In this article, based on a talk given to a recent meeting on global health,
Julio Frenk and Octavio Gómez-Dantés argue that,although there are
many threats inherent in globalisation, improvinghealth is a
unifying activity. They suggest that "exchange, evidence,and
empathy" should characterise international activities to improve
health and health care for all the world's people
In the aftermath of the events of 11 September Britain's prime minister, Tony
Blair, reminded us of what he called "the fragilityof our frontiers
in the face of the world's new challenges" (LabourParty Conference,
Brighton, October 2001). This shift of humanaffairs from the
restricted frame of the nation state to the vasttheatre of planet
earth is not only affecting trade, finance,science, the environment,
crime, and terrorism; it is also changingthe nature of health
challenges facing people all over the world.1
In 1997 an influential report by the US Institute of Medicine stated:
"Distinctions between domestic and international healthproblems are
losing their usefulness and are often misleading."2We are all coming closer to each other. One of the great revolutionsof the 20th century was, in the words of the historian Eric Hobsbawm,the virtual annihilation of time and distance.3
Summary points
Globalisation is affecting health as well as other aspects of human
activity
All countries must deal with the international transfer of riskswhether
this is of microbes, unregulated distribution of drugs, or tobacco
marketing
On the other hand, globalisation makes the sharing of information on
health care easier
The aspiration for good health is also a unifying factor across
different parts of the world, cultures, and religions
The death of distance
Intense international contacts are not new. From time immemorial the forces
of trade, migration, war, and conquest have boundtogether people
from distant places. The expression "citizen ofthe world" was coined
by the Greek philosopher Diogenes in thefourth century BC. What is
new is the pace, range, and depth ofintegration. As never before,
the consequences of actions thatare taking place far away show up,
literally, at ourdoorsteps.
The degree of proximity in our world can be illustrated by the fact that the
number of international travellers has tripledsince 1980, and it now
reaches three million people every day.Last year the traffic on
international telephone switchboardstopped 100 billion for the first
time.4
We cannot underestimate the implications of these changes for health. In
addition to their own domestic problems, all countriesmust now deal
with the international transfer of risks.5
The most obvious case of the blurring of health frontiers is the transmission
of communicable diseases. Again, this is notin itself a new
phenomenon. The first documented case of a transnationalepidemic was
the Athenian plague of 430 BC.6 The Black Deathof 1347, which killed one third of the European population, was
the direct result of international trade. In the 16th centurythe
conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires was an early exampleof
involuntary microbiological warfare through the introductionof
smallpox to previously unexposed populations. More recently,the
global spread of the influenza pandemic of the early 20thcentury
accounted for far more casualties than the first worldwar.
(Credit: THE BRITISH LIBRARY)
Globalisation is nothing new: the Black
Death of the 14th century was a direct result of international trade
Microbial traffic and other vectors
Again, what is new is the scale of what has been called "microbial traffic."
The explosive increase of world travel producesthousands of
potentially infectious contacts daily. Even the longest
intercontinental flights are briefer than the incubation periodof
any human infectious disease. Thus, a Peruvian outbreak ofcholera
turned into a continental epidemic in a matter of daysin the early
1990s. Drug resistant strains of tuberculosis maytravel from
detention centres in Russia to Paris in just a fewhours.7
Likewise, the Asian "tiger mosquito," a potential vectorfor dengue
fever virus, was introduced into the United Statesin the 1980s in a
shipment of used tyres imported from northernAsia.8
These are all examples of what Arno Karlen has calledour new
biocultural era, generated by radical changes in our environmentand
life styles.9
Indeed, to make matters more complex, it is not only people, microbes, and
material goods that travel from one country toanother; it is also
ideas and lifestyles. Take smoking as anexample.
Whenever a legal or regulatory battle against the tobacco companies is won in
the United States, we rejoice for the Americanpublic but tremble for
the consequences in other countries becausethose victories give
those same companies the incentive to lookfor new markets with less
stringent regulations. Already about4 million people are dying of
smoking related causes every year.By 2020 that number will grow to
10 million, making tobacco theleading killer worldwide. This shows
why effective national policiesmust be coupled with global action,
like the international conventioncurrently being promoted by the
World Health Organization, wherebygovernments will join forces to
match tobacco's transnationalpower.
Effects on health care
Furthermore, the globalisation of health goes beyond diseases and risk
factors to include also health care and its inputs.For example,
careful restrictions on access to prescription drugsin one country
may be subverted when its neighbour allows theunrestricted purchase
of antibiotics, thereby stimulating theappearance of resistant
microbes in the first country. The growingcommerce of pharmaceutical
products and healthcare services overthe internet is another way in
which national authorities maybebypassed.
Interdependence has also opened up new avenues for international collective
action. For instance, initial efforts in the 1990sto secure cheaper
drugs for AIDS victims in poor countries yieldedonly modest results.
A few months ago, however, strong internationalmobilisation
persuaded several major multinational drug companiesto establish
agreements with developing countries to sell AIDSdrugs at heavily
discountedprices.
Forces related to globalisation also prompted the organisation of the UN
General Assembly special session on HIV/AIDS in June2001, which
approved a historical declaration of commitment. Thiswas the first
time that a session of the general assembly wasdevoted to a health
topic, thus underscoring the growing linkbetween pandemics such as
AIDS with economic development and globalsecurity.
