadan, Nigeria
Dr. Daniel Gallego-Perez, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Program of Integrative Medicine; Chair, Integrative, Complementary, and Traditional Medicine Section, American Public Health Association
Professor Hassan Kaya, University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban South Africa, Director of Centre of Indigenous Knowledge Systems
Dr. Nicole Redvers, University of North Dakota, Assistant Professor in Family and Community Medicine
Dr. Naveen Visweswaraiah, Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India, Faculty; SDM College of Naturopathy & Yogic Sciences Ujire, Karnataka, India, Adjunct Professor; Yogaksema Chain of Clinics, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India, Medical Director
Professor Jon Wardle, Southern Cross University, National Centre of Naturopathic Medicine
The 2018 Declaration of Astana* issued by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) represents a landmark step for all of primary health care, public health, and traditional complementary and integrative medicine. It brings together the priorities of the WHO's 1978 Alma-Ata Declaration, the international importance of universal health coverage, and the ongoing efforts of the global community to reach UNICEF's Sustainable Development Goals. It is the first global primary health care document to explicitly acknowledge the value and importance of traditional medicine systems in achieving successful primary health services; ‘success' being underpinned by specific commitments and evaluated by key success measures**. The Declaration explicitly refers to the application of traditional knowledge and the appropriate inclusion of traditional medicines as factors that will drive the success of primary care. However, the Declaration also makes commitments and identifies other success drivers that, despite not being directly linked to traditional and integrative care, are equally relevant. These omissions represent potentially untapped and overlooked opportunities for meaningful engagement to improve primary care.
Make bold political choices for health across all sectors
Build sustainable primary health care
Empower individuals and communities
Align stakeholder support to national policies, strategies, and plans
Knowledge and capacity-building
Human resources for health
Technologies (i.e., new health treatments)
Financing
Ref: Declaration of Astana: Global Conference on Primary Health Care 2018 (
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