The law is central to virtually all aspects of public health. Tobacco control laws aim to reduce smoking, food product regulations encourage healthy nutrition, vaccination laws have saved millions of lives, pollution laws and environmental regulations safeguard the public’s health in a myriad of ways and perhaps, most importantly, law and regulation establish systems for universal health coverage.
The rule of law itself is essential for human health and wellbeing. However, while legal frameworks can determine if people’s right to health can be realized, laws can also embed discrimination, criminalization, licenses to pollute and other ills that undermine public health.
How can the law safeguard health, promote equality and translate vision into action and sustainable development?
This panel launches The Lancet, O’Neill Institute and Georgetown University Commission on Health and Law report The Legal Determinants of Health.
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Panellists discuss the report’s message on the immense power of the law to advance the right to health.
What are the barriers to law reform? How can relevant parties build support for the expanded evidence and rights-based use of law to advance global health? How can the world move forward on several contemporary prominent opportunities and challenges such as sugar taxes, mandatory vaccinations and legal responses to antimicrobial resistance?
And how can law and legal instruments be used to accelerate progress towards universal health coverage?
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