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Right to Health: A Buzzword in Health Policy in Indonesia.

Priscilla A Magrath
Published in: Medical anthropology (2019)
The "right to health" operates as a buzzword in Indonesia to frame health policies as beneficial to citizens. Right to health is equated with access to Western biomedical services. Within the policy on partnership between biomedical and traditional midwives, only the biomedical midwife can fulfill the right to health. The "traditional" midwife is reframed as her assistant. Right to health language hides underlying tensions in relationships between these two categories of midwives by presenting the policy as mutually beneficial. Right to health language is effective in the post-Suharto era as it aligns with other incontestable values, including democracy and modernity.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • health information
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • health promotion
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • climate change