Leaders Suggest UN May Be More Appropriate to Lead Pandemic Response Than WHO 20/09/2023 Kerry Cullinan NEW YORK – Despite the weaknesses of the political declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness, and Response (PPPR) expected to be adopted by the United Nations (UN) High-Level Meeting (HLM) on Wednesday, some world leaders believe that the UN is a more appropriate forum to thrash out the global pandemic response than the World Health Organization (WHO). Juan Manuel Santos, former President of Colombia and a member of The Elders, believes that the UN may be the better forum as “pandemic preparedness encompasses far more than health”. Santos told a UN side meeting on Tuesday hosted by the Pandemic Action Network (PAN) that if the pandemic accord negotiations are still “mired in confusion” by the time the WHO Intergovernmental Negotiating Body (INB) meets for the seventh time later this year, “someone has to say, enough, we need to shift it back to New York.” Mary Robinson, former Irish President and Chair of The Elders, supported Santos’s view that pandemic negotiations should be at the UN. “We do need to strengthen the WHO, but we need to realise pandemics affect the whole economy. It has an incredibly devastating impact that drives countries into debt,” said Robinson. “The world is dismally prepared for the next pandemic, which is definitely coming,” warned Joy Phumaphi, chair of the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board, adding that her body’s report on global readiness would be released in six week’s time. Next steps? Alejandro Solano Ortiz, Costa Rica’s Vice Minister for Multilateral Affairs, said that while he was optimistic that the declaration would be passed, “what are the next steps? “This is a non-binding declaration. It’s just a political declaration, and we need concrete steps in this process to complement the Geneva [WHO] process.” WHO member states are currently involved in two pandemic negotiations: strengthening the International Health Regulations (IHR), the only legally binding global rules governing health emergencies, and negotiating a pandemic accord to address gaps that emerged during COVID-19, particularly equitable access to vaccines and medicines. Winnie Byanyima, Executive Director of UNAIDS, said that any future pandemic response needed to be based on technology-sharing to enable more equitable access to medical products. Byanyima also said that many countries were unable to invest properly in health and pandemic preparedness as they were servicing debts that were bigger than their health budgets. But Dr Magda Robalo, president of The Institute for Global Health and Development, said that “there is no way we are going to prevent, prepare and respond to pandemics if we don’t address the critical issue of the healthcare workforce.” However, she too stressed that countries with massive debt repayments were unable to invest in their health systems and health workforce. Global Threats Council Helen Clark Meanwhile, Helen Clark, former Prime Minister of New Zealand and former co-chair of The Independent Panel on PPPR, repeated the panel’s call for the establishment of a “high-level Global Threats Council” as a UN standing committee. It would be tasked with “really keeping everyone on their toes about the need for preparedness, and also support the mobilisation of finance to support […] the capacity of low and middle-income countries,” she said. The Independent Panel had uncovered 16 previous reports about how unprepared the world was to address pandemics, as well as a previous call for a Global Threats Council to be set up following the Ebola outbreak. “We have to break the cycle of panic and neglect. As we’ve seen with the COVID pandemic, which really isn’t over, we’ve been through the panic phase, and we’re well into the neglect phase. To break that, you need sustained political attention on the importance of preparedness and response because otherwise we will be doomed to repeat the painful lessons of history,” said Clark, reminding the audience that excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic was in excess of 24 million people. Climate and health Robinson also called for closer collaboration between the climate and health sectors, and for health to follow the lead of the climate sector, which is “trying to have the broadest climate justice movement possible”. In the face of a massive fossil fuel lobby, climate activists are “trying to gather all the forces” and “the health space needs to widen the circle as much as possible. Health is everybody’s business [and we need] the same kind of connected movements.” Mary Robinson, chairperson of The Elders Most of the speakers at the PAN event expressed frustration that the declaration did not commit member states to any action. Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and also a member of The Elders, said that weaknesses in the UN system itself needed to be addressed. “Some parts are highly developed and mature, where the mechanisms are layered and there’s a measure of surrender of sovereignty, which is acceptable. Then parts of the UN system are highly underdeveloped, almost primitive, and it’s staggeringly slow getting anything done. Health is one such sector. The other is climate,” said Hussein. “In human rights, you have an interesting array of different incentives and disincentives to get governments to do things. That doesn’t exist where you have only a voluntary system and that is where we are with health.” The African Union in the G20: What Will the Implications Be For Health Financing in Africa? 19/09/2023 Justice Nonvignon, Boima S. Kamara, Pete Baker, Javier Guzman & Jean Kaseya Glimpse of Bharat Mandapam in Pragati Maidan ahead of the G20 Summit, in New Delhi on September 06, 2023. Health systems in Africa are under considerable strain: rapid demographic change, rising non-communicable diseases, and emerging and re-emerging threats such as COVID-19 and Ebola are increasing demands on limited health services. Africa, however, faces a challenging period in health financing to meet these increasing needs. Health spending in most countries remains far short of what is needed to achieve universal health coverage, and in several countries, high debt service has outpaced domestic spending on health and education. There is no indication from donors that development assistance for health will increase to meet these needs, which means that domestic financing will have to close these critical gaps. These challenges need an integrated national, regional, and global response. Yet, the global development and health financing architecture has, historically, excluded Africa’s voice from important decisions. G20 countries have begun to collectively shape the post-COVID health financing agenda. The group has created a Joint Health and Finance Task Force, and launched the G20 High-Level Independent Panel on the best way to finance pandemic preparedness going forward. The African Union’s (AU) admission to the G20 therefore provides an opportunity for Africa to be recognized as a true strategic partner in development; for the continent to make critical inputs to decisions on its development, including health financing reforms; and has the potential to reinvigorate Africa’s resolve to reform domestic issues that hold back the potential for sustainable domestic financing of health. But questions remain about what kind of opportunity this presents: would the G20 membership provide true co-ownership? Would it present equal partnership to engage in meaningful and respectful partnership that would bring true and lasting change to Africa’s development? An opportunity for Africa’s voice to be heard and acted upon A COVAX vaccine delivery to Africa in April 2021. Historically, Africa has often been excluded from discussions and decisions that impact development and health on the continent. Two recent initiatives with little room for Africa’s voice and participation include the design of COVAX and the design and operation of the Pandemic Fund. A recent evaluation of the COVAX facility showed that the design of this important initiative had insufficient inputs from beneficiary countries, including those in Africa. Yet, this facility was intended to make substantial inputs into how the COVID-19 financing and response was implemented in Africa. “The original design process was driven by a small subset of stakeholders, notably donors and industry of the Global North, without the meaningful engagement of beneficiary countries,” the evaluation noted. Similarly, the Pandemic Fund—a creation of the G20, sought to have game-changing impacts on the financing of pandemic preparedness and response globally. Yet, the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), Africa’s foremost continental health agency with the mandate to lead public health policy and action in Africa, has yet to be accredited as an implementing partner of the Fund. Instead, the Africa CDC is represented as an Observer on the Pandemic Fund’s Governing board, denying it a full seat at the table where crucial decisions are made and preventing it from designing a coordinated regional response. This limits the meaningful participation of the continent in the activities that seek to impact the pandemic preparedness and response landscape in Africa. As a result, in the first allocation of funds by the Pandemic Fund, Africa is the only continent without a funded regional proposal. Going forward, the AU can use its voice within the G20 to ensure that this doesn’t happen again and that it has a seat at the table on all future global health decisions that affect its development: this might include international trade practices, the impacts of climate change, and the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance. Africa can now contribute its voice on these issues at the G20 in unison. Two key health financing concerns for the G20 to consider: debt relief and reforming global health aid Interest payments in Africa have increased by 132% over the past decade, according to the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). The G20 membership presents an opportunity for Africa to boldly confront two key global issues that hold it back from achieving its health financing goals. Firstly, about 23 African countries are in or at high risk of debt distress. Debt service has clearly outpaced spending on health and education, with consequences on other sectors of the economy. With many of Africa’s creditors in the G20, Africa has an opportunity to make the case for debt relief to assist it with rebuilding its health systems. The G20 has done this before—at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, it suspended $12.9 billion in debt service payments. Secondly, the AU could press the G20 to revisit prior agreements on aid effectiveness to ensure that foreign aid is properly monitored and aligned with national and regional priorities. This is timely as many stakeholders are now calling for substantial reforms of the global health architecture, including major institutions such as the Global Fund and Gavi, to increase country ownership and strengthen country capacity in a sustainable manner, while charting a clear path to ending dependence on these institutions. Africa can therefore use the G20 as a means through which to establish a new compact for donor and domestic financing of health services that puts African governments back in charge of setting health priorities and funding core services, with aid restored to its place as a supplementary health financing stream. An opportunity for a coordinated African domestic policy response The G20 membership also has the potential to spur African countries to act on areas where there has been little progress in the past. Despite skepticism about the potential for domestic resource mobilization for health in Africa given the ongoing economic challenges, there are opportunities to boost domestic financing by introducing non-traditional or innovative financing mechanisms. Taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and sugar-sweetened beverages are lower in Africa than in all other regions. By “soft-earmarking” these funds for health, they can mobilize popular support, raise finance, and combat the growing burden of non-communicable diseases. In addition, to mitigate the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic on economies in Africa, countries should explore other forms of raising (for example through airline levies, import and other duties) and channel domestic resources to strengthen national and regional health systems and public health functions. Furthermore, the time is right for African countries to strengthen their public financial management systems and introduce the use of evidence-informed priority-setting mechanisms to improve efficiency in health system decision-making to ensure that resources are channeled to the most effective and cost-effective health interventions. Concluding Reflections The African Union has finally gained a permanent G20 seat. How does this help the over 50 countries in Africa? pic.twitter.com/joX8ZvPjkJ — DW News (@dwnews) September 10, 2023 The admission of AU into the G20 is timely and welcome. It presents an opportunity to reflect on Africa’s role in ongoing global development and health financing conversations. It gives Africa a voice and a long-overdue seat at the table of global health financing reforms. It enables Africa to renegotiate debts to spur investment in health systems, to input into reforms of the global health architecture, and to establish a new compact for donor and domestic financing of health services that puts African governments back in charge of setting health priorities. Finally, it gives Africa an opportunity to overhaul its financing systems to appropriately prioritize health in its spending through national budgets. Now is the time to move from agenda to action. Authors Justice Nonvignon is Acting Head, Health Economics and Financing Programme, Africa CDC. He is also a Professor of Health Economics at the University of Ghana, and Non-Resident Fellow of CGD. Boima S. Kamara is the Health Financing Advisor at the Health Economics and Financing Programme, Africa CDC. He is a former Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Republic of Liberia and former Deputy Governor (Research and Monetary Policy) of the Central Bank of Liberia. Pete Baker is a Policy Fellow and Deputy Director of Global Health Policy, Center for Global Development. Javier Guzman is a Senior Policy Fellow and Director of Global Health Policy, Center for Global Development. Jean Kaseya is Director General of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, African Union. Image Credits: India Ministry of Culture, WHO. A Leading Global Killer, Hypertension, Is Largely Undetected and Untreated; That Needs to Change 19/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Testing for hypertension NEW YORK CITY – A leading killer, hypertension, receives barely a nod in many of the world’s health systems – even though it’s the key contributor to deaths from cardiovascular disease, which claims about 17.9 million lives annually and is the single largest cause of deaths in the world today. Addressing this systemic neglect is critical to advancing universal health coverage, says the World Health Organization. WHO’s first-ever Global Hypertension Report, released Tuesday, calls for the dramatic scale up of prevention, treatment and diagnosis of a condition that affects one in three adults worldwide, but is adequately treated only in about one in every five cases. The report was one of two WHO publications released just in advance of a critical UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, set for Thursday, 21 September. A second publication, the Global Monitoring Report co-authored with the World Bank, underlines the huge gap that still exists between the vision of UHC and the reality. Half of the world’s population lacks access to essential health services and 2 billion people face severe financial hardship due to out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. That reality is far short of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) of coverage for all. Without more attention to hypertension and other noncommunicable diseases, which today represent some 74% of premature mortality worldwide, progress on UHC will remain stalled, WHO officials have warned. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at the launch of the WHO Global Hypertension report, Tuesday 19 September, in New York City. “Uncontrolled hypertension can lead to heart attack, stroke and premature death,” said WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesusm, speaking Tuesday at the launch of the report . “The loss of families and communities is not only personal, it also affects economies and development. In the Sustainable Development Goals, countries have committed to reducing premature mortality from noncommunicable diaseases by one-third by 2030. To get anywhere near that target, all countries must take urgent action on hypertension as part of their journey towards universal health coverage.” Number of people living with hypertension has doubled Hypertension diagnosis and treatment by region – a snapshot. The number of people living with high blood pressure doubled between 1990 and 2019, from 650 million to 1.3 billion, the global hypertension report notes. But nearly one-half of people are entirely unaware of their condition, and only one out of five people actually receive adequate treatment. Moreover, the condition that was traditionally associated with the rich diets and sedentary lifestyles of high-income countries is making big inroads in developing regions – along with the encroachment of salt-laden processed foods on traditional diets and other lifestyle changes. In fact, more than three-quarters of adults with hypertension today are living in low- and middle-income countries, the report stated. Bente Mikkelsen, WHO director of NCDs, at Tuesday’s launch of the report: most hypertension cases go undetected and untreated, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. “One in three people worldwide has hypertension, only one in two knows that they have it and only one in five globally are under control [of their condition],” said Bente Mikkelsen, director of WHO’s Department of Noncommunicable Diseases at a press briefing on Monday, just ahead of the report’s release. Increased diagnosis and treatment could prevent 76 million premature deaths by 2050 Tom Frieden, head of Resolve to Save Lives Technically, the condition is defined as having a blood pressure measurement of more than 140/90 mmHG [millimeters of mercury] or taking hypertension medication, said Mikkelsen. However whenever blood pressure levels rise above 120/75 mmHG, risks begin to increase sharply, warned Tom Frieden, head of the US-based nonprofit Resolve to Save Lives, which has long supported WHO’s work on hypertension and cardiovascular disease. “Hypertension is the world’s leading killer,” he declared at the WHO briefing. “And in fact risks double with every 10 mmHG increase in blood pressure.” Additionally, although the 1.3 billion estimate of people with the condition spans the ages of 30-79, it can occur at younger ages as well, he said. Detecting and treating people at levels achieved in “high-performing” countries could prevent some 76 million premature deaths by 2050, along with 120 million strokes and nearly 100 million cases of heart attack and heart failure, the report concluded. Scenarios for scale-up of hypertension treatment – which could save tens of millions of lives by 2050. Solutions are cheap and simple – or should be Digital blood pressure monitoring devices have now become widely available. But while diagnosis and effective medications are both simple and inexpensive, in principle, neither are routine services in primary health care systems in many low and middle income countries, the health experts noted. “The most deadly condition is also the most neglected,” declared Frieden. He noted that the technology to detect hypertension, a simple handheld sphygmomanometer, is hardly new. More recently, battery-powered devices have made measurement even easier for lay people. “There is no excuse for any country not to measure blood pressure,” Frieden declared. “This is not an innovation that just happened, it’s an innovation that happened many years ago.” And he described it as “unethical” that many generic medications, which are inherently inexpensive, are subject to markups and price gouging in many developing countries – and thus unavailable to many people. “It’s an immoral fact that we have off-patent medicines that are unavailable,” said Frieden, who revealed that he, himself, uses an inexpensive, generic blood pressure medication known as amlodipine. “I have hypertension. I am on it. It’s not second rate in any