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1 s are unable to pay (water and sanitation as human rights).
2 It should be considered a fundamental human right.
3 ealth and full development as a basic global human right.
4 al requirement for good health and is also a human right.
5 exual and gender minorities is a fundamental human right.
6 An anonymous grant to Physicians for Human Rights.
7 en appear to support a full range of women's human rights.
8 there should be legal protection for women's human rights.
9 th principles of bioethics and international human rights.
10 most all (96%) expressed support for women's human rights.
11 eople's daily lives-are ones of equality and human rights.
12 crime, while detractors argue they undermine human rights.
13 ure in the fight for equal opportunities and human rights.
14 s a public health problem and a violation of human rights.
15 rtner violence (IPV), a serious violation of human rights.
16 iverse areas as health, the environment, and human rights.
17 eceding this complex emergency in health and human rights.
18 th also warrants other perspectives, such as human rights.
19 manner that respects, protects, and promotes human rights.
20 lable for the sake of both public health and human rights.
21 their communities in ways that uphold their human rights.
22 uctural barriers to their overall health and human rights.
23 xperience discrimination and abuses of their human rights.
24 tween biomedical science, public health, and human rights.
25 less frequently as a violation of children's human rights.
27 erpetrated in the context of a high level of human rights abuses against the civilian population.
28 eholds in 3 southern cities in Iraq reported human rights abuses among household members between 1991
30 e combined effects of war-related trauma and human rights abuses by Taliban officials have had a prof
33 le evidence of the frequency and severity of human rights abuses in Haiti after the departure of the
34 Physicians are known to have participated in human rights abuses in Iraq during Saddam Hussein's Baat
37 ld members reported incidents of war-related human rights abuses in the last 10 years, including abdu
38 up were extremely or quite a bit involved in human rights abuses included 50% (42/83) for nontherapeu
39 g those surveyed, physician participation in human rights abuses included falsification of medical-le
45 community a strategic opportunity to promote human rights, advance gender equality, and achieve healt
46 t the fundamental role of evidence-based and human-rights affirming policies towards sex work as part
47 d delivering innovative, evidence-based, and human rights-affirming HIV prevention and treatment inte
49 health services if the social inclusion and human rights agenda of families with an intellectually d
50 ssessment of Western values of democracy and human rights among university students in Palestine, par
51 , even in the face of fear instructions, the human right amygdala still shows a separable neural patt
53 ncome countries, health care is considered a human right and is provided universally, typically free
55 for orienting positive epidemiology within a human rights and economic justice framework to mitigate
59 ement in future abuses, including increasing human rights and ethics education of physicians (99% [79
61 (CRVS) systems play a key role in upholding human rights and generating data for health and good gov
63 These include: the relationships between human rights and mental health care, research and traini
64 d mental health care, research and training; human rights and mental health legislation; digital psyc
67 recommended that adopt an approach based on human rights and public health, do not make drug use a c
69 AI through clear guidelines that align with human rights and the public good, and considering AI's e
70 hics and evolved alongside changing views on human rights and the role of social factors in disease.
72 society that professes to value fundamental human rights and wishes to prevent important decisions f
73 ficient water for health and sanitation is a human right, and the reliable disinfection of water play
75 alance between academic freedom, fundamental human rights, and bene- or malevolent intentions, drives
77 rates severe environmental damage, threatens human rights, and could destabilize local and even natio
78 many people to migrate, led to violations of human rights, and diverted resources away from important
79 hood maltreatment is a global public health, human rights, and moral issue that is associated with a
80 isorders, with a commitment to protect their human rights, and provides information on the costs, ind
81 ign with the WHO's own principles on equity, human rights, and social determinants of health in the d
82 mmitments to improve access to care, promote human rights, and strengthen the evidence on effective p
84 ssential to respect, protect, and meet their human rights, and to improve their health and wellbeing.
85 se fields, the combined syndemics/health and human rights approach advanced here can provide clinicia
86 on TNCs and other Businesses with Respect to Human Rights, as well as in the WHO Framework Convention
87 nd (3) placing social equity and fundamental human rights at the centre of anaemia-focused policies a
88 Hopkins and the Center for Public Health and Human Rights at the JHU Bloomberg School of Public Healt
90 s (97+/-4 micrometers; n=120) dissected from human right atrial appendages (n=78) were cannulated at
91 (135+/-7 micro m, n=71) were dissected from human right atrial appendages at the time of cardiac sur
92 and cells, which was further evident in the human right atrial appendages of septic patients and lik
98 monitor blood viscosity continuously in the human right atrium by a dedicated central venous cathete
99 Bulk2Space to profile the cells of the bulk human right atrium using publicly available mouse scRNA-
104 ed a working group to drive an evidence- and human rights-based response to illicit drug use and asso
105 that economic costs are reasonable; (4) that human rights burdens are reasonable; and (5) that benefi
106 policy at the local level poses significant human rights burdens on HCWs, but does not improve patie
107 chools in Uganda is important for health and human rights but is not sufficient to improve mental hea
109 water and sanitation are now recognized as a human right by the United Nations, monitoring inequality
112 hts (WCCHR), a large academic, medical-legal human rights center in the US serving a globally represe
113 w far countries are from meeting the supreme human rights command of non-discrimination, from achievi
114 analysis of historical examples of abuses of human rights committed in the name of medical science or
116 o learn the background political context and human rights conditions of the settings in which they pr
117 ttempt to incorporate external political and human rights contexts into research ethics codes or ethi
118 rculosis within prisons creates a health and human rights crisis for PDL that also undermines wider t
122 Access to adequate housing is a fundamental human right, essential to human security, nutrition and
124 d and optimum nutrition and development is a human right for all children, including those with disab
127 sustained access to treatment, and realising human rights gains for MSM remains markedly uneven and f
129 berate efforts to advance what I have called human rights globalization, building foundations for an
131 and care, are supported on public health and human rights grounds; however, only around 10% of people
132 r the implementation of proposed ethical and human rights guidelines, alongside technical options suc
136 apose the fields of syndemics and health and human rights, identify their complementarities, and advo
139 hese domains are: mental health legislation, human rights implementations, mental health care financi
143 he use of international humanitarian law and human rights instruments to govern the behaviour of stat
147 is a developmental issue, a health issue, a human rights issue, or a combination of these issues-and
149 Some governments are taking steps to address human rights issues and provide better legal protection
150 45%; 95% confidence interval, 41%-49%) of 16 human rights issues in their required bioethics curricul
151 medical schools included substantially fewer human rights issues than private medical schools (F[1,11
152 ot adequately address the medical aspects of human rights issues, especially international issues.
