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Global Health Partnerships and the Brocher Declaration: Principles for Ethical Short-Term Engagements in Global Health Cover

Global Health Partnerships and the Brocher Declaration: Principles for Ethical Short-Term Engagements in Global Health

Open Access
|May 2022

Figures & Tables

Table 1

Six Principles of the Brocher Declaration.

1) Mutual partnership with bidirectional input and learning
   –emphasize mutual partnership and bidirectionality–both parties have input and learn from one another.
   –recognize expertise and experience of host country health professionals.
   –establish equality, trust and partnership as the foundations of all activities
2) Empowered host country and community define needs and activities
   –create programs based on the host country and community’s priorities
   –define activities such that external actors do not divert funds and efforts from real needs of the community
   –align with national planning frameworks and WHO/SDG priorities
3) Sustainable programs and capacity building
   –commit to long-term healthcare development and sustainability
   –aim to strengthen health systems rather than providing unsustainable alternatives
   –emphasize and utilize existing health systems
4) Compliance with applicable laws, ethical standards, and code of conduct
   –comply with existing legal and regulatory frameworks in the host and originating countries and with local regulations for professional practice and drug distribution
   –consider ethical principles including social justice, social contract, and utilitarian principles
   –abide by common quality principles
5) Humility, cultural sensitivity, and respect for all involved
   –respect the culture, history, strengths, expertise, and knowledge of host communities
   –recognize the limitations of visitors’ cursory understanding as non-members of the community and that they are subject to the constraints and biases of their own cultural backgrounds
   –transform the current narrative of privileged volunteers gaining social capital with lower regard for the perspectives of the host communities to one of solidarity and respect
6) Accountability for actions
   –evaluate programs appropriately so that negative outcomes and unintended consequences are reduced
   –place special emphasis on the concerns of environmental impact due to the travel and activities involved.
   –ensure accountability to local authorities
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3577 | Journal eISSN: 2214-9996
Language: English
Published on: May 17, 2022
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2022 Shailendra Prasad, Myron Aldrink, Bruce Compton, Judy Lasker, Peter Donkor, David Weakliam, Virginia Rowthorn, Efua Mantey, Keith Martin, Francis Omaswa, Habib Benzian, Erwin Calgua-Guerra, Emilly Maractho, Kwame Agyire-Tettey, Nigel Crisp, Ramaswami Balasubramaniam, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.