way. “But we have to put on record that, as of today, there is a huge access problem,” he observed, for drugs just like the one he is using. “It is almost catastrophic. These are very cheap molecules. But if you look at countries, you have markups, you have little regulation. And until medicines are free, the most vulnerable may have to choose between food and medicines.” Essential to UHC core package Countries that have implemented HEARTS-based programmes for hypertension control. Mikkelsen declared that “an essential package for hypertension should be core to any universal health coverage,” referring to the WHO HEARTS technical package for guidance. She pointed to the examples such as Canada, India and the Philippines, which have made hypertension diagnosis and treatment a standard procedure in primary health care. “We want to make it clear that it is possible for any country, low-income or high income country, to change the situation,” she added. In India and the Philippines, community-based and team based care has made all the difference, she said. “India has the largest HEARTS-based programme in the world,” added Frieden. “I’ve never seen anything as exciting and as important as the Indian health and wellness centers, which have very effective hypertension treatment.” Yet while such Asian countries are making big progress, in Africa, hypertension treatment lags far behind. “If in Canada six out of every 10 people with hypertension are very well treated, in Africa it’s only five or six people out of 100,” noted Mikkelsen. Even so, money is not the secret to success. The United States, which outspends most countries on healthcare, has far lower hypertension detection and treatment rates than its neighbor to the north, Mikkelsen and Frieden noted. Unhealthy diets, physical inactivity and air pollution Air pollution in New Delhi, India, one of the most heavily polluted cities in the world. Policy change is essential to reduce such hypertension and health risks. Incorporating hypertension treatment into the traditional national and donor-supported programmes for HIV/AIDS ,TB, malaria and maternal health is one way to mainstream diagnosis and treatment, the experts noted. Collaborations with organizations such as The Global Fund have expanded along with the recognition that people living with diseases like HIV/AIDS also are at increased risk of hypertension – particularly as they age. Prevention of hypertension through diet, lifestyles and environmental factors is another key message, however, of the new WHO report and initiative. Levels of hypertension roughly correlate with salt and potassium intake, Frieden said – with salt increasing risks and potassium reducing them. However, barely 6% of countries have policies in place to combat excessive use of sodium in food products, he pointed out. Excessive use of alcohol and tobacco are other factors – also still poorly regulated in many countries. ‘We have imported an alien way of life’ (Left) Terrence Deyaisingh, Minister of Health, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. (Right) Kwaku Agyemang-Manu, Minister of Health, Republic of Ghana, at the launch of the Global Hypertension Report Urbanization and the onslaught of cheap processed and ultra-processed foods marketed by global food chains are changing diets and lifestyles in many low- and middle-income countries, increasing hypertension risks, noted Terrence Deyaisingh, Minister of Health, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, at Tuesday’s launch event. “We have, unfortunately, imported an alien way of life in what we eat. When we try to walk around, it’s like New York City. In the adoption of technology, children no longer play [outdoors],” he lamented. The country implemented a HEARTS-based programme of outreach to increase diagnosis and control, and is committeed to have 50% of people living with hypertension under treatment by 2050. Lesser known is the fact that exposure to air pollution increases hypertension risks, as well. The fine particles of pollutants absorbed into the bloodstream inflame and constrict the blood vessels, as well as increasing blood clotting, which can lead to a stroke. WHO estimates that 99% of people worldwide are exposed to unhealthy levels of air pollution. And overall, addressing such issues require a wider approach, beyond the individual and the health care system, Frieden noted. “Encouraging people to have healthier diets is fine,” he said. “But it’s not really effective. You have to make the physical environment more conducive, so that you are more likely to walk or bicycle.” Added Mikkelsen. “We don’t believe that we can totally delete the problem by prevention – rather we are looking into modifying the trajectory of hypertension. So I have to say that we need to continue to focus on treatment and control.” Image Credits: WHO Global Report on Hypertension/Natalie Naccache, E. Fletcher/HPW, WHO Global Hypertension Report, 2023, E. Fletcher/Health Policy Watch, WHO Global Hypertension report, Marco Verch/Flickr , WHO Global Hypertension Report , Jean-Etienne Minh-Duy. Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit 18/09/2023 Stefan Anderson NEW YORK CITY – World leaders issued a political declaration Monday warning that the world is nowhere close to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) it set in 2015. The declaration, adopted at the first UN high-level political forum on the SDGs since 2019, comes at a time when progress on the goals has been slowed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, and other crises. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres billed the Sustainable Development Goals summit as a chance to agree on a “global rescue plan” to save the SDGs. Failure to achieve the SDG targets will leave millions of people around the world without access to education, quality healthcare, food, and routes out of poverty, Guterres told world leaders gathered at UN headquarters in New York City. “You made a solemn promise, a promise to build a world of health, progress and opportunity for all, a promise to leave no one behind, and the promise to pay for it,” Guterres told world leaders at the summit’s opening ceremony. “This was not a promise made to one another, as diplomats, from the comfort of these chambers. It was always a promise to people. “Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind,” said Guterres. “The SDGs need a global rescue plan.” Politics over people Since the start of his invasion of Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin has leveraged the importance of the Black Sea corridor to global food security to obtain concessions from the international community. The political declaration was approved by world leaders without objection on Monday morning. However, a coalition of 11 authoritarian countries, led by North Korea, Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Syria and Belarus, also published a 17 September letter to UN General Assembly President Dennis Francis in which they stated that they did not consider today’s decision binding. The countries said that their objections to language in the declaration had been ignored and they “reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration” of the documents in the UN General Assembly later in this autumn’s session. The countries are reportedly upset over the deletion of a clause in the declarations calling on countries to refrain from “unilateral” trade and economic sanctions. But the rift also goes to the heart of the world’s major geopolitical battles, and the political and social conservatism of the countries involved (see related story). The first in-person appearance of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the UN General Assembly has heightened political tensions. At a critical juncture for the SDGs that are supposed to help the world’s poorest people, experts worry the week could be derailed by politics. “Rising authoritarianism, democratic backsliding, but also geostrategic competition and economic distress: those are likely to overshadow other fundamental issues related to climate change and global development,” Noam Unger, a development expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies told AFP. At half-time, the world is not close to SDGs The world is set to miss its 2030 hunger eradication target by 600 million people. The SDG targets were set in 2015, and the deadline was fixed for 2030. At halftime, the score is depressing: just 15% of the 17 targets to transform the world are on track to be achieved by 2030, and eight are going backwards. Half a billion people are on course to remain in poverty in 2030, while nearly 100 million children will be out of school. Last year, 735 million people faced acute hunger. “Can we accept these numbers? Or because they make us uncomfortable, should we pretend they do not exist and carry on with business as usual?” said UN General Assembly President Dennis Francis. Poverty eradication, gender equality, education and hunger have all faced setbacks amid several crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a food and energy crisis and climate shocks. Finance is “fuel” The success of Guterres’ rescue plan hinges on several key financial provisions that all have one thing in common: more money. The provisions in the draft declaration include a call to recapitalise the multilateral development banks – the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank – and rework the “international financial architecture” that forces developing countries to pay more to borrow money and blocks foreign investment. “Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind,” said Guterres. “This can be a game changer … [we] need to reform the international financial architecture that I consider outdated, dysfunctional and unfair.” Financing is the lifeblood of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), but developing countries are falling short on the trillions of dollars they need to achieve them, Guterres warned. “I accept that there may not be enough public money, and to that extent, how do we mobilise money?” said Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, a leading figure in the fight for global financial reform. “The major multinational corporations have balance sheets that dwarf and miniaturise the majority of countries in this room. “We have to find a way of them contributing to the financing of global public goods,” said Mottley. In some regions of the world, the deadly interplay between conflict, climate and poverty means money is just one part of the solution. Conflict hits women, children and other vulnerable groups the hardest. “[We] need to recognise the intertwined nature of the challenges that we are facing with climate, with pandemics, with fragility, with war, and with food insecurity,” said World Bank President Ajay Banga. “We cannot solve one without having a holistic view of the total. Hunger: missing SDGs leaves people behind Global hunger took centre stage as a stirring example of the lives changed by missing the SDGs. The world is currently set to fall 600 million people short of its goal of ensuring not a single person goes hungry. Some 2.4 billion people, 30% of the global population, did not have constant access to food in 2022. “In our world of plenty, hunger is a shocking stain on humanity and an epic human rights violation,” said Guterres. “It is an indictment that millions of people are starving in this day and age. “The SDGs aren’t just a list of goals. They carry the hopes, dreams, rights and expectations of people everywhere,” said Guterres. Image Credits: Mohammed Omer Mukhier/Twitter , UNCTAD. Russia and Allies Refuse to Support High Level UN Declarations on Health and Sustainable Development Goals 18/09/2023 Kerry Cullinan Eleven conservative countries have declared that they will not support the adoption of the political declarations on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), pandemic prevention, preparedness and response (PPPR), universal health coverage (UHC), and tuberculosis (TB) on the United Nations agenda this week. Although the countries did not raise their objections during Monday’s SDG Summit, the first in this week’s series of high level meetings, they declared in a letter to the UN General Assembly President that they “reserve the right to take appropriate action” during the subsequent UN General Assembly debate and formal vote on the declarations, which must follow the HLM convocations. “Our delegations oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively. In addition, we reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration of these four (04) draft outcome documents in the coming weeks, after the conclusion of the High-Level Segment of the 78th Session of the General Assembly, when they must all be considered by the General Assembly in accordance with its rules of procedures.” It was unclear what the practical implications of their reservations would be. Typically, the UNGA formalizes the declarations of high level political meetings in a vote on the Assembly floor after the meetings are over. The letter opens the door for further debate and deliberations, however, before the close of the 78th GA session, now scheduled for 26 September – along with the possibility that the declarations may have to be approved by a vote count, rather than unanimously, as has been the tradition. Oppose the removal of language on unilateral sanctions In their letter to UN president Dennis Francis, dated Sunday 17 September, Belarus, Bolivia, Cuba, North Korea, Eritrea, Iran, Nicaragua, Russia, Syria, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe alluded to a “political stalemate” relating to “unilateral coercive measures (UCMs)” as the motive for the reservations. The claimed that their objections had been ignored or set aside at various stages in the development of the declarations, contrary to UN procedural rules. According to the UN Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights Commission (OHRHC), UCMs “usually refers to economic measures taken by one state to compel a change in the policy of another state”, including trade sanctions, embargoes, asset freezing and travel bans. One of the issues that has apparently angered the 11 countries is that earlier drafts of the health and sustainable development declarations initially had language calling on countries to refrain “from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law”. However, this has been removed from the final drafts. the United States, Europe and its allies have slapped a range of trade and economic sanctions on Russia as a result of the Ukraine war; Iran has faced a variety of US-led sanctions since 1979 and more recently, as a result of its nuclear programme, and Latin American countries such as Cuba have faced a US trade blockade for even longer. An earlier version of the Political Delcaration of the High-Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage (23 June 2023) – PP31 had language on "refraining from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law". pic.twitter.com/ywyY4Whd6n — Balasubramaniam (@ThiruGeneva) September 18, 2023 However, Lucica Ditiu, Executive Director of the Stop TB Partnership (STBP), told a webinar last week that long-held health rights had also been contested during the negotiations on all three political declarations on health. “I was in the room and I could hear with my own ears and see with my own eyes Member States literally saying ‘we don’t want to see any language around gender’; ‘can you remove everything that is about the rights of the key and vulnerable populations’. Bodily autonomy and integrity is like up there in the sky,” said Ditiu. “Even as weak, as watered down as these declarations are, as far as I understand, none of them is actually fully endorsed.” Four grievances In the Letter to UNGA 17 September 2023, sent on a letterhead from the Venezuelan Representative to the UN, the countries outline four key grievances. First, a small group of developed countries were unwilling to “engage in meaningful negotiations to find compromises, forcing unfair practices which pretend to impose a kind of ‘veto’ on certain issues, and pretending to even prevent their discussion within the framework of intergovernmental negotiations”. Second, “negotiations were not conducted in a truly inclusive, fair and balanced way”, including the draft outcome of the SDGs Summit being “reopened with the purpose of exclusively accommodating the priorities of a few delegations from developed countries” while “nothing was done to reflect and accommodate the legitimate concerns of delegations from developing countries that, in addition, had broken silence repeatedly, including the Group of 77 and China”. Third, there were attempts to “ignore formal communications of delegations from developing countries, including from the Group of 77 and China, on behalf of its 134 Member States, indicating strong reservations and objections.” Finally, the letter claims that the UNGA president had attempted to “force consensus” when it is” evident that no consensus has been reached on any of these processes”. The delegations conclude by saying that they will “oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively”. Despite the formal objections, the Political Declaration on the SDGs was adopted at Monday’s SDG Summit. See related story. Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit Shenanigans in WHO South-East Asia as Politician’s Daughter Contests Regional Director Election 18/09/2023 Mukesh Kapila Numerous health challenges face the SEARO region, particularly in regard to women’s health. Election fever is sweeping through the World Health Organization (WHO) in three of its six regions – Eastern Mediterranean (EMRO), South-East Asia (SEARO), and Western Pacific (WPRO). It matters who becomes their regional directors because they have considerable decentralised authority to influence the health chances of billions. Its regions also make or break WHO globally. Close squeaks, as with Ebola and COVID-19, show that a divided WHO can be catastrophic. Conversely, a united WHO is a vital defence against borderless health threats yet to come. Take SEARO – the focus of this article, after we earlier considered EMRO. The South-East Asia Region is special in WHO annals as it is the first regional office that opened – in 1948 in New Delhi where it is still based. SEARO’s 11 members are home to two billion people – a quarter of humanity. They range from mighty India (1.4 billion) to the tiny Maldives (0.5 million), with Indonesia, Bangladesh, Thailand, Myanmar, Nepal, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, and Bhutan in between. Remarkable progress WHO was a household name during my childhood. I got my immunisations at its centres and treasured the stickers I received as a reward. We did not know what the WHO acronym meant but felt its goodness. Global health’s biggest battles were waged in SEARO with notable successes including the eradication of smallpox, wild poliovirus, and maternal and neonatal tetanus. Several countries have vanquished other conditions: Nepal eradicated trachoma, Maldives eliminated lymphatic filariasis while yaws went from India, rubella from Timor-Leste, measles from Bhutan, and malaria from Sri Lanka. The region’s people live better with all countries approaching and four exceeding global healthy life expectancy (63.7 years). World Health Statistics indicate that SEARO has posted the fastest decline (57%) in maternal mortality ratio since the millennium and reduced its under-five mortality by 78%. New HIV infections have declined by 50%. That is not all. The region has hot-housed crucial service innovations such as community health workers and financing, essential drug kits, integration of traditional healthcare systems, malnutrition management, reproductive health outreach, small-scale water and sanitation technologies, and mass health education, among many examples. To be accurate – these advances did not come from WHO but from increasing prosperity. All SEARO countries except DPRK are now middle-income with Thailand and Indonesia in the upper-middle-income category. There are also hordes of well-qualified professionals, passionate health advocates and civil society groups in the region. WHO wisely partnered with them to build significant national capacities. That is how WHO accompanied South-East Asia’s post-decolonisation to help countries stand on their feet. It also eased the birth pains of newer nations emerging from bloody civil wars: Bangladesh and Timor-Leste. Where next for SEARO? With increased geopolitical interest in health, WHO punches above its weight more than other technical agencies as seen by its participation in political fora such as the G20 whose latest summit was in India. Where does SEARO go next? It has plenty of unfinished business. COVID-19 was a reality check causing six