These are two clear examples of what Richard Feachem recently called "the
political benefits of openness."10
Information as a global public good
Increasing communication, in the face of the growing complexity of health
systems, has also made international comparisonsmore valuable than
ever. Given the enormous economic and socialimpact of policy
decisions, countries can benefit from a processof shared learning.
This is the significance of the recent effortby the World Health
Organization (WHO) to assess the performanceof all 191 health
systems of the world. Imperfect as it is, thisexercise has nourished
an intense and fruitful debate, which buildson previous efforts by
academic and intergovernmental organisationssuch as the Organisation
for Economic Cooperation and Development(OECD). This kind of
comparative analysis has the virtue of turninginformation into a
global public good, a topic widely addressedat the recent meeting
convened by the UN in Monterrey, Mexico,on development financing.11
Global public goods for health werealso well discussed by the
Commission on Macroeconomics and Health,whose report was launched
recently.12
The performance of local health systems can also be enhanced by one of the
most potent motors of globalisation: the telecommunications
revolution. This is opening up the prospect of improving accessto
care for underserved populations. Telemedicine points the wayto a
future when physical distance may no longer be a significantbarrier
to healthcare.
The challenge, of course, will be to make sure that the distance divide is
not merely replaced by the digital divide. Thesize of this challenge
becomes clear when we realise that the80% of the population living
in developing countries representsless than 10% of internet users.13
Canada, the United States,and Sweden rank among the most wired
nations, with 40% of theirpopulation regularly connected to the
internet.14 In contrast,many African
countries can count just a few hundred active internetusers.
The dark side of globalisation
The new forms of social exclusion feed on the old scourges of poverty and
inequality. The 1.3 billion people who survive on$1 a day are a
reminder to all of the enormous gaps that muststill be overcome
within and betweencountries.
Exclusion and inequality are one dark side of globalisation. Insensitivity to
local cultures is another. Together they mayexplain a painful
paradox of our days: Precisely when technologyhas brought human
beings closer to each other than ever before,we are witnessing
intolerance in its ugly guises of xenophobiaand ethnic cleansing.
According to the French philosopher RegisDebray, there seems to be
an intrinsic relation between the disappearanceof cultural points of
reference and the dogmatic reaffirmationof the myths of origins.15
And with intolerance, as a Siamese twin, comes terrorism, traditionally the
instrument of offended fanatical minorities thatresist believing in
persuasion. At its essence, terrorism is theworst form of
dehumanisation, as it turns innocent people intomere
targets.
In the long run, the challenge we have before us is to build a world order
characterised by peace in the midst of diversity.Instead of
asserting one's identity by rejecting or destroyingwhat is
different, we must try to soften collisions, balance claims,and
reach compromises.16 In this way, we may try
living accordingto what President Vaclav Havel of the Czech Republic
has calleda basic code of mutual coexistence.17
Health as a force for unity
Even as we share America's grief over the attack of 11 September, we must
join together in searching for new ways of makingour interdependence
a force for peace and prosperity. As PrimeMinister Blair said, the
best memorial for those who lost theirlives on 11 September will be
"A new beginning, where we seekto resolve differences in a calm and
ordered way; greater understandingbetween nations and between
faiths; and above all justice andprosperity for the poor and
dispossessed, so that people everywherecan see the chance of a
better future through the hard work andcreative power of the free
citizen" (Labour Party Conference,Brighton, October
2001).
Health may contribute to this pursuit because it involves those domains that
unite all human beings. It is there, in birth,in sickness, in
recovery, and ultimately in death that we canall find our common
humanity. In our turbulent world health remainsone of the few truly
universal aspirations. It therefore offersa concrete opportunity to
reconcile national self interest withinternational mutual interest.
More today than ever, health isa bridge to peace, a common ground, a
source for sharedsecurity.
But for this to happen, we must renew international cooperation for health.
"Successful globalisation," says George Soros,"requires effective
global institutions devoted not only to financeand trade, but also
to public health, human rights, [and] environmentalprotection."18
Exchange, evidence, and empathy
We suggest three key elements for such renewal, three "e's": exchange,
evidence, andempathy.
Firstly, we should exchange experiences around commonproblems.
Secondly, we need evidence on alternatives, so that we may build a solid
knowledge base of what works and what doesn't. Thisis why
international comparative analysis of health systems isso
important.
But there is another value. The late British philosopher Isaiah Berlin
proposed the comparative studies of other culturesas an antidote to
intolerance, stereotypes, and the dangerousdelusion by individuals,
tribes, states, and religions of beingthe sole possessors of truth.19
And this leads to the thirdelement, empathythat
human characteristic which allows us toparticipate mentally in a
foreign reality, understand it, relateto it, and, in the end, value
the core elements that make us allmembers of the human
race.
As we engage in the process of renewal, we would do well to remember the
words of a great American, Martin Luther King Jr:"It really boils
down to this: that all life is interrelated.We are all caught in an
inescapable network of mutuality, tiedinto a single garment of
destiny. Whatever affects one directly,affects all indirectly."20
Acknowledgments
This article is based on a talk given to a meeting on globalisation and
health in San Francisco in May 2002 and on a fullerarticle published
in the May-June issue of Health Affairs.
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