Leitura que faz parte da curadoria do laboratório para as “Leituras Essenciais”.

O livro (em inglês) está hospedado no portal da Organização Mundial da Saúde (OMS), fevereiro de 2022. É possível realizar o acesso através do link.

Abstract

Countries worldwide are facing complex and diverse health challenges in 21st century, and usually there is one national health system for individual and population health outcomes. The COVID-19 pandemic and other emerging health challenges have exposed gaps and fragmentation in health systems with limited public health capacities and governance. In this context, “essential public health functions” (EPHFs) have been revitalized to support an integrated approach to sustainable health systems strengthening, complementary to primary health care, various programme-specific and health security approaches. Resolution WHA69.1 identified “public health functions as the most cost-effective, comprehensive and sustainable way to enhance the health of populations and individuals and to reduce the burden of disease”; operational framework for primary health care highlighted EPHFs as a key consideration to provide public health services; and WHO’s position paper on building health systems resilience towards universal health coverage (UHC) and health security recommended investing in EPHFs as a key mean for countries’ health systems recovery and transformation during COVID-19 and beyond.

Despite gaps in public health capacities and calls from countries to strengthen EPHFs, there remain no clear examples of where and how EPHFs have been comprehensively applied in health systems strengthening. This paper builds on earlier WHO work and synthesizes an updated knowledge base and experiences in EPHFs. The purpose is to further promote understanding of EPHFs in reference to recent complementary concepts and approaches; to ascertain its value for health systems strengthening for UHC, health security, promotion of healthier populations; and to present options for policy considerations at global and national levels in addressing the 21st-century health challenges in countries of various contexts.