million indirect excess deaths – the largest among all regions. Service disruptions meant that immunisation rates dipped, and tuberculosis treatment declined. SEARO will catch up but remains ill-prepared for the next pandemic with a low 68% score for self-reported International Health Regulations capacities. Women’s health struggles with 47% anaemia prevalence, the world’s highest. Child stunting rates of 30% with its most severe ‘wasting’ form contribute an embarrassing eight million of the 13 million children afflicted worldwide. Water and sanitation coverage lags dismally, contributing 40% of preventable global deaths. With urbanisation edging 40-50% across SEARO, record levels of particulate air pollution and road crashes take years off lifespans. Storm clouds on the horizon include rapidly increasing anti-microbial resistance. That is on top of climate change causing changes in vector and pathogen behaviours, risking the re-emergence of defeated conditions or increased virulence of familiar infections. Meanwhile, richer lifestyles fuel non communicable diseases risks such as rising blood pressures and obesity across the region. How will SEARO health systems respond? A prospering but grossly unequal region is pushing 100 million into catastrophic poverty through the world’s highest out-of-pocket healthcare costs. Ironically, the region is a mecca for medical tourism – valued at S$7.5 billion in India alone and projected to rise to $42 billion this decade. SEARO’s fast-digitising population has high expectations that won’t be satisfied by community health workers. They expect hospital-centered technology-dependent specialist attention. However, SEARO is short of around seven million health workers with only DPRK and Maldives above the WHO threshold of 44.5 per 10, 000 population. That is not for lack of training. India has the most medical schools in the world and exports thousands of doctors and allied personnel to OECD and Gulf countries. Contradictory trends mean that SEARO’s Universal Health Coverage (UHC) index has crawled to a disappointing 61 (on a 100-point scale). There is no chance of reaching the SDG target of 80 by 2030 by following WHO’s standard prescription. Where are the new ideas? Expectations from the new regional director In short, SEARO has already plucked the low-hanging fruit, and residual and new challenges are not amenable to quick fixes. What is to be expected from the new SEARO regional director elected on 30 October – 2 November by 10 voting states (Myanmar’s military regime is disenfranchised under UN sanctions)? The new leader must be humble to understand that whereas WHO was once indispensable to advancing health in the SEARO region, that is no longer the case. As ever-stronger nations grip their own destinies, and their populations’ health is dictated by externalities that only they can manage, SEARO (and wider WHO) must recalibrate its role. The region has a cornucopia of strategies, frameworks, goals and targets bestowed by global and regional governance bodies or special interest lobbies. The incoming regional director needs political courage and clarity of purpose to cut through them to define the few essential works that SEARO is best placed to do. Change at the regional level means more than moving into its smart new premises, a $30 million gift from the Indian government. It requires re-setting the bloated Delhi regional office with its wasteful, initiative-sapping rituals and regulations that have left staff at their lowest morale. A more collegiate leadership style and greater diversity of appointments from around Southeast Asia should reduce a stultifying atmosphere more reminiscent of the British Indian Raj than modern corporate management. A murky election Who can do this? Astonishingly, Southeast Asia’s vast reservoir of talent has turned up only two candidates (compared to six in EMRO and five in WPRO elections). The SEARO contenders are from Bangladesh and Nepal. Bangladesh’s nominee, Saima Wazed, also holds Canadian citizenship. She has a Master’s degree in psychology and specialises in autism. Her passion for this neglected aspect of mental health is admirable. Her pitch emphasises the continuity of SEARO flagship programmes while promoting partnerships and inclusion of marginalised groups. Unfortunately, her own capability statement does not reveal the “strong technical and public health background and extensive experience in global health”, required by the official criteria for the role. Or the mandatory substantive track record in public health leadership and significant competencies in organisational management. Her rival is Nepal’s Dr Shambhu Prasad Acharya with a public health doctorate and Masters qualifications in business administration and sociology. He has 30 years of substantive leadership and management experience at WHO headquarters, SEARO, and at country-level organising practical programmes in many places. Born in a rural farming community, he appears committed to diversity and sensitive to social disadvantage concerns. His future vision seeks population well-being, accelerated Universal Health Coverage, strengthened future pandemic and emergency preparedness, innovating to bridge inequities, and championing an inter-connected WHO. It is banal to say that the best candidate should get the job in a fair competition. But the SEARO election is no ordinary process. Wazed is the daughter of the Bangladesh Prime Minister. Of course, that should not he held against her as even the offspring of a privileged public figure has the right to make their own career. But being introduced by her mother at recent high-level summits such as BRICS, ASEAN, G20 and the UN General Assembly to craft deals in exchange for votes may be seen as crossing the fine line between a government’s legitimate lobbying for its candidate and craven nepotism. Earlier, intense political pressure from Bangladesh appears to have dissuaded good competitors from within Bangladesh and other countries. Nepal is now under intensified pressure to withdraw its nominee and allow Wazed to be anointed unopposed. The waters are further muddied by a complaint to WHO legal authorities alleging that Wazed may have faked her academic credentials and lacks the constitutionally required qualifications and experience. The requested investigation cites the dismissal of the previous Western Pacific Regional Director as an example of the Organization’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy towards lack of integrity. But it is unlikely that Geneva will wade in and future investigations – if any – will be long after the event. Such shenanigans in SEARO plumb a new low in multilateral ethics and standards. They undermine the WHO when we need global health cooperation more than ever. Whether raw politics or principled professionalism will decide the election of the next regional director remains to be seen while, regrettably, the health of Southeast Asians is just an afterthought. Mukesh Kapila is a physician and public health specialist who has worked in 120 countries, including as a former United Nations (UN) Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan and a UN Special Adviser in Afghanistan. Image Credits: UN Photo/Kibae Park/Flickr, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash. Breathing Clean: How Improving Indoor Air Quality Can Save Lives and Boost Productivity 16/09/2023 Maayan Hoffman Sealed windows and an aging HVAC system in a Stockholm apartment building – a combination that experts now say can lead to health risks from indoor air pollution. Nearly seven million people die prematurely each year because of ambient and household air pollution, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Moreover, studies have shown a direct correlation between classroom air quality and children’s performance in school. Finally, according to WHO, household air pollution exposure contributes to non-communicable diseases, including increased risk of illness and death from stroke, ischaemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer. However, most of WHO’s work on indoor air pollution has been focused on dirty wood, coal and biomass stove use in developing countries. Less studied are the health risks associated with poor ventilation in modern buildings – ranging from virus transmission to high CO2 levels and the outgassing of chemicals like formaldehyde from building materials and furnishings. With these challenges in mind, the WHO’s European Region, the Swiss government and the Geneva Health Forum are partnering on a first-ever Indoor Air Conference on September 20 in Bern, Switzerland. The day-long event will bring together diverse experts to discuss indoor air pollution, why it needs monitoring, and how to improve indoor air in older buildings. COVID triggered a re-evaluation of indoor air pollution risks Ventilation tips for reducing virus transmission risks, issued by the US Centers for Disease Control during the COVID pandemic. “We spend around 80% or 90% of our time indoors, so what we are exposed to there has an impact,” said Catherine Noakes, of lifestyle patterns in urban settings of developed countries. A professor of Environmental Engineering for Buildings at the University of Leeds, she will moderate the event. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the significance of proper ventilation in reducing the spread of viruses that cause respiratory illnesses; higher exchange rates reduced indoor virus transmission, WHO documented in a milestone set of guidelines for schools, homes and offices, issued during the pandemic. Chemical pollutants indoors getting more attention Particleboard often contains formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. But the risks are not limited to infectious diseases. In the absence of proper ventilation, even cooking on a modern gas stove can lead to excessive exposures of fine particulates and oxides of nitrogen (NOx), which have been linked to childhood asthma. Indoor dampness and mold also are associated with increased risks of asthma, chronic respiratory illnesses and allergic reactions, according to WHO. Chronic exposure to toxic cleaning products and carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde used in particleboard, glues and resins of many modern furniture and building materials can lead to increased risks of chronic health conditions over time. CO2 and cognitive performance A number of recent studies, including one published by a team of Harvard researchers, has documented how higher levels of CO2 indoors are associated with reduced cognitive performance. The team compared the performance of student volunteers engaged in a game simulation, in settings with indoor CO2 levels of 600 1000 and 2,500 parts per million (ppm). Outdoor levels typically range from 300-400 ppm although they can rise as high as 900 ppm in cities. The researchers found a slight drop in mental performance at CO2 concentrations of 1,000 ppm, and a significantly larger decline at 2500 ppm. Finally, in heavily polluted cities, outdoor air pollution can seep into buildings and cause harm – from allergies to respiratory conditions or, as WHO documented, even death. CO2 monitor measures indoor levels of carbon dioxide; high levels have recently been associated with reduced cognitive performance. ‘No magic bullet’ Unfortunately, there “is no single magic bullet” that can solve the indoor air pollution crisis, Noakes said. However, there are several recommendations – many of them inexpensive and applicable in the Global North and South. “There are lots of different strategies,” Noakes said. “You don’t need an expensive ventilation system in every building.” First, the best way to remove pollutants is to provide fresh air. Ventilation needs to be integrated into the design of a building – whether that includes windows that open or a sophisticated system of mechanical ventilation and air purification. In highly polluted cities, indoor air purification systems are increasingly a part of the equation, removing harmful particulates from, breaking down volatile organic compounds and neutralizing bad smells inside homes and office facilities. According to Noakes, part of the solution is also building awareness so that people can catch pollution before it causes lasting harm. A study by the Royal Academy of Engineering showed that improving ventilation could reduce long-range aerosol transmission of diseases by about 50%. Improving ventilation and ensuring good air quality could also enhance productivity by around 1-4%. Climate change vs. indoor air pollution Modern offices may be airtight and thus energy efficient – but also lack adequate indoor air exchanges and healthy ventilation. There is, however, a tension today between trying to save energy and reduce the impact on climate change and the environment by improving insulation and air tightness of a home or office and ensuring its proper ventilation, explained Noakes. While very well insulated homes and office buildings reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it also means the spaces cannot “breathe.” Without advanced mechanical ventilation systems and proper air filtration, harmful chemicals, viruses and CO2 may all build up. “On the one hand, the more we move to reduce fossil fuels, take gas, oil and solid fuels for heating and cooking out of the home, that is a good thing,” Noakes said. “On the other hand, some actions around net zero are potentially making indoor environments worse by sealing pollutants in buildings.” ‘We should be breathing good quality air’ Noakes said she hoped this event would spark discussion around the topic and bring about new solutions. “If you go back 100 or 150 years, we had the same discussions around clean water, and now it is just accepted that everyone should have clean water. It should be the same thing with air,” Noakes said. She acknowledged that there are costs associated with improving air quality, and those need to be considered in the equation. But ultimately there is no downside to having clean air. “We all breathe continuously,” she concluded. “We should be breathing good quality air.” For more information or to register for the First WHO/Europe Indoor Air Conference, click here. Image Credits: Pelle Sten/Flickr, US Centers for Disease Control, DMW/Flickr, Geneva Health Forum , Rachel Lovinger/Flickr. European Battle for Air Quality Heats Up as EU Parliament Votes to Toughen Rules 15/09/2023 Stefan Anderson The European Parliament’s ambitious air quality targets set the stage for the European battle on air pollution. European air quality activists have won a key victory in the European Parliament, which approved tough new air pollution rules that would require countries to meet stricter WHO air quality guidelines by 2035, and allow EU citizens to sue for financial compensation for air pollution-related health damage. But the draft legislation still faces an uphill battle for approval in the European Commission and European Council for it to become law. An air of uncertainty loomed over the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Wednesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on new air pollution rules that would set the bar for the European Union’s ambitions to tackle the unsafe air that 98% of its citizens breathe. The vote was seen by many as the latest test of the European Parliament’s commitment to the Green Deal, the EU’s flagship package of policies to fight climate change. Echoes of the highly politicized vote on biodiversity restoration in July, which passed by a razor-thin margin after an all-out push by right-wing parties to shoot it down, hung over Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s State of the Union address before voting began. “We are facing, with air pollution, a slow-motion pandemic,” Javi López, the centre-left Spanish MEP in charge of negotiating the Parliament’s position, said ahead of the vote. “The administration should fight against air pollution like we were fighting against the pandemic.” But the parliamentary vote, advertised as a down-to-the-wire affair, wasn’t even close. The final tally – 363 votes in favour, 226 against and 46 abstentions – was a welcome relief for environmental groups, who had feared that a campaign by the same right-wing coalition that joined forces to take down the biodiversity law would succeed the second time around. Key victories in voting marathon A 40-minute voting marathon on over 130 pages of amendments notched up several key victories for air quality advocates, who had sought to strengthen the Parliament’s position on Europe’s largest environmental health threat. Ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe -Extracts from the debate (12/09)-Extracts from the vote (13/09) & -Statement by Rapporteur @javilopezEU 🎦Watch and download: https://t.co/o5ResUVRfq pic.twitter.com/VGFGzI011J — European Parliament Audiovisual Service (@europarlAV) September 13, 2023 Significantly, an amendment by political conservatives that would have stripped EU citizens of their right to seek financial compensation from companies and governments for health damages caused by unlawful levels of air pollution was defeated. “It should be a relic of the past that polluting industries continue their delay game to reap profit while tax-payers pay the health costs,” Dr Ebba Malmqvist, professor of environmental health at the University of Lund, said after the vote. New provisions were added to address the training and education of healthcare professionals, health inequalities caused by healthcare costs associated with air pollution, and stricter rules for air quality monitoring systems. Alignment with WHO guideline levels pushed to 2035 Most fundamentally, a provision aligning member states to World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines, which are much stricter than EU standards currently in force, passed comfortably, albeit with a five-year delay to 2035 to appease some centrist members of parliament. Current EU rules, for instance, permit annual average concentrations of PM2.5 to be as high as 25 micrograms/cubic meters of air. Adherence to WHO guidelines would reduce these concentrations fivefold, to just 5 micrograms per cubic meter of air. Although Europe can boast some of the best air quality in the world, air pollution still causes nearly 300,000 premature deaths each year. Despite improvements in air quality across the European Union since 2005, air pollution remains the largest single environmental health risk for its citizens, causing an estimated 287,000 premature deaths annually. Almost the entire global population breathes polluted air which can cause premature death, heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases, according to the WHO. Air pollution is a silent killer, cutting short nearly 7 million lives globally every year. “Anything less than alignment with the WHO would not have been acceptable from a health point of view,” said Dr Cale Lawlor, senior policy manager for global public health at the European Public Health Alliance. “To know the science and not act to protect health is not acceptable.” Another blow to the crusade against the Green Deal Air pollution is the 10th leading cause of death in the European Union. This vote over the air pollution legislation effectively meant another battle lost by the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest party in the European Parliament and political home of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which has sought to derail the 2020 European Green Deal, the centrepiece of her legislative legacy. A campaign by the EPP and far-right allies such as Spain’s populist Vox party to portray the air pollution law as a car ban – which it is not – failed to gain traction. Provisions in the draft law compelling municipal authorities to consider proven air quality measures such as low-emission zones, speed limits, and low-traffic neighbourhoods passed easily. “There’s clearly a strategy to demonise these measures and the way the directive works,” said Zachary Azdad, a policy officer at the advocacy NGO Transport & Environment, who followed the Parliament negotiations. “It’s reassuring to see that this didn’t take and that decisions were made from a more rational point of view.” The EPP Group stands for INCENTIVES, not BANS. We are against banning cars from inner cities. The new rules must not lead to shutting down industry sites or, as the Socialists wanted, even closing nurseries on certain days. 📖 https://t.co/6oxiMapFCL #FitFor55 pic.twitter.com/gu3ZdGdI2J — EPP Group (@EPPGroup) September 12, 2023 Long and difficult battle through the EU legislative labyrinth The ambitious targets established in the Parliament’s vote on new air pollution rules set the stage for what will be a long and difficult battle through the EU’s legislative labyrinth. To get over the line and become law, the new legislation must also win the approval of the European Commission and the European Council. Environmental groups were not happy with the Parliament’s compromise agreement Wednesday to postpone the deadline for meeting WHO’s air quality guidelines from 2030 to 2035, calling it a “lifeline for dirty cars”. But that target date is nearly certain to be the most ambitious to come out of the EU’s three legislative institutions. The European Commission, the EU governing body, had earlier proposed that WHO air quality guidelines only come into force in 2050. The EU Council, comprising the governments of all 27 member states, is widely expected to water down the ambitions set by the Parliament, as it has done with nearly all environmental legislation. The Council is expected to publish its position on the revised air quality rules in December. The publication of the EU Council’s position will mark the beginning of inter-institutional negotiations to finalise the law. Negotiations between the three branches of the European Union’s legislature take place behind closed doors, making the process more difficult for civil society to follow and influence. “That’s why the Parliament vote was so important,” said Azdad. “We really wanted Parliament to send the signal to the other institutions that the people elected by European citizens want clean air.” In April 2024, the Spanish presidency of the European Council ends, and the position rotates to another EU government, setting a tight timeline for lawmakers to finalise the first update to Europe’s air quality directives since 2008. A rightward shift in the balance of power in the Parliament could derail negotiations altogether if the deadline is not met. “There’s a risk of the whole file being forgotten after the European elections,” said Azdad. “That’s why we absolutely want it to be adopted before.” Image Credits: CC, IQ Air , Mariordo. UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
