Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Law, University of Helsinki
Abstract
The
Emergency Medical Services (EMS) are emergency services generally been designed
to provide urgent treatment of patients with life-threatening conditions
outside medical facilities. Even though the EMS belongs to the category of
socio-economic rights, it nevertheless has great significance in safeguarding
one of the most fundamental human rights, the right to life. In fact,
international humanitarian law has recognised this important connection by establishing
explicit legal rules that oblige states to ensure urgent medical care for the wounded
and sick. International human rights law, on the other hand, has no such expressed
provisions. However, the problem is not the lack of legal rules applicable to
the EMS as such but rather the challenges in human rights perception, which
hinder the EMS being perceived as a valuable human right. Therefore, this
article essentially argues that international human rights law does not
recognise the EMS as a human right sufficiently and that more thorough actions
are required from the UN Committee of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(CESCR) in this regard.
Publisher
Institute for Development and International Relations
Subject
Political Science and International Relations