Jones Peris Sean
Norwegian Centre for Human Rights.
Health Hum Rights. 2005;8(2):76-102.
Universal access to anti-retroviral (ARV) medication for HIV/AIDS is the clarion call of the WHO/UNAIDS 3 by 5 Initiative. Treatment coverage, however, remains highly uneven. This sharpens the question of who exactly is accessing ARVs and whether access is challenging inequality or reinforcing it. Issues of distributive justice have long been debated in health policy, but the practical challenges of ARV distribution are relatively new. In exploring what a more equitable process of ARV distribution could involve, this article draws on a human rights framework using case study material from Zambia.
让所有艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者都能获得抗逆转录病毒药物,是世界卫生组织/联合国艾滋病规划署“3年内使500万人得到治疗”倡议的响亮号召。然而,治疗覆盖率仍然极不均衡。这就凸显了一个问题:究竟哪些人正在获得抗逆转录病毒药物,以及药物获取是在挑战不平等还是在强化不平等。卫生政策领域长期以来一直在讨论分配正义问题,但抗逆转录病毒药物分配的实际挑战相对较新。在探讨更公平的抗逆转录病毒药物分配过程可能涉及哪些方面时,本文借鉴了人权框架,并使用了来自赞比亚的案例研究材料。