The African Union in the G20: What Will the Implications Be For Health Financing in Africa? 19/09/2023 Justice Nonvignon, Boima S. Kamara, Pete Baker, Javier Guzman & Jean Kaseya Glimpse of Bharat Mandapam in Pragati Maidan ahead of the G20 Summit, in New Delhi on September 06, 2023. Health systems in Africa are under considerable strain: rapid demographic change, rising non-communicable diseases, and emerging and re-emerging threats such as COVID-19 and Ebola are increasing demands on limited health services. Africa, however, faces a challenging period in health financing to meet these increasing needs. Health spending in most countries remains far short of what is needed to achieve universal health coverage, and in several countries, high debt service has outpaced domestic spending on health and education. There is no indication from donors that development assistance for health will increase to meet these needs, which means that domestic financing will have to close these critical gaps. These challenges need an integrated national, regional, and global response. Yet, the global development and health financing architecture has, historically, excluded Africa’s voice from important decisions. G20 countries have begun to collectively shape the post-COVID health financing agenda. The group has created a Joint Health and Finance Task Force, and launched the G20 High-Level Independent Panel on the best way to finance pandemic preparedness going forward. The African Union’s (AU) admission to the G20 therefore provides an opportunity for Africa to be recognized as a true strategic partner in development; for the continent to make critical inputs to decisions on its development, including health financing reforms; and has the potential to reinvigorate Africa’s resolve to reform domestic issues that hold back the potential for sustainable domestic financing of health. But questions remain about what kind of opportunity this presents: would the G20 membership provide true co-ownership? Would it present equal partnership to engage in meaningful and respectful partnership that would bring true and lasting change to Africa’s development? An opportunity for Africa’s voice to be heard and acted upon A COVAX vaccine delivery to Africa in April 2021. Historically, Africa has often been excluded from discussions and decisions that impact development and health on the continent. Two recent initiatives with little room for Africa’s voice and participation include the design of COVAX and the design and operation of the Pandemic Fund. A recent evaluation of the COVAX facility showed that the design of this important initiative had insufficient inputs from beneficiary countries, including those in Africa. Yet, this facility was intended to make substantial inputs into how the COVID-19 financing and response was implemented in Africa. “The original design process was driven by a small subset of stakeholders, notably donors and industry of the Global North, without the meaningful engagement of beneficiary countries,” the evaluation noted. Similarly, the Pandemic Fund—a creation of the G20, sought to have game-changing impacts on the financing of pandemic preparedness and response globally. Yet, the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), Africa’s foremost continental health agency with the mandate to lead public health policy and action in Africa, has yet to be accredited as an implementing partner of the Fund. Instead, the Africa CDC is represented as an Observer on the Pandemic Fund’s Governing board, denying it a full seat at the table where crucial decisions are made and preventing it from designing a coordinated regional response. This limits the meaningful participation of the continent in the activities that seek to impact the pandemic preparedness and response landscape in Africa. As a result, in the first allocation of funds by the Pandemic Fund, Africa is the only continent without a funded regional proposal. Going forward, the AU can use its voice within the G20 to ensure that this doesn’t happen again and that it has a seat at the table on all future global health decisions that affect its development: this might include international trade practices, the impacts of climate change, and the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance. Africa can now contribute its voice on these issues at the G20 in unison. Two key health financing concerns for the G20 to consider: debt relief and reforming global health aid Interest payments in Africa have increased by 132% over the past decade, according to the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). The G20 membership presents an opportunity for Africa to boldly confront two key global issues that hold it back from achieving its health financing goals. Firstly, about 23 African countries are in or at high risk of debt distress. Debt service has clearly outpaced spending on health and education, with consequences on other sectors of the economy. With many of Africa’s creditors in the G20, Africa has an opportunity to make the case for debt relief to assist it with rebuilding its health systems. The G20 has done this before—at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, it suspended $12.9 billion in debt service payments. Secondly, the AU could press the G20 to revisit prior agreements on aid effectiveness to ensure that foreign aid is properly monitored and aligned with national and regional priorities. This is timely as many stakeholders are now calling for substantial reforms of the global health architecture, including major institutions such as the Global Fund and Gavi, to increase country ownership and strengthen country capacity in a sustainable manner, while charting a clear path to ending dependence on these institutions. Africa can therefore use the G20 as a means through which to establish a new compact for donor and domestic financing of health services that puts African governments back in charge of setting health priorities and funding core services, with aid restored to its place as a supplementary health financing stream. An opportunity for a coordinated African domestic policy response The G20 membership also has the potential to spur African countries to act on areas where there has been little progress in the past. Despite skepticism about the potential for domestic resource mobilization for health in Africa given the ongoing economic challenges, there are opportunities to boost domestic financing by introducing non-traditional or innovative financing mechanisms. Taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and sugar-sweetened beverages are lower in Africa than in all other regions. By “soft-earmarking” these funds for health, they can mobilize popular support, raise finance, and combat the growing burden of non-communicable diseases. In addition, to mitigate the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic on economies in Africa, countries should explore other forms of raising (for example through airline levies, import and other duties) and channel domestic resources to strengthen national and regional health systems and public health functions. Furthermore, the time is right for African countries to strengthen their public financial management systems and introduce the use of evidence-informed priority-setting mechanisms to improve efficiency in health system decision-making to ensure that resources are channeled to the most effective and cost-effective health interventions. Concluding Reflections The African Union has finally gained a permanent G20 seat. How does this help the over 50 countries in Africa? pic.twitter.com/joX8ZvPjkJ — DW News (@dwnews) September 10, 2023 The admission of AU into the G20 is timely and welcome. It presents an opportunity to reflect on Africa’s role in ongoing global development and health financing conversations. It gives Africa a voice and a long-overdue seat at the table of global health financing reforms. It enables Africa to renegotiate debts to spur investment in health systems, to input into reforms of the global health architecture, and to establish a new compact for donor and domestic financing of health services that puts African governments back in charge of setting health priorities. Finally, it gives Africa an opportunity to overhaul its financing systems to appropriately prioritize health in its spending through national budgets. Now is the time to move from agenda to action. Authors Justice Nonvignon is Acting Head, Health Economics and Financing Programme, Africa CDC. He is also a Professor of Health Economics at the University of Ghana, and Non-Resident Fellow of CGD. Boima S. Kamara is the Health Financing Advisor at the Health Economics and Financing Programme, Africa CDC. He is a former Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Republic of Liberia and former Deputy Governor (Research and Monetary Policy) of the Central Bank of Liberia. Pete Baker is a Policy Fellow and Deputy Director of Global Health Policy, Center for Global Development. Javier Guzman is a Senior Policy Fellow and Director of Global Health Policy, Center for Global Development. Jean Kaseya is Director General of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, African Union. Image Credits: India Ministry of Culture, WHO. A Leading Global Killer, Hypertension, Is Largely Undetected and Untreated; That Needs to Change 19/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Testing for hypertension NEW YORK CITY – A leading killer, hypertension, receives barely a nod in many of the world’s health systems – even though it’s the key contributor to deaths from cardiovascular disease, which claims about 17.9 million lives annually and is the single largest cause of deaths in the world today. Addressing this systemic neglect is critical to advancing universal health coverage, says the World Health Organization. WHO’s first-ever Global Hypertension Report, released Tuesday, calls for the dramatic scale up of prevention, treatment and diagnosis of a condition that affects one in three adults worldwide, but is adequately treated only in about one in every five cases. The report was one of two WHO publications released just in advance of a critical UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, set for Thursday, 21 September. A second publication, the Global Monitoring Report co-authored with the World Bank, underlines the huge gap that still exists between the vision of UHC and the reality. Half of the world’s population lacks access to essential health services and 2 billion people face severe financial hardship due to out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. That reality is far short of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) of coverage for all. Without more attention to hypertension and other noncommunicable diseases, which today represent some 74% of premature mortality worldwide, progress on UHC will remain stalled, WHO officials have warned. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at the launch of the WHO Global Hypertension report, Tuesday 19 September, in New York City. “Uncontrolled hypertension can lead to heart attack, stroke and premature death,” said WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesusm, speaking Tuesday at the launch of the report . “The loss of families and communities is not only personal, it also affects economies and development. In the Sustainable Development Goals, countries have committed to reducing premature mortality from noncommunicable diaseases by one-third by 2030. To get anywhere near that target, all countries must take urgent action on hypertension as part of their journey towards universal health coverage.” Number of people living with hypertension has doubled Hypertension diagnosis and treatment by region – a snapshot. The number of people living with high blood pressure doubled between 1990 and 2019, from 650 million to 1.3 billion, the global hypertension report notes. But nearly one-half of people are entirely unaware of their condition, and only one out of five people actually receive adequate treatment. Moreover, the condition that was traditionally associated with the rich diets and sedentary lifestyles of high-income countries is making big inroads in developing regions – along with the encroachment of salt-laden processed foods on traditional diets and other lifestyle changes. In fact, more than three-quarters of adults with hypertension today are living in low- and middle-income countries, the report stated. Bente Mikkelsen, WHO director of NCDs, at Tuesday’s launch of the report: most hypertension cases go undetected and untreated, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. “One in three people worldwide has hypertension, only one in two knows that they have it and only one in five globally are under control [of their condition],” said Bente Mikkelsen, director of WHO’s Department of Noncommunicable Diseases at a press briefing on Monday, just ahead of the report’s release. Increased diagnosis and treatment could prevent 76 million premature deaths by 2050 Tom Frieden, head of Resolve to Save Lives Technically, the condition is defined as having a blood pressure measurement of more than 140/90 mmHG [millimeters of mercury] or taking hypertension medication, said Mikkelsen. However whenever blood pressure levels rise above 120/75 mmHG, risks begin to increase sharply, warned Tom Frieden, head of the US-based nonprofit Resolve to Save Lives, which has long supported WHO’s work on hypertension and cardiovascular disease. “Hypertension is the world’s leading killer,” he declared at the WHO briefing. “And in fact risks double with every 10 mmHG increase in blood pressure.” Additionally, although the 1.3 billion estimate of people with the condition spans the ages of 30-79, it can occur at younger ages as well, he said. Detecting and treating people at levels achieved in “high-performing” countries could prevent some 76 million premature deaths by 2050, along with 120 million strokes and nearly 100 million cases of heart attack and heart failure, the report concluded. Scenarios for scale-up of hypertension treatment – which could save tens of millions of lives by 2050. Solutions are cheap and simple – or should be Digital blood pressure monitoring devices have now become widely available. But while diagnosis and effective medications are both simple and inexpensive, in principle, neither are routine services in primary health care systems in many low and middle income countries, the health experts noted. “The most deadly condition is also the most neglected,” declared Frieden. He noted that the technology to detect hypertension, a simple handheld sphygmomanometer, is hardly new. More recently, battery-powered devices have made measurement even easier for lay people. “There is no excuse for any country not to measure blood pressure,” Frieden declared. “This is not an innovation that just happened, it’s an innovation that happened many years ago.” And he described it as “unethical” that many generic medications, which are inherently inexpensive, are subject to markups and price gouging in many developing countries – and thus unavailable to many people. “It’s an immoral fact that we have off-patent medicines that are unavailable,” said Frieden, who revealed that he, himself, uses an inexpensive, generic blood pressure medication known as amlodipine. “I have hypertension. I am on it. It’s not second rate in any way. “But we have to put on record that, as of today, there is a huge access problem,” he observed, for drugs just like the one he is using. “It is almost catastrophic. These are very cheap molecules. But if you look at countries, you have markups, you have little regulation. And until medicines are free, the most vulnerable may have to choose between food and medicines.” Essential to UHC core package Countries that have implemented HEARTS-based programmes for hypertension control. Mikkelsen declared that “an essential package for hypertension should be core to any universal health coverage,” referring to the WHO HEARTS technical package for guidance. She pointed to the examples such as Canada, India and the Philippines, which have made hypertension diagnosis and treatment a standard procedure in primary health care. “We want to make it clear that it is possible for any country, low-income or high income country, to change the situation,” she added. In India and the Philippines, community-based and team based care has made all the difference, she said. “India has the largest HEARTS-based programme in the world,” added Frieden. “I’ve never seen anything as exciting and as important as the Indian health and wellness centers, which have very effective hypertension treatment.” Yet while such Asian countries are making big progress, in Africa, hypertension treatment lags far behind. “If in Canada six out of every 10 people with hypertension are very well treated, in Africa it’s only five or six people out of 100,” noted Mikkelsen. Even so, money is not the secret to success. The United States, which outspends most countries on healthcare, has far lower hypertension detection and treatment rates than its neighbor to the north, Mikkelsen and Frieden noted. Unhealthy diets, physical inactivity and air pollution Air pollution in New Delhi, India, one of the most heavily polluted cities in the world. Policy change is essential to reduce such hypertension and health risks. Incorporating hypertension treatment into the traditional national and donor-supported programmes for HIV/AIDS ,TB, malaria and maternal health is one way to mainstream diagnosis and treatment, the experts noted. Collaborations with organizations such as The Global Fund have expanded along with the recognition that people living with diseases like HIV/AIDS also are at increased risk of hypertension – particularly as they age. Prevention of hypertension through diet, lifestyles and environmental factors is another key message, however, of the new WHO report and initiative. Levels of hypertension roughly correlate with salt and potassium intake, Frieden said – with salt increasing risks and potassium reducing them. However, barely 6% of countries have policies in place to combat excessive use of sodium in food products, he pointed out. Excessive use of alcohol and tobacco are other factors – also still poorly regulated in many countries. ‘We have imported an alien way of life’ (Left) Terrence Deyaisingh, Minister of Health, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. (Right) Kwaku Agyemang-Manu, Minister of Health, Republic of Ghana, at the launch of the Global Hypertension Report Urbanization and the onslaught of cheap processed and ultra-processed foods marketed by global food chains are changing diets and lifestyles in many low- and middle-income countries, increasing hypertension risks, noted Terrence Deyaisingh, Minister of Health, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, at Tuesday’s launch event. “We have, unfortunately, imported an alien way of life in what we eat. When we try to walk around, it’s like New York City. In the adoption of technology, children no longer play [outdoors],” he lamented. The country implemented a HEARTS-based programme of outreach to increase diagnosis and control, and is committeed to have 50% of people living with hypertension under treatment by 2050. Lesser known is the fact that exposure to air pollution increases hypertension risks, as well. The fine particles of pollutants absorbed into the bloodstream inflame and constrict the blood vessels, as well as increasing blood clotting, which can lead to a stroke. WHO estimates that 99% of people worldwide are exposed to unhealthy levels of air pollution. And overall, addressing such issues require a wider approach, beyond the individual and the health care system, Frieden noted. “Encouraging people to have healthier diets is fine,” he said. “But it’s not really effective. You have to make the physical environment more conducive, so that you are more likely to walk or bicycle.” Added Mikkelsen. “We don’t believe that we can totally delete the problem by prevention – rather we are looking into modifying the trajectory of hypertension. So I have to say that we need to continue to focus on treatment and control.” Image Credits: WHO Global Report on Hypertension/Natalie Naccache, E. Fletcher/HPW, WHO Global Hypertension Report, 2023, E. Fletcher/Health Policy Watch, WHO Global Hypertension report, Marco Verch/Flickr , WHO Global Hypertension Report , Jean-Etienne Minh-Duy. Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit 18/09/2023 Stefan Anderson NEW YORK CITY – World leaders issued a political declaration Monday warning that the world is nowhere close to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) it set in 2015. The declaration, adopted at the first UN high-level political forum on the SDGs since 2019, comes at a time when progress on the goals has been slowed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, and other crises. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres billed the Sustainable Development Goals summit as a chance to agree on a “global rescue plan” to save the SDGs. Failure to achieve the SDG targets will leave millions of people around the world without access to education, quality healthcare, food, and routes out of poverty, Guterres told world leaders gathered at UN headquarters in New York City. “You made a solemn promise, a promise to build a world of health, progress and opportunity for all, a promise to leave no one behind, and the promise to pay for it,” Guterres told world leaders at the summit’s opening ceremony. “This was not a promise made to one another, as diplomats, from the comfort of these chambers. It was always a promise to people. “Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind,” said Guterres. “The SDGs need a global rescue plan.” Politics over people Since the start of his invasion of Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin has leveraged the importance of the Black Sea corridor to global food security to obtain concessions from the international community. The political declaration was approved by world leaders without objection on Monday morning. However, a coalition of 11 authoritarian countries, led by North Korea, Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Syria and Belarus, also published a 17 September letter to UN General Assembly President Dennis Francis in which they stated that they did not consider today’s decision binding. The countries said that their objections to language in the declaration had been ignored and they “reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration” of the documents in the UN General Assembly later in this autumn’s session. The countries are reportedly upset over the deletion of a clause in the declarations calling on countries to refrain from “unilateral” trade and economic sanctions. But the rift also goes to the heart of the world’s major geopolitical battles, and the political and social conservatism of the countries involved (see related story). The first in-person appearance of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the UN General Assembly has heightened political tensions. At a critical juncture for the SDGs that are supposed to help the world’s poorest people, experts worry the week could be derailed by politics. “Rising authoritarianism, democratic backsliding, but also geostrategic competition and economic distress: those are likely to overshadow other fundamental issues related to climate change and global development,” Noam Unger, a development expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies told AFP. At half-time, the world is not close to SDGs The world is set to miss its 2030 hunger eradication target by 600 million people. The SDG targets were set in 2015, and the deadline was fixed for 2030. At halftime, the score is depressing: just 15% of the 17 targets to transform the world are on track to be achieved by 2030, and eight are going backwards. Half a billion people are on course to remain in poverty in 2030, while nearly 100 million children will be out of school. Last year, 735 million people faced acute hunger. “Can we accept these numbers? Or because they make us uncomfortable, should we pretend they do not exist and carry on with business as usual?” said UN General Assembly President Dennis Francis. Poverty eradication, gender equality, education and hunger have all faced setbacks amid several crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a food and energy crisis and climate shocks. Finance is “fuel” The success of Guterres’ rescue plan hinges on several key financial provisions that all have one thing in common: more money. The provisions in the draft declaration include a call to recapitalise the multilateral development banks – the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank – and rework the “international financial architecture” that forces developing countries to pay more to borrow money and blocks foreign investment. “Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind,” said Guterres. “This can be a game changer … [we] need to reform the international financial architecture that I consider outdated, dysfunctional and unfair.” Financing is the lifeblood of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), but developing countries are falling short on the trillions of dollars they need to achieve them, Guterres warned. “I accept that there may not be enough public money, and to that extent, how do we mobilise money?” said Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, a leading figure in the fight for global financial reform. “The major multinational corporations have balance sheets that dwarf and miniaturise the majority of countries in this room. “We have to find a way of them contributing to the financing of global public goods,” said Mottley. In some regions of the world, the deadly interplay between conflict, climate and poverty means money is just one part of the solution. Conflict hits women, children and other vulnerable groups the hardest. “[We] need to recognise the intertwined nature of the challenges that we are facing with climate, with pandemics, with fragility, with war, and with food insecurity,” said World Bank President Ajay Banga. “We cannot solve one without having a holistic view of the total. Hunger: missing SDGs leaves people behind Global hunger took centre stage as a stirring example of the lives changed by missing the SDGs. The world is currently set to fall 600 million people short of its goal of ensuring not a single person goes hungry. Some 2.4 billion people, 30% of the global population, did not have constant access to food in 2022. “In our world of plenty, hunger is a shocking stain on humanity and an epic human rights violation,” said Guterres. “It is an indictment that millions of people are starving in this day and age. “The SDGs aren’t just a list of goals. They carry the hopes, dreams, rights and expectations of people everywhere,” said Guterres. Image Credits: Mohammed Omer Mukhier/Twitter , UNCTAD. Russia and Allies Refuse to Support High Level UN Declarations on Health and Sustainable Development Goals 18/09/2023 Kerry Cullinan Eleven conservative countries have declared that they will not support the adoption of the political declarations on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), pandemic prevention, preparedness and response (PPPR), universal health coverage (UHC), and tuberculosis (TB) on the United Nations agenda this week. Although the countries did not raise their objections during Monday’s SDG Summit, the first in this week’s series of high level meetings, they declared in a letter to the UN General Assembly President that they “reserve the right to take appropriate action” during the subsequent UN General Assembly debate and formal vote on the declarations, which must follow the HLM convocations. “Our delegations oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively. In addition, we reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration of these four (04) draft outcome documents in the coming weeks, after the conclusion of the High-Level Segment of the 78th Session of the General Assembly, when they must all be considered by the General Assembly in accordance with its rules of procedures.” It was unclear what the practical implications of their reservations would be. Typically, the UNGA formalizes the declarations of high level political meetings in a vote on the Assembly floor after the meetings are over. The letter opens the door for further debate and deliberations, however, before the close of the 78th GA session, now scheduled for 26 September – along with the possibility that the declarations may have to be approved by a vote count, rather than unanimously, as has been the tradition. Oppose the removal of language on unilateral sanctions In their letter to UN president Dennis Francis, dated Sunday 17 September, Belarus, Bolivia, Cuba, North Korea, Eritrea, Iran, Nicaragua, Russia, Syria, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe alluded to a “political stalemate” relating to “unilateral coercive measures (UCMs)” as the motive for the reservations. The claimed that their objections had been ignored or set aside at various stages in the development of the declarations, contrary to UN procedural rules. According to the UN Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights Commission (OHRHC), UCMs “usually refers to economic measures taken by one state to compel a change in the policy of another state”, including trade sanctions, embargoes, asset freezing and travel bans. One of the issues that has apparently angered the 11 countries is that earlier drafts of the health and sustainable development declarations initially had language calling on countries to refrain “from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law”. However, this has been removed from the final drafts. the United States, Europe and its allies have slapped a range of trade and economic sanctions on Russia as a result of the Ukraine war; Iran has faced a variety of US-led sanctions since 1979 and more recently, as a result of its nuclear programme, and Latin American countries such as Cuba have faced a US trade blockade for even longer. An earlier version of the Political Delcaration of the High-Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage (23 June 2023) – PP31 had language on "refraining from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law". pic.twitter.com/ywyY4Whd6n — Balasubramaniam (@ThiruGeneva) September 18, 2023 However, Lucica Ditiu, Executive Director of the Stop TB Partnership (STBP), told a webinar last week that long-held health rights had also been contested during the negotiations on all three political declarations on health. “I was in the room and I could hear with my own ears and see with my own eyes Member States literally saying ‘we don’t want to see any language around gender’; ‘can you remove everything that is about the rights of the key and vulnerable populations’. Bodily autonomy and integrity is like up there in the sky,” said Ditiu. “Even as weak, as watered down as these declarations are, as far as I understand, none of them is actually fully endorsed.” Four grievances In the Letter to UNGA 17 September 2023, sent on a letterhead from the Venezuelan Representative to the UN, the countries outline four key grievances. First, a small group of developed countries were unwilling to “engage in meaningful negotiations to find compromises, forcing unfair practices which pretend to impose a kind of ‘veto’ on certain issues, and pretending to even prevent their discussion within the framework of intergovernmental negotiations”. Second, “negotiations were not conducted in a truly inclusive, fair and balanced way”, including the draft outcome of the SDGs Summit being “reopened with the purpose of exclusively accommodating the priorities of a few delegations from developed countries” while “nothing was done to reflect and accommodate the legitimate concerns of delegations from developing countries that, in addition, had broken silence repeatedly, including the Group of 77 and China”. Third, there were attempts to “ignore formal communications of delegations from developing countries, including from the Group of 77 and China, on behalf of its 134 Member States, indicating strong reservations and objections.” Finally, the letter claims that the UNGA president had attempted to “force consensus” when it is” evident that no consensus has been reached on any of these processes”. The delegations conclude by saying that they will “oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively”. Despite the formal objections, the Political Declaration on the SDGs was adopted at Monday’s SDG Summit. See related story. Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit Shenanigans in WHO South-East Asia as Politician’s Daughter Contests Regional Director Election 18/09/2023 Mukesh Kapila Numerous health challenges face the SEARO region, particularly in regard to women’s health. Election fever is sweeping through the World Health Organization (WHO) in three of its six regions – Eastern Mediterranean (EMRO), South-East Asia (SEARO), and Western Pacific (WPRO). It matters who becomes their regional directors because they have considerable decentralised authority to influence the health chances of billions. Its regions also make or break WHO globally. Close squeaks, as with Ebola and COVID-19, show that a divided WHO can be catastrophic. Conversely, a united WHO is a vital defence against borderless health threats yet to come. Take SEARO – the focus of this article, after we earlier considered EMRO. The South-East Asia Region is special in WHO annals as it is the first regional office that opened – in 1948 in New Delhi where it is still based. SEARO’s 11 members are home to two billion people – a quarter of humanity. They range from mighty India (1.4 billion) to the tiny Maldives (0.5 million), with Indonesia, Bangladesh, Thailand, Myanmar, Nepal, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, and Bhutan in between. Remarkable progress WHO was a household name during my childhood. I got my immunisations at its centres and treasured the stickers I received as a reward. We did not know what the WHO acronym meant but felt its goodness. Global health’s biggest battles were waged in SEARO with notable successes including the eradication of smallpox, wild poliovirus, and maternal and neonatal tetanus. Several countries have vanquished other conditions: Nepal eradicated trachoma, Maldives eliminated lymphatic filariasis while yaws went from India, rubella from Timor-Leste, measles from Bhutan, and malaria from Sri Lanka. The region’s people live better with all countries approaching and four exceeding global healthy life expectancy (63.7 years). World Health Statistics indicate that SEARO has posted the fastest decline (57%) in maternal mortality ratio since the millennium and reduced its under-five mortality by 78%. New HIV infections have declined by 50%. That is not all. The region has hot-housed crucial service innovations such as community health workers and financing, essential drug kits, integration of traditional healthcare systems, malnutrition management, reproductive health outreach, small-scale water and sanitation technologies, and mass health education, among many examples. To be accurate – these advances did not come from WHO but from increasing prosperity. All SEARO countries except DPRK are now middle-income with Thailand and Indonesia in the upper-middle-income category. There are also hordes of well-qualified professionals, passionate health advocates and civil society groups in the region. WHO wisely partnered with them to build significant national capacities. That is how WHO accompanied South-East Asia’s post-decolonisation to help countries stand on their feet. It also eased the birth pains of newer nations emerging from bloody civil wars: Bangladesh and Timor-Leste. Where next for SEARO? With increased geopolitical interest in health, WHO punches above its weight more than other technical agencies as seen by its participation in political fora such as the G20 whose latest summit was in India. Where does SEARO go next? It has plenty of unfinished business. COVID-19 was a reality check causing six million indirect excess deaths – the largest among all regions. Service disruptions meant that immunisation rates dipped, and tuberculosis treatment declined. SEARO will catch up but remains ill-prepared for the next pandemic with a low 68% score for self-reported International Health Regulations capacities. Women’s health struggles with 47% anaemia prevalence, the world’s highest. Child stunting rates of 30% with its most severe ‘wasting’ form contribute an embarrassing eight million of the 13 million children afflicted worldwide. Water and sanitation coverage lags dismally, contributing 40% of preventable global deaths. With urbanisation edging 40-50% across SEARO, record levels of particulate air pollution and road crashes take years off lifespans. Storm clouds on the horizon include rapidly increasing anti-microbial resistance. That is on top of climate change causing changes in vector and pathogen behaviours, risking the re-emergence of defeated conditions or increased virulence of familiar infections. Meanwhile, richer lifestyles fuel non communicable diseases risks such as rising blood pressures and obesity across the region. How will SEARO health systems respond? A prospering but grossly unequal region is pushing 100 million into catastrophic poverty through the world’s highest out-of-pocket healthcare costs. Ironically, the region is a mecca for medical tourism – valued at S$7.5 billion in India alone and projected to rise to $42 billion this decade. SEARO’s fast-digitising population has high expectations that won’t be satisfied by community health workers. They expect hospital-centered technology-dependent specialist attention. However, SEARO is short of around seven million health workers with only DPRK and Maldives above the WHO threshold of 44.5 per 10, 000 population. That is not for lack of training. India has the most medical schools in the world and exports thousands of doctors and allied personnel to OECD and Gulf countries. Contradictory trends mean that SEARO’s Universal Health Coverage (UHC) index has crawled to a disappointing 61 (on a 100-point scale). There is no chance of reaching the SDG target of 80 by 2030 by following WHO’s standard prescription. Where are the new ideas? Expectations from the new regional director In short, SEARO has already plucked the low-hanging fruit, and residual and new challenges are not amenable to quick fixes. What is to be expected from the new SEARO regional director elected on 30 October – 2 November by 10 voting states (Myanmar’s military regime is disenfranchised under UN sanctions)? The new leader must be humble to understand that whereas WHO was once indispensable to advancing health in the SEARO region, that is no longer the case. As ever-stronger nations grip their own destinies, and their populations’ health is dictated by externalities that only they can manage, SEARO (and wider WHO) must recalibrate its role. The region has a cornucopia of strategies, frameworks, goals and targets bestowed by global and regional governance bodies or special interest lobbies. The incoming regional director needs political courage and clarity of purpose to cut through them to define the few essential works that SEARO is best placed to do. Change at the regional level means more than moving into its smart new premises, a $30 million gift from the Indian government. It requires re-setting the bloated Delhi regional office with its wasteful, initiative-sapping rituals and regulations that have left staff at their lowest morale. A more collegiate leadership style and greater diversity of appointments from around Southeast