What Is Primary Health Care?
What Is Primary Health Care?
What Is Primary Health Care?
1. What is the definition of Primary Health Care according to World Health Organization?
It provides whole-person care for health needs throughout the lifespan, not just for a set of specific
diseases. Primary health care ensures people receive comprehensive care - ranging from promotion and
prevention to treatment, rehabilitation and palliative care - as close as feasible to people’s everyday
environment.
Primary health care is rooted in a commitment to social justice and equity and in the recognition of the
fundamental right to the highest attainable standard of health, as echoed in Article 25 of the Universal
Declaration on Human Rights: “Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health
and wellbeing of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and
necessary social services […]”.
The concept of primary health care has been repeatedly reinterpreted and redefined. In some contexts,
it has referred to the provision of ambulatory or first-level of personal health care services. In other
contexts, primary health care has been understood as a set of priority health interventions for low-
income populations (also called selective primary health care). Others have understood primary health
care as an essential component of human development, focusing on the economic, social and political
aspects.