The Bulletin series: primary health care 30 years on
The Declaration of Alma-Ata in 1978 was the first international declaration advocating primary health care as the main strategy for achieving WHO’s goal of “health for all”.
While there have been huge improvements in areas such as childhood immunization coverage and access to safe water and sanitation, there have been setbacks to providing equitable access to essential health care worldwide. Health system constraints including financial barriers and health worker shortages, combined with challenges such as the HIV epidemic, have hampered progress towards achieving health for all.
Thirty years on, primary health care is still firmly on the agenda at WHO. This year the Bulletin marks the Declaration of Alma-Ata in a series of features on primary health care in 12 countries, including Bangladesh, Brazil, Cuba, Fiji, Madagascar, Thailand and New Zealand. Each feature examines one country's efforts to provide health for all, highlighting the challenges faced and the achievements made.
JANUARY
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Thailand's unsung heros
FEBRUARY
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Getting health to rural communities in Bangladesh
MARCH
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Primary health care: Fiji’s broken dream
APRIL
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Flawed but fair: Brazil's health system reaches out to the poor
MAY
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Cuba's primary health care revolution: 30 years on
JUNE
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Primary health care: back to basics in Madagascar
JULY
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Primary health care the New Zealand way
AUGUST
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Iranian health houses open the door to primary care
SEPTEMBER
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Nigeria still searching for right formula
OCTOBER
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The French country doctor: caring for the sick through the centuries
NOVEMBER
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Portugal's rapid progress through primary health care
DECEMBER
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China's village doctors take great strides