Asia should reduce a stultifying atmosphere more reminiscent of the British Indian Raj than modern corporate management. A murky election Who can do this? Astonishingly, Southeast Asia’s vast reservoir of talent has turned up only two candidates (compared to six in EMRO and five in WPRO elections). The SEARO contenders are from Bangladesh and Nepal. Bangladesh’s nominee, Saima Wazed, also holds Canadian citizenship. She has a Master’s degree in psychology and specialises in autism. Her passion for this neglected aspect of mental health is admirable. Her pitch emphasises the continuity of SEARO flagship programmes while promoting partnerships and inclusion of marginalised groups. Unfortunately, her own capability statement does not reveal the “strong technical and public health background and extensive experience in global health”, required by the official criteria for the role. Or the mandatory substantive track record in public health leadership and significant competencies in organisational management. Her rival is Nepal’s Dr Shambhu Prasad Acharya with a public health doctorate and Masters qualifications in business administration and sociology. He has 30 years of substantive leadership and management experience at WHO headquarters, SEARO, and at country-level organising practical programmes in many places. Born in a rural farming community, he appears committed to diversity and sensitive to social disadvantage concerns. His future vision seeks population well-being, accelerated Universal Health Coverage, strengthened future pandemic and emergency preparedness, innovating to bridge inequities, and championing an inter-connected WHO. It is banal to say that the best candidate should get the job in a fair competition. But the SEARO election is no ordinary process. Wazed is the daughter of the Bangladesh Prime Minister. Of course, that should not he held against her as even the offspring of a privileged public figure has the right to make their own career. But being introduced by her mother at recent high-level summits such as BRICS, ASEAN, G20 and the UN General Assembly to craft deals in exchange for votes may be seen as crossing the fine line between a government’s legitimate lobbying for its candidate and craven nepotism. Earlier, intense political pressure from Bangladesh appears to have dissuaded good competitors from within Bangladesh and other countries. Nepal is now under intensified pressure to withdraw its nominee and allow Wazed to be anointed unopposed. The waters are further muddied by a complaint to WHO legal authorities alleging that Wazed may have faked her academic credentials and lacks the constitutionally required qualifications and experience. The requested investigation cites the dismissal of the previous Western Pacific Regional Director as an example of the Organization’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy towards lack of integrity. But it is unlikely that Geneva will wade in and future investigations – if any – will be long after the event. Such shenanigans in SEARO plumb a new low in multilateral ethics and standards. They undermine the WHO when we need global health cooperation more than ever. Whether raw politics or principled professionalism will decide the election of the next regional director remains to be seen while, regrettably, the health of Southeast Asians is just an afterthought. Mukesh Kapila is a physician and public health specialist who has worked in 120 countries, including as a former United Nations (UN) Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan and a UN Special Adviser in Afghanistan. Image Credits: UN Photo/Kibae Park/Flickr, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash. Breathing Clean: How Improving Indoor Air Quality Can Save Lives and Boost Productivity 16/09/2023 Maayan Hoffman Sealed windows and an aging HVAC system in a Stockholm apartment building – a combination that experts now say can lead to health risks from indoor air pollution. Nearly seven million people die prematurely each year because of ambient and household air pollution, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Moreover, studies have shown a direct correlation between classroom air quality and children’s performance in school. Finally, according to WHO, household air pollution exposure contributes to non-communicable diseases, including increased risk of illness and death from stroke, ischaemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer. However, most of WHO’s work on indoor air pollution has been focused on dirty wood, coal and biomass stove use in developing countries. Less studied are the health risks associated with poor ventilation in modern buildings – ranging from virus transmission to high CO2 levels and the outgassing of chemicals like formaldehyde from building materials and furnishings. With these challenges in mind, the WHO’s European Region, the Swiss government and the Geneva Health Forum are partnering on a first-ever Indoor Air Conference on September 20 in Bern, Switzerland. The day-long event will bring together diverse experts to discuss indoor air pollution, why it needs monitoring, and how to improve indoor air in older buildings. COVID triggered a re-evaluation of indoor air pollution risks Ventilation tips for reducing virus transmission risks, issued by the US Centers for Disease Control during the COVID pandemic. “We spend around 80% or 90% of our time indoors, so what we are exposed to there has an impact,” said Catherine Noakes, of lifestyle patterns in urban settings of developed countries. A professor of Environmental Engineering for Buildings at the University of Leeds, she will moderate the event. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the significance of proper ventilation in reducing the spread of viruses that cause respiratory illnesses; higher exchange rates reduced indoor virus transmission, WHO documented in a milestone set of guidelines for schools, homes and offices, issued during the pandemic. Chemical pollutants indoors getting more attention Particleboard often contains formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. But the risks are not limited to infectious diseases. In the absence of proper ventilation, even cooking on a modern gas stove can lead to excessive exposures of fine particulates and oxides of nitrogen (NOx), which have been linked to childhood asthma. Indoor dampness and mold also are associated with increased risks of asthma, chronic respiratory illnesses and allergic reactions, according to WHO. Chronic exposure to toxic cleaning products and carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde used in particleboard, glues and resins of many modern furniture and building materials can lead to increased risks of chronic health conditions over time. CO2 and cognitive performance A number of recent studies, including one published by a team of Harvard researchers, has documented how higher levels of CO2 indoors are associated with reduced cognitive performance. The team compared the performance of student volunteers engaged in a game simulation, in settings with indoor CO2 levels of 600 1000 and 2,500 parts per million (ppm). Outdoor levels typically range from 300-400 ppm although they can rise as high as 900 ppm in cities. The researchers found a slight drop in mental performance at CO2 concentrations of 1,000 ppm, and a significantly larger decline at 2500 ppm. Finally, in heavily polluted cities, outdoor air pollution can seep into buildings and cause harm – from allergies to respiratory conditions or, as WHO documented, even death. CO2 monitor measures indoor levels of carbon dioxide; high levels have recently been associated with reduced cognitive performance. ‘No magic bullet’ Unfortunately, there “is no single magic bullet” that can solve the indoor air pollution crisis, Noakes said. However, there are several recommendations – many of them inexpensive and applicable in the Global North and South. “There are lots of different strategies,” Noakes said. “You don’t need an expensive ventilation system in every building.” First, the best way to remove pollutants is to provide fresh air. Ventilation needs to be integrated into the design of a building – whether that includes windows that open or a sophisticated system of mechanical ventilation and air purification. In highly polluted cities, indoor air purification systems are increasingly a part of the equation, removing harmful particulates from, breaking down volatile organic compounds and neutralizing bad smells inside homes and office facilities. According to Noakes, part of the solution is also building awareness so that people can catch pollution before it causes lasting harm. A study by the Royal Academy of Engineering showed that improving ventilation could reduce long-range aerosol transmission of diseases by about 50%. Improving ventilation and ensuring good air quality could also enhance productivity by around 1-4%. Climate change vs. indoor air pollution Modern offices may be airtight and thus energy efficient – but also lack adequate indoor air exchanges and healthy ventilation. There is, however, a tension today between trying to save energy and reduce the impact on climate change and the environment by improving insulation and air tightness of a home or office and ensuring its proper ventilation, explained Noakes. While very well insulated homes and office buildings reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it also means the spaces cannot “breathe.” Without advanced mechanical ventilation systems and proper air filtration, harmful chemicals, viruses and CO2 may all build up. “On the one hand, the more we move to reduce fossil fuels, take gas, oil and solid fuels for heating and cooking out of the home, that is a good thing,” Noakes said. “On the other hand, some actions around net zero are potentially making indoor environments worse by sealing pollutants in buildings.” ‘We should be breathing good quality air’ Noakes said she hoped this event would spark discussion around the topic and bring about new solutions. “If you go back 100 or 150 years, we had the same discussions around clean water, and now it is just accepted that everyone should have clean water. It should be the same thing with air,” Noakes said. She acknowledged that there are costs associated with improving air quality, and those need to be considered in the equation. But ultimately there is no downside to having clean air. “We all breathe continuously,” she concluded. “We should be breathing good quality air.” For more information or to register for the First WHO/Europe Indoor Air Conference, click here. Image Credits: Pelle Sten/Flickr, US Centers for Disease Control, DMW/Flickr, Geneva Health Forum , Rachel Lovinger/Flickr. European Battle for Air Quality Heats Up as EU Parliament Votes to Toughen Rules 15/09/2023 Stefan Anderson The European Parliament’s ambitious air quality targets set the stage for the European battle on air pollution. European air quality activists have won a key victory in the European Parliament, which approved tough new air pollution rules that would require countries to meet stricter WHO air quality guidelines by 2035, and allow EU citizens to sue for financial compensation for air pollution-related health damage. But the draft legislation still faces an uphill battle for approval in the European Commission and European Council for it to become law. An air of uncertainty loomed over the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Wednesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on new air pollution rules that would set the bar for the European Union’s ambitions to tackle the unsafe air that 98% of its citizens breathe. The vote was seen by many as the latest test of the European Parliament’s commitment to the Green Deal, the EU’s flagship package of policies to fight climate change. Echoes of the highly politicized vote on biodiversity restoration in July, which passed by a razor-thin margin after an all-out push by right-wing parties to shoot it down, hung over Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s State of the Union address before voting began. “We are facing, with air pollution, a slow-motion pandemic,” Javi López, the centre-left Spanish MEP in charge of negotiating the Parliament’s position, said ahead of the vote. “The administration should fight against air pollution like we were fighting against the pandemic.” But the parliamentary vote, advertised as a down-to-the-wire affair, wasn’t even close. The final tally – 363 votes in favour, 226 against and 46 abstentions – was a welcome relief for environmental groups, who had feared that a campaign by the same right-wing coalition that joined forces to take down the biodiversity law would succeed the second time around. Key victories in voting marathon A 40-minute voting marathon on over 130 pages of amendments notched up several key victories for air quality advocates, who had sought to strengthen the Parliament’s position on Europe’s largest environmental health threat. Ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe -Extracts from the debate (12/09)-Extracts from the vote (13/09) & -Statement by Rapporteur @javilopezEU 🎦Watch and download: https://t.co/o5ResUVRfq pic.twitter.com/VGFGzI011J — European Parliament Audiovisual Service (@europarlAV) September 13, 2023 Significantly, an amendment by political conservatives that would have stripped EU citizens of their right to seek financial compensation from companies and governments for health damages caused by unlawful levels of air pollution was defeated. “It should be a relic of the past that polluting industries continue their delay game to reap profit while tax-payers pay the health costs,” Dr Ebba Malmqvist, professor of environmental health at the University of Lund, said after the vote. New provisions were added to address the training and education of healthcare professionals, health inequalities caused by healthcare costs associated with air pollution, and stricter rules for air quality monitoring systems. Alignment with WHO guideline levels pushed to 2035 Most fundamentally, a provision aligning member states to World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines, which are much stricter than EU standards currently in force, passed comfortably, albeit with a five-year delay to 2035 to appease some centrist members of parliament. Current EU rules, for instance, permit annual average concentrations of PM2.5 to be as high as 25 micrograms/cubic meters of air. Adherence to WHO guidelines would reduce these concentrations fivefold, to just 5 micrograms per cubic meter of air. Although Europe can boast some of the best air quality in the world, air pollution still causes nearly 300,000 premature deaths each year. Despite improvements in air quality across the European Union since 2005, air pollution remains the largest single environmental health risk for its citizens, causing an estimated 287,000 premature deaths annually. Almost the entire global population breathes polluted air which can cause premature death, heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases, according to the WHO. Air pollution is a silent killer, cutting short nearly 7 million lives globally every year. “Anything less than alignment with the WHO would not have been acceptable from a health point of view,” said Dr Cale Lawlor, senior policy manager for global public health at the European Public Health Alliance. “To know the science and not act to protect health is not acceptable.” Another blow to the crusade against the Green Deal Air pollution is the 10th leading cause of death in the European Union. This vote over the air pollution legislation effectively meant another battle lost by the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest party in the European Parliament and political home of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which has sought to derail the 2020 European Green Deal, the centrepiece of her legislative legacy. A campaign by the EPP and far-right allies such as Spain’s populist Vox party to portray the air pollution law as a car ban – which it is not – failed to gain traction. Provisions in the draft law compelling municipal authorities to consider proven air quality measures such as low-emission zones, speed limits, and low-traffic neighbourhoods passed easily. “There’s clearly a strategy to demonise these measures and the way the directive works,” said Zachary Azdad, a policy officer at the advocacy NGO Transport & Environment, who followed the Parliament negotiations. “It’s reassuring to see that this didn’t take and that decisions were made from a more rational point of view.” The EPP Group stands for INCENTIVES, not BANS. We are against banning cars from inner cities. The new rules must not lead to shutting down industry sites or, as the Socialists wanted, even closing nurseries on certain days. 📖 https://t.co/6oxiMapFCL #FitFor55 pic.twitter.com/gu3ZdGdI2J — EPP Group (@EPPGroup) September 12, 2023 Long and difficult battle through the EU legislative labyrinth The ambitious targets established in the Parliament’s vote on new air pollution rules set the stage for what will be a long and difficult battle through the EU’s legislative labyrinth. To get over the line and become law, the new legislation must also win the approval of the European Commission and the European Council. Environmental groups were not happy with the Parliament’s compromise agreement Wednesday to postpone the deadline for meeting WHO’s air quality guidelines from 2030 to 2035, calling it a “lifeline for dirty cars”. But that target date is nearly certain to be the most ambitious to come out of the EU’s three legislative institutions. The European Commission, the EU governing body, had earlier proposed that WHO air quality guidelines only come into force in 2050. The EU Council, comprising the governments of all 27 member states, is widely expected to water down the ambitions set by the Parliament, as it has done with nearly all environmental legislation. The Council is expected to publish its position on the revised air quality rules in December. The publication of the EU Council’s position will mark the beginning of inter-institutional negotiations to finalise the law. Negotiations between the three branches of the European Union’s legislature take place behind closed doors, making the process more difficult for civil society to follow and influence. “That’s why the Parliament vote was so important,” said Azdad. “We really wanted Parliament to send the signal to the other institutions that the people elected by European citizens want clean air.” In April 2024, the Spanish presidency of the European Council ends, and the position rotates to another EU government, setting a tight timeline for lawmakers to finalise the first update to Europe’s air quality directives since 2008. A rightward shift in the balance of power in the Parliament could derail negotiations altogether if the deadline is not met. “There’s a risk of the whole file being forgotten after the European elections,” said Azdad. “That’s why we absolutely want it to be adopted before.” Image Credits: CC, IQ Air , Mariordo. UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