154 ered much more frequently than international human rights issues, such as physician participation in
156 ported and unregulated (IUU) fishing violate human rights, jeopardize food security, and deprive gove
158 violations of international humanitarian and human rights law largely unanswered, despite their enorm
162 stitutions, the new paradigm of recovery and human rights laws have led to increased joint working in
163 al challenges arguing that the rule violates human rights laws regarding discrimination in the provis
164 edia reporting, humanitarian relief efforts, human-rights monitoring, reconstruction initiatives, and
166 f all people everywhere, and from taking the human rights obligation of international assistance and
167 e failure of many states to live up to their human rights obligations should be a central narrative.
170 ntee the safety of and respect for the basic human rights of all refugee populations during their jou
171 s quo, nor further attempts to reconcile the human rights of patients with the property claims of inv
174 ndustry and academia in applications such as human rights, official statistics, medicine, and citatio
175 search could or should be done by consulting human rights organisations and, when possible, a trusted
176 Syrian Government and allied forces, in what human rights organisations described as a war-crime stra
179 shed research documents widespread abuses of human rights perpetrated by both state and non-state act
181 tial locations is a critical function of the human right PPC which needs to be incorporated into mode
182 the US State Department's Country Reports on Human Rights Practices and country-specific legal docume
185 d the polarised opinions concerning choices, human rights, professional responsibilities and personal
186 utcomes, and holding states accountable; (5) human rights protection, setting science-based standards
187 atment, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), and human rights protections for sexual and gender minoritie
188 anthropology, and in the field of health and human rights recognise that upstream social, political,
191 h criteria to review three global sources of human rights reports in armed conflicts for 2003-08, and
193 t not only do indigenous territories serve a human-rights role, but they are a cost-effective way for
194 to enable WHO to be a bulwark for health and human rights, serving as an inspiring contra-example to
195 Topics relate to global biodiversity policy; human rights; shifting human geography; inclusion, diver
196 e current noma status quo has been cast as a human rights shortfall, since this devasting disease ove
197 Programme on HIV and AIDS has proposed that human rights should be at the center of efforts to end t
198 HES1 loss correlates with the development of human right-sided colorectal tumors with epigenetic loss
199 m age for consent to marriage, international human-rights standards do not recommend specific age lim
201 ober 1995, representatives of Physicians for Human Rights studied the problem of physician complicity
204 on based on scientific evidence, ethics, and human rights that spans multiple governments, organisati
205 t from or reflect violations of a variety of human rights-the right to life, the right to freedom fro
207 vaccines have, among other factors, made the human right to health unattainable for many people.
208 ed antimicrobials is regarded as part of the human right to health, yet universal access is often und
210 old age was part of human nature and a basic human right to others that proposed that with the loss o
212 prison conditions, constitute violations of human rights to be free of discrimination and cruel and
213 ls should use the framework of international human rights to fight against these harmful policies.
218 Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is a human rights violation with social, economic, and health
219 on of gender-based violence, is inherently a human rights violation, and is a grave public health con
222 lombia, we show the links between systematic human rights violations and the effects of infectious di
223 f widespread and sustained torture and other human rights violations by GoS and/or Janjaweed forces a
224 ces to civilian victims of torture and other human rights violations in Darfur during this time perio
226 ature and geographic scope of allegations of human rights violations perpetrated against civilians in
228 lence against women and against children are human rights violations with lasting harms to survivors
229 as helping the dispossessed (eg, victims of human rights violations) and technical cooperation and d
230 of funding for research and HIV programmes, human rights violations, and stigma and discrimination c
231 l to prevent further avoidable deaths, deter human rights violations, and to support post-conflict re
235 nducted through the Weill Cornell Center for Human Rights (WCCHR), a large academic, medical-legal hu
238 modern slavery, is an egregious violation of human rights with profound personal and public health im
239 ral to HIV status and grounded in health and human rights, work with trans communities, and use stren