Abstract

We examine the efforts of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) to extend medical care under social security, through international conventions, advocacy and technical assistance. We consider the challenges faced by the ILO in advancing global health coverage through its labourist, social security model. The narrative begins in the interwar period, with the early conventions on sickness insurance, then discusses the rights-based universalistic vision expressed in the Philadelphia Declaration (1944). We characterize the ILO's postwar research and technical assistance as "progressive gradualism" then show how from the late-1970s the ILO became increasingly marginalized, though it retained an advisory role within the now dominant "co-operative pluralistic" model.

Highlights

  • Analisamos os esforços da Organização Internacional do Trabalho (OIT) em ampliar o cuidado médico sob seguridade social, via convenções, amparo e assistência técnica internacionais

  • For the World Health Organisation (WHO), the rhetoric of universalism is humanitarian, asking that “all ‘people and communities’ receive the health services they need without suffering financial hardship” (WHO, n.d.; emphasis added)

  • It should be stressed that the argument is not that the International Labour Organisation (ILO) was important in furthering the spread of universal health coverage (UHC), at least in the postwar period (Sirrs, 2019; Landy, 1970; Strang, Chang, 1993)

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Summary

Introduction

Analisamos os esforços da Organização Internacional do Trabalho (OIT) em ampliar o cuidado médico sob seguridade social, via convenções, amparo e assistência técnica internacionais. It called for: “(f) the extension of social security measures to provide a basic income to all in need of such protection and comprehensive medical care; (g) adequate protection for the life and health of workers in all occupations; (h) provision for child welfare and maternity protection”

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