Desarrollo de la capacidad para la regulación en salud en México
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Resumen
The National Academy of Medicine is an essential space to discuss regulatory science in health, and to position its impact on health and economy. Framed within the stewardship role of the health authority, health regulation is the action of protecting the population against involuntary health hazards against which the individual cannot protect him/herself. It is an essential function of public health, an institutional component of the health system and, therefore, linked to its reforms and to universal coverage. Regulation has its support on an epidemiological, organizational, legal, sociological and economic theoretical body. It has a methodological body that supports its regulatory process based on risk analysis and that is translated into regulations, implementations, compliance, monitoring and evaluation of the regulation. It has a professional, financial, organizational, legal and governance architecture. Given its universal action, it has a widespread impact on the population and a substantial economic effect, influencing on at least 17% of regional international trade. Health through its regulatory authorities should be an early part of international trade discussions.
Cómo citar
Carlos Santos‐Burgoa, & Manuel Urbina-Fuentes, & Juan Á. Rivera, & Martha Hı́jar, & Julio Salvador Sánchez-Tépoz, & Juan Carlos Gallaga-Solórzano, & Rocío del Carmen Alatorre Eden-Wynter, & Armida Zúñiga-Estrada, & Ricardo García-Sarubbi, & Claudia Gabriela García-Chávez, & Ana Carolina Ariza (2018). Desarrollo de la capacidad para la regulación en salud en México. https://doi.org/10.24875/gmm.18004351