A Leading Global Killer, Hypertension, Is Largely Undetected and Untreated; That Needs to Change 19/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher Testing for hypertension NEW YORK CITY – A leading killer, hypertension, receives barely a nod in many of the world’s health systems – even though it’s the key contributor to deaths from cardiovascular disease, which claims about 17.9 million lives annually and is the single largest cause of deaths in the world today. Addressing this systemic neglect is critical to advancing universal health coverage, says the World Health Organization. WHO’s first-ever Global Hypertension Report, released Tuesday, calls for the dramatic scale up of prevention, treatment and diagnosis of a condition that affects one in three adults worldwide, but is adequately treated only in about one in every five cases. The report was one of two WHO publications released just in advance of a critical UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, set for Thursday, 21 September. A second publication, the Global Monitoring Report co-authored with the World Bank, underlines the huge gap that still exists between the vision of UHC and the reality. Half of the world’s population lacks access to essential health services and 2 billion people face severe financial hardship due to out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. That reality is far short of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) of coverage for all. Without more attention to hypertension and other noncommunicable diseases, which today represent some 74% of premature mortality worldwide, progress on UHC will remain stalled, WHO officials have warned. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at the launch of the WHO Global Hypertension report, Tuesday 19 September, in New York City. “Uncontrolled hypertension can lead to heart attack, stroke and premature death,” said WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesusm, speaking Tuesday at the launch of the report . “The loss of families and communities is not only personal, it also affects economies and development. In the Sustainable Development Goals, countries have committed to reducing premature mortality from noncommunicable diaseases by one-third by 2030. To get anywhere near that target, all countries must take urgent action on hypertension as part of their journey towards universal health coverage.” Number of people living with hypertension has doubled Hypertension diagnosis and treatment by region – a snapshot. The number of people living with high blood pressure doubled between 1990 and 2019, from 650 million to 1.3 billion, the global hypertension report notes. But nearly one-half of people are entirely unaware of their condition, and only one out of five people actually receive adequate treatment. Moreover, the condition that was traditionally associated with the rich diets and sedentary lifestyles of high-income countries is making big inroads in developing regions – along with the encroachment of salt-laden processed foods on traditional diets and other lifestyle changes. In fact, more than three-quarters of adults with hypertension today are living in low- and middle-income countries, the report stated. Bente Mikkelsen, WHO director of NCDs, at Tuesday’s launch of the report: most hypertension cases go undetected and untreated, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. “One in three people worldwide has hypertension, only one in two knows that they have it and only one in five globally are under control [of their condition],” said Bente Mikkelsen, director of WHO’s Department of Noncommunicable Diseases at a press briefing on Monday, just ahead of the report’s release. Increased diagnosis and treatment could prevent 76 million premature deaths by 2050 Tom Frieden, head of Resolve to Save Lives Technically, the condition is defined as having a blood pressure measurement of more than 140/90 mmHG [millimeters of mercury] or taking hypertension medication, said Mikkelsen. However whenever blood pressure levels rise above 120/75 mmHG, risks begin to increase sharply, warned Tom Frieden, head of the US-based nonprofit Resolve to Save Lives, which has long supported WHO’s work on hypertension and cardiovascular disease. “Hypertension is the world’s leading killer,” he declared at the WHO briefing. “And in fact risks double with every 10 mmHG increase in blood pressure.” Additionally, although the 1.3 billion estimate of people with the condition spans the ages of 30-79, it can occur at younger ages as well, he said. Detecting and treating people at levels achieved in “high-performing” countries could prevent some 76 million premature deaths by 2050, along with 120 million strokes and nearly 100 million cases of heart attack and heart failure, the report concluded. Scenarios for scale-up of hypertension treatment – which could save tens of millions of lives by 2050. Solutions are cheap and simple – or should be Digital blood pressure monitoring devices have now become widely available. But while diagnosis and effective medications are both simple and inexpensive, in principle, neither are routine services in primary health care systems in many low and middle income countries, the health experts noted. “The most deadly condition is also the most neglected,” declared Frieden. He noted that the technology to detect hypertension, a simple handheld sphygmomanometer, is hardly new. More recently, battery-powered devices have made measurement even easier for lay people. “There is no excuse for any country not to measure blood pressure,” Frieden declared. “This is not an innovation that just happened, it’s an innovation that happened many years ago.” And he described it as “unethical” that many generic medications, which are inherently inexpensive, are subject to markups and price gouging in many developing countries – and thus unavailable to many people. “It’s an immoral fact that we have off-patent medicines that are unavailable,” said Frieden, who revealed that he, himself, uses an inexpensive, generic blood pressure medication known as amlodipine. “I have hypertension. I am on it. It’s not second rate in any way. “But we have to put on record that, as of today, there is a huge access problem,” he observed, for drugs just like the one he is using. “It is almost catastrophic. These are very cheap molecules. But if you look at countries, you have markups, you have little regulation. And until medicines are free, the most vulnerable may have to choose between food and medicines.” Essential to UHC core package Countries that have implemented HEARTS-based programmes for hypertension control. Mikkelsen declared that “an essential package for hypertension should be core to any universal health coverage,” referring to the WHO HEARTS technical package for guidance. She pointed to the examples such as Canada, India and the Philippines, which have made hypertension diagnosis and treatment a standard procedure in primary health care. “We want to make it clear that it is possible for any country, low-income or high income country, to change the situation,” she added. In India and the Philippines, community-based and team based care has made all the difference, she said. “India has the largest HEARTS-based programme in the world,” added Frieden. “I’ve never seen anything as exciting and as important as the Indian health and wellness centers, which have very effective hypertension treatment.” Yet while such Asian countries are making big progress, in Africa, hypertension treatment lags far behind. “If in Canada six out of every 10 people with hypertension are very well treated, in Africa it’s only five or six people out of 100,” noted Mikkelsen. Even so, money is not the secret to success. The United States, which outspends most countries on healthcare, has far lower hypertension detection and treatment rates than its neighbor to the north, Mikkelsen and Frieden noted. Unhealthy diets, physical inactivity and air pollution Air pollution in New Delhi, India, one of the most heavily polluted cities in the world. Policy change is essential to reduce such hypertension and health risks. Incorporating hypertension treatment into the traditional national and donor-supported programmes for HIV/AIDS ,TB, malaria and maternal health is one way to mainstream diagnosis and treatment, the experts noted. Collaborations with organizations such as The Global Fund have expanded along with the recognition that people living with diseases like HIV/AIDS also are at increased risk of hypertension – particularly as they age. Prevention of hypertension through diet, lifestyles and environmental factors is another key message, however, of the new WHO report and initiative. Levels of hypertension roughly correlate with salt and potassium intake, Frieden said – with salt increasing risks and potassium reducing them. However, barely 6% of countries have policies in place to combat excessive use of sodium in food products, he pointed out. Excessive use of alcohol and tobacco are other factors – also still poorly regulated in many countries. ‘We have imported an alien way of life’ (Left) Terrence Deyaisingh, Minister of Health, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. (Right) Kwaku Agyemang-Manu, Minister of Health, Republic of Ghana, at the launch of the Global Hypertension Report Urbanization and the onslaught of cheap processed and ultra-processed foods marketed by global food chains are changing diets and lifestyles in many low- and middle-income countries, increasing hypertension risks, noted Terrence Deyaisingh, Minister of Health, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, at Tuesday’s launch event. “We have, unfortunately, imported an alien way of life in what we eat. When we try to walk around, it’s like New York City. In the adoption of technology, children no longer play [outdoors],” he lamented. The country implemented a HEARTS-based programme of outreach to increase diagnosis and control, and is committeed to have 50% of people living with hypertension under treatment by 2050. Lesser known is the fact that exposure to air pollution increases hypertension risks, as well. The fine particles of pollutants absorbed into the bloodstream inflame and constrict the blood vessels, as well as increasing blood clotting, which can lead to a stroke. WHO estimates that 99% of people worldwide are exposed to unhealthy levels of air pollution. And overall, addressing such issues require a wider approach, beyond the individual and the health care system, Frieden noted. “Encouraging people to have healthier diets is fine,” he said. “But it’s not really effective. You have to make the physical environment more conducive, so that you are more likely to walk or bicycle.” Added Mikkelsen. “We don’t believe that we can totally delete the problem by prevention – rather we are looking into modifying the trajectory of hypertension. So I have to say that we need to continue to focus on treatment and control.” Image Credits: WHO Global Report on Hypertension/Natalie Naccache, E. Fletcher/HPW, WHO Global Hypertension Report, 2023, E. Fletcher/Health Policy Watch, WHO Global Hypertension report, Marco Verch/Flickr , WHO Global Hypertension Report , Jean-Etienne Minh-Duy. Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit 18/09/2023 Stefan Anderson NEW YORK CITY – World leaders issued a political declaration Monday warning that the world is nowhere close to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) it set in 2015. The declaration, adopted at the first UN high-level political forum on the SDGs since 2019, comes at a time when progress on the goals has been slowed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, and other crises. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres billed the Sustainable Development Goals summit as a chance to agree on a “global rescue plan” to save the SDGs. Failure to achieve the SDG targets will leave millions of people around the world without access to education, quality healthcare, food, and routes out of poverty, Guterres told world leaders gathered at UN headquarters in New York City. “You made a solemn promise, a promise to build a world of health, progress and opportunity for all, a promise to leave no one behind, and the promise to pay for it,” Guterres told world leaders at the summit’s opening ceremony. “This was not a promise made to one another, as diplomats, from the comfort of these chambers. It was always a promise to people. “Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind,” said Guterres. “The SDGs need a global rescue plan.” Politics over people Since the start of his invasion of Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin has leveraged the importance of the Black Sea corridor to global food security to obtain concessions from the international community. The political declaration was approved by world leaders without objection on Monday morning. However, a coalition of 11 authoritarian countries, led by North Korea, Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Syria and Belarus, also published a 17 September letter to UN General Assembly President Dennis Francis in which they stated that they did not consider today’s decision binding. The countries said that their objections to language in the declaration had been ignored and they “reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration” of the documents in the UN General Assembly later in this autumn’s session. The countries are reportedly upset over the deletion of a clause in the declarations calling on countries to refrain from “unilateral” trade and economic sanctions. But the rift also goes to the heart of the world’s major geopolitical battles, and the political and social conservatism of the countries involved (see related story). The first in-person appearance of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the UN General Assembly has heightened political tensions. At a critical juncture for the SDGs that are supposed to help the world’s poorest people, experts worry the week could be derailed by politics. “Rising authoritarianism, democratic backsliding, but also geostrategic competition and economic distress: those are likely to overshadow other fundamental issues related to climate change and global development,” Noam Unger, a development expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies told AFP. At half-time, the world is not close to SDGs The world is set to miss its 2030 hunger eradication target by 600 million people. The SDG targets were set in 2015, and the deadline was fixed for 2030. At halftime, the score is depressing: just 15% of the 17 targets to transform the world are on track to be achieved by 2030, and eight are going backwards. Half a billion people are on course to remain in poverty in 2030, while nearly 100 million children will be out of school. Last year, 735 million people faced acute hunger. “Can we accept these numbers? Or because they make us uncomfortable, should we pretend they do not exist and carry on with business as usual?” said UN General Assembly President Dennis Francis. Poverty eradication, gender equality, education and hunger have all faced setbacks amid several crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a food and energy crisis and climate shocks. Finance is “fuel” The success of Guterres’ rescue plan hinges on several key financial provisions that all have one thing in common: more money. The provisions in the draft declaration include a call to recapitalise the multilateral development banks – the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank – and rework the “international financial architecture” that forces developing countries to pay more to borrow money and blocks foreign investment. “Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind,” said Guterres. “This can be a game changer … [we] need to reform the international financial architecture that I consider outdated, dysfunctional and unfair.” Financing is the lifeblood of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), but developing countries are falling short on the trillions of dollars they need to achieve them, Guterres warned. “I accept that there may not be enough public money, and to that extent, how do we mobilise money?” said Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, a leading figure in the fight for global financial reform. “The major multinational corporations have balance sheets that dwarf and miniaturise the majority of countries in this room. “We have to find a way of them contributing to the financing of global public goods,” said Mottley. In some regions of the world, the deadly interplay between conflict, climate and poverty means money is just one part of the solution. Conflict hits women, children and other vulnerable groups the hardest. “[We] need to recognise the intertwined nature of the challenges that we are facing with climate, with pandemics, with fragility, with war, and with food insecurity,” said World Bank President Ajay Banga. “We cannot solve one without having a holistic view of the total. Hunger: missing SDGs leaves people behind Global hunger took centre stage as a stirring example of the lives changed by missing the SDGs. The world is currently set to fall 600 million people short of its goal of ensuring not a single person goes hungry. Some 2.4 billion people, 30% of the global population, did not have constant access to food in 2022. “In our world of plenty, hunger is a shocking stain on humanity and an epic human rights violation,” said Guterres. “It is an indictment that millions of people are starving in this day and age. “The SDGs aren’t just a list of goals. They carry the hopes, dreams, rights and expectations of people everywhere,” said Guterres. Image Credits: Mohammed Omer Mukhier/Twitter , UNCTAD. Russia and Allies Refuse to Support High Level UN Declarations on Health and Sustainable Development Goals 18/09/2023 Kerry Cullinan Eleven conservative countries have declared that they will not support the adoption of the political declarations on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), pandemic prevention, preparedness and response (PPPR), universal health coverage (UHC), and tuberculosis (TB) on the United Nations agenda this week. Although the countries did not raise their objections during Monday’s SDG Summit, the first in this week’s series of high level meetings, they declared in a letter to the UN General Assembly President that they “reserve the right to take appropriate action” during the subsequent UN General Assembly debate and formal vote on the declarations, which must follow the HLM convocations. “Our delegations oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively. In addition, we reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration of these four (04) draft outcome documents in the coming weeks, after the conclusion of the High-Level Segment of the 78th Session of the General Assembly, when they must all be considered by the General Assembly in accordance with its rules of procedures.” It was unclear what the practical implications of their reservations would be. Typically, the UNGA formalizes the declarations of high level political meetings in a vote on the Assembly floor after the meetings are over. The letter opens the door for further debate and deliberations, however, before the close of the 78th GA session, now scheduled for 26 September – along with the possibility that the declarations may have to be approved by a vote count, rather than unanimously, as has been the tradition. Oppose the removal of language on unilateral sanctions In their letter to UN president Dennis Francis, dated Sunday 17 September, Belarus, Bolivia, Cuba, North Korea, Eritrea, Iran, Nicaragua, Russia, Syria, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe alluded to a “political stalemate” relating to “unilateral coercive measures (UCMs)” as the motive for the reservations. The claimed that their objections had been ignored or set aside at various stages in the development of the declarations, contrary to UN procedural rules. According to the UN Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights Commission (OHRHC), UCMs “usually refers to economic measures taken by one state to compel a change in the policy of another state”, including trade sanctions, embargoes, asset freezing and travel bans. One of the issues that has apparently angered the 11 countries is that earlier drafts of the health and sustainable development declarations initially had language calling on countries to refrain “from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law”. However, this has been removed from the final drafts. the United States, Europe and its allies have slapped a range of trade and economic sanctions on Russia as a result of the Ukraine war; Iran has faced a variety of US-led sanctions since 1979 and more recently, as a result of its nuclear programme, and Latin American countries such as Cuba have faced a US trade blockade for even longer. An earlier version of the Political Delcaration of the High-Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage (23 June 2023) – PP31 had language on "refraining from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law". pic.twitter.com/ywyY4Whd6n — Balasubramaniam (@ThiruGeneva) September 18, 2023 However, Lucica Ditiu, Executive Director of the Stop TB Partnership (STBP), told a webinar last week that long-held health rights had also been contested during the negotiations on all three political declarations on health. “I was in the room and I could hear with my own ears and see with my own eyes Member States literally saying ‘we don’t want to see any language around gender’; ‘can you remove everything that is about the rights of the key and vulnerable populations’. Bodily autonomy and integrity is like up there in the sky,” said Ditiu. “Even as weak, as watered down as these declarations are, as far as I understand, none of them is actually fully endorsed.” Four grievances In the Letter to UNGA 17 September 2023, sent on a letterhead from the Venezuelan Representative to the UN, the countries outline four key grievances. First, a small group of developed countries were unwilling to “engage in meaningful negotiations to find compromises, forcing unfair practices which pretend to impose a kind of ‘veto’ on certain issues, and pretending to even prevent their discussion within the framework of intergovernmental negotiations”. Second, “negotiations were not conducted in a truly inclusive, fair and balanced way”, including the draft outcome of the SDGs Summit being “reopened with the purpose of exclusively accommodating the priorities of a few delegations from developed countries” while “nothing was done to reflect and accommodate the legitimate concerns of delegations from developing countries that, in addition, had broken silence repeatedly, including the Group of 77 and China”. Third, there were attempts to “ignore formal communications of delegations from developing countries, including from the Group of 77 and China, on behalf of its 134 Member States, indicating strong reservations and objections.” Finally, the letter claims that the UNGA president had attempted to “force consensus” when it is” evident that no consensus has been reached on any of these processes”. The delegations conclude by saying that they will “oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively”. Despite the formal objections, the Political Declaration on the SDGs was adopted at Monday’s SDG Summit. See related story. Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit Shenanigans in WHO South-East Asia as Politician’s Daughter Contests Regional Director Election 18/09/2023 Mukesh Kapila Numerous health challenges face the SEARO region, particularly in regard to women’s health. Election fever is sweeping through the World Health Organization (WHO) in three of its six regions – Eastern Mediterranean (EMRO), South-East Asia (SEARO), and Western Pacific (WPRO). It matters who becomes their regional directors because they have considerable decentralised authority to influence the health chances of billions. Its regions also make or break WHO globally. Close squeaks, as with Ebola and COVID-19, show that a divided WHO can be catastrophic. Conversely, a united WHO is a vital defence against borderless health threats yet to come. Take SEARO – the focus of this article, after we earlier considered EMRO. The South-East Asia Region is special in WHO annals as it is the first regional office that opened – in 1948 in New Delhi where it is still based. SEARO’s 11 members are home to two billion people – a quarter of humanity. They range from mighty India (1.4 billion) to the tiny Maldives (0.5 million), with Indonesia, Bangladesh, Thailand, Myanmar, Nepal, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, and Bhutan in between. Remarkable progress WHO was a household name during my childhood. I got my immunisations at its centres and treasured the stickers I received as a reward. We did not know what the WHO acronym meant but felt its goodness. Global health’s biggest battles were waged in SEARO with notable successes including the eradication of smallpox, wild poliovirus, and maternal and neonatal tetanus. Several countries have vanquished other conditions: Nepal eradicated trachoma, Maldives eliminated lymphatic filariasis while yaws went from India, rubella from Timor-Leste, measles from Bhutan, and malaria from Sri Lanka. The region’s people live better with all countries approaching and four exceeding global healthy life expectancy (63.7 years). World Health Statistics indicate that SEARO has posted the fastest decline (57%) in maternal mortality ratio since the millennium and reduced its under-five mortality by 78%. New HIV infections have declined by 50%. That is not all. The region has hot-housed crucial service innovations such as community health workers and financing, essential drug kits, integration of traditional healthcare systems, malnutrition management, reproductive health outreach, small-scale water and sanitation technologies, and mass health education, among many examples. To be accurate – these advances did not come from WHO but from increasing prosperity. All SEARO countries except DPRK are now middle-income with Thailand and Indonesia in the upper-middle-income category. There are also hordes of well-qualified professionals, passionate health advocates and civil society groups in the region. WHO wisely partnered with them to build significant national capacities. That is how WHO accompanied South-East Asia’s post-decolonisation to help countries stand on their feet. It also eased the birth pains of newer nations emerging from bloody civil wars: Bangladesh and Timor-Leste. Where next for SEARO? With increased geopolitical interest in health, WHO punches above its weight more than other technical agencies as seen by its participation in political fora such as the G20 whose latest summit was in India. Where does SEARO go next? It has plenty of unfinished business. COVID-19 was a reality check causing six million indirect excess deaths – the largest among all regions. Service disruptions meant that immunisation rates dipped, and tuberculosis treatment declined. SEARO will catch up but remains ill-prepared for the next pandemic with a low 68% score for self-reported International Health Regulations capacities. Women’s health struggles with 47% anaemia prevalence, the world’s highest. Child stunting rates of 30% with its most severe ‘wasting’ form contribute an embarrassing eight million of the 13 million children afflicted worldwide. Water and sanitation coverage lags dismally, contributing 40% of preventable global deaths. With urbanisation edging 40-50% across SEARO, record levels of particulate air pollution and road crashes take years off lifespans. Storm clouds on the horizon include rapidly increasing anti-microbial resistance. That is on top of climate change causing changes in vector and pathogen behaviours, risking the re-emergence of defeated conditions or increased virulence of familiar infections. Meanwhile, richer lifestyles fuel non communicable diseases risks such as rising blood pressures and obesity across the region. How will SEARO health systems respond? A prospering but grossly unequal region is pushing 100 million into catastrophic poverty through the world’s highest out-of-pocket healthcare costs. Ironically, the region is a mecca for medical tourism – valued at S$7.5 billion in India alone and projected to rise to $42 billion this decade. SEARO’s fast-digitising population has high expectations that won’t be satisfied by community health workers. They expect hospital-centered technology-dependent specialist attention. However, SEARO is short of around seven million health workers with only DPRK and Maldives above the WHO threshold of 44.5 per 10, 000 population. That is not for lack of training. India has the most medical schools in the world and exports thousands of doctors and allied personnel to OECD and Gulf countries. Contradictory trends mean that SEARO’s Universal Health Coverage (UHC) index has crawled to a disappointing 61 (on a 100-point scale). There is no chance of reaching the SDG target of 80 by 2030 by following WHO’s standard prescription. Where are the new ideas? Expectations from the new regional director In short, SEARO has already plucked the low-hanging fruit, and residual and new challenges are not amenable to quick fixes. What is to be expected from the new SEARO regional director elected on 30 October – 2 November by 10 voting states (Myanmar’s military regime is disenfranchised under UN sanctions)? The new leader must be humble to understand that whereas WHO was once indispensable to advancing health in the SEARO region, that is no longer the case. As ever-stronger nations grip their own destinies, and their populations’ health is dictated by externalities that only they can manage, SEARO (and wider WHO) must recalibrate its role. The region has a cornucopia of strategies, frameworks, goals and targets bestowed by global and regional governance bodies or special interest lobbies. The incoming regional director needs political courage and clarity of purpose to cut through them to define the few essential works that SEARO is best placed to do. Change at the regional level means more than moving into its smart new premises, a $30 million gift from the Indian government. It requires re-setting the bloated Delhi regional office with its wasteful, initiative-sapping rituals and regulations that have left staff at their lowest morale. A more collegiate leadership style and greater diversity of appointments from around Southeast Asia should reduce a stultifying atmosphere more reminiscent of the British Indian Raj than modern corporate management. A murky election Who can do this? Astonishingly, Southeast Asia’s vast reservoir of talent has turned up only two candidates (compared to six in EMRO and five in WPRO elections). The SEARO contenders are from Bangladesh and Nepal. Bangladesh’s nominee, Saima Wazed, also holds Canadian citizenship. She has a Master’s degree in psychology and specialises in autism. Her passion for this neglected aspect of mental health is admirable. Her pitch emphasises the continuity of SEARO flagship programmes while promoting partnerships and inclusion of marginalised groups. Unfortunately, her own capability statement does not reveal the “strong technical and public health background and extensive experience in global health”, required by the official criteria for the role. Or the mandatory substantive track record in public health leadership and significant competencies in organisational management. Her rival is Nepal’s Dr Shambhu Prasad Acharya with a public health doctorate and Masters qualifications in business administration and sociology. He has 30 years of substantive leadership and management experience at WHO headquarters, SEARO, and at country-level organising practical programmes in many places. Born in a rural farming community, he appears committed to diversity and sensitive to social disadvantage concerns. His future vision seeks population well-being, accelerated Universal Health Coverage, strengthened future pandemic and emergency preparedness, innovating to bridge inequities, and championing an inter-connected WHO. It is banal to say that the best candidate should get the job in a fair competition. But the SEARO election is no ordinary process. Wazed is the daughter of the Bangladesh Prime Minister. Of course, that should not he held against her as even the offspring of a privileged public figure has the right to make their own career. But being introduced by her mother at recent high-level summits such as BRICS, ASEAN, G20 and the UN General Assembly to craft deals in exchange for votes may be seen as crossing the fine line between a government’s legitimate lobbying for its candidate and craven nepotism. Earlier, intense political pressure from Bangladesh appears to have dissuaded good competitors from within Bangladesh and other countries. Nepal is now under intensified pressure to withdraw its nominee and allow Wazed to be anointed unopposed. The waters are further muddied by a complaint to WHO legal authorities alleging that Wazed may have faked her academic credentials and lacks the constitutionally required qualifications and experience. The requested investigation cites the dismissal of the previous Western Pacific Regional Director as an example of the Organization’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy towards lack of integrity. But it is unlikely that Geneva will wade in and future investigations – if any – will be long after the event. Such shenanigans in SEARO plumb a new low in multilateral ethics and standards. They undermine the WHO when we need global health cooperation more than ever. Whether raw politics or principled professionalism will decide the election of the next regional director remains to be seen while, regrettably, the health of Southeast Asians is just an afterthought. Mukesh Kapila is a physician and public health specialist who has worked in 120 countries, including as a former United Nations (UN) Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan and a UN Special Adviser in Afghanistan. Image Credits: UN Photo/Kibae Park/Flickr, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash. Breathing Clean: How Improving Indoor Air Quality Can Save Lives and Boost Productivity 16/09/2023 Maayan Hoffman Sealed windows and an aging HVAC system in a Stockholm apartment building – a combination that experts now say can lead to health risks from indoor air pollution. Nearly seven million people die prematurely each year because of ambient and household air pollution, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Moreover, studies have shown a direct correlation between classroom air quality and children’s performance in school. Finally, according to WHO, household air pollution exposure contributes to non-communicable diseases, including increased risk of illness and death from stroke, ischaemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer. However, most of WHO’s work on indoor air pollution has been focused on dirty wood, coal and biomass stove use in developing countries. Less studied are the health risks associated with poor ventilation in modern buildings – ranging from virus transmission to high CO2 levels and the outgassing of chemicals like formaldehyde from building materials and furnishings. With these challenges in mind, the WHO’s European Region, the Swiss government and the Geneva Health Forum are partnering on a first-ever Indoor Air Conference on September 20 in Bern, Switzerland. The day-long event will bring together diverse experts to discuss indoor air pollution, why it needs monitoring, and how to improve indoor air in older buildings. COVID triggered a re-evaluation of indoor air pollution risks Ventilation tips for reducing virus transmission risks, issued by the US Centers for Disease Control during the COVID pandemic. “We spend around 80% or 90% of our time indoors, so what we are exposed to there has an impact,” said Catherine Noakes, of lifestyle patterns in urban settings of developed countries. A professor of Environmental Engineering for Buildings at the University of Leeds, she will moderate the event. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the significance of proper ventilation in reducing the spread of viruses that cause respiratory illnesses; higher exchange rates reduced indoor virus transmission, WHO documented in a milestone set of guidelines for schools, homes and offices, issued during the pandemic. Chemical pollutants indoors getting more attention Particleboard often contains formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. But the risks are not limited to infectious diseases. In the absence of proper ventilation, even cooking on a modern gas stove can lead to excessive exposures of fine particulates and oxides of nitrogen (NOx), which have been linked to childhood asthma. Indoor dampness and mold also are associated with increased risks of asthma, chronic respiratory illnesses and allergic reactions, according to WHO. Chronic exposure to toxic cleaning products and carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde used in particleboard, glues and resins of many modern furniture and building materials can lead to increased risks of chronic health conditions over time. CO2 and cognitive performance A number of recent studies, including one published by a team of Harvard researchers, has documented how higher levels of CO2 indoors are associated with reduced cognitive performance. The team compared the performance of student volunteers engaged in a game simulation, in settings with indoor CO2 levels of 600 1000 and 2,500 parts per million (ppm). Outdoor levels typically range from 300-400 ppm although they can rise as high as 900 ppm in cities. The researchers found a slight drop in mental performance at CO2 concentrations of 1,000 ppm, and a significantly larger decline at 2500 ppm. Finally, in heavily polluted cities, outdoor air pollution can seep into buildings and cause harm – from allergies to respiratory conditions or, as WHO documented, even death. CO2 monitor measures indoor levels of carbon dioxide; high levels have recently been associated with reduced cognitive performance. ‘No magic bullet’ Unfortunately, there “is no single magic bullet” that can solve the indoor air pollution crisis, Noakes said. However, there are several recommendations – many of them inexpensive and applicable in the Global North and South. “There are lots of different strategies,” Noakes said. “You don’t need an expensive ventilation system in every building.” First, the best way to remove pollutants is to provide fresh air. Ventilation needs to be integrated into the design of a building – whether that includes windows that open or a sophisticated system of mechanical ventilation and air purification. In highly polluted cities, indoor air purification systems are increasingly a part of the equation, removing harmful particulates from, breaking down volatile organic compounds and neutralizing bad smells inside homes and office facilities. According to Noakes, part of the solution is also building awareness so that people can catch pollution before it causes lasting harm. A study by the Royal Academy of Engineering showed that improving ventilation could reduce long-range aerosol transmission of diseases by about 50%. Improving ventilation and ensuring good air quality could also enhance productivity by around 1-4%. Climate change vs. indoor air pollution Modern offices may be airtight and thus energy efficient – but also lack adequate indoor air exchanges and healthy ventilation. There is, however, a tension today between trying to save energy and reduce the impact on climate change and the environment by improving insulation and air tightness of a home or office and ensuring its proper ventilation, explained Noakes. While very well insulated homes and office buildings reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it also means the spaces cannot “breathe.” Without advanced mechanical ventilation systems and proper air filtration, harmful chemicals, viruses and CO2 may all build up. “On the one hand, the more we move to reduce fossil fuels, take gas, oil and solid fuels for heating and cooking out of the home, that is a good thing,” Noakes said. “On the other hand, some actions around net zero are potentially making indoor environments worse by sealing pollutants in buildings.” ‘We should be breathing good quality air’ Noakes said she hoped this event would spark discussion around the topic and bring about new solutions. “If you go back 100 or 150 years, we had the same discussions around clean water, and now it is just accepted that everyone should have clean water. It should be the same thing with air,” Noakes said. She acknowledged that there are costs associated with improving air quality, and those need to be considered in the equation. But ultimately there is no downside to having clean air. “We all breathe continuously,” she concluded. “We should be breathing good quality air.” For more information or to register for the First WHO/Europe Indoor Air Conference, click here. Image Credits: Pelle Sten/Flickr, US Centers for Disease Control, DMW/Flickr, Geneva Health Forum , Rachel Lovinger/Flickr. European Battle for Air Quality Heats Up as EU Parliament Votes to Toughen Rules 15/09/2023 Stefan Anderson The European Parliament’s ambitious air quality targets set the stage for the European battle on air pollution. European air quality activists have won a key victory in the European Parliament, which approved tough new air pollution rules that would require countries to meet stricter WHO air quality guidelines by 2035, and allow EU citizens to sue for financial compensation for air pollution-related health damage. But the draft legislation still faces an uphill battle for approval in the European Commission and European Council for it to become law. An air of uncertainty loomed over the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Wednesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on new air pollution rules that would set the bar for the European Union’s ambitions to tackle the unsafe air that 98% of its citizens breathe. The vote was seen by many as the latest test of the European Parliament’s commitment to the Green Deal, the EU’s flagship package of policies to fight climate change. Echoes of the highly politicized vote on biodiversity restoration in July, which passed by a razor-thin margin after an all-out push by right-wing parties to shoot it down, hung over Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s State of the Union address before voting began. “We are facing, with air pollution, a slow-motion pandemic,” Javi López, the centre-left Spanish MEP in charge of negotiating the Parliament’s position, said ahead of the vote. “The administration should fight against air pollution like we were fighting against the pandemic.” But the parliamentary vote, advertised as a down-to-the-wire affair, wasn’t even close. The final tally – 363 votes in favour, 226 against and 46 abstentions – was a welcome relief for environmental groups, who had feared that a campaign by the same right-wing coalition that joined forces to take down the biodiversity law would succeed the second time around. Key victories in voting marathon A 40-minute voting marathon on over 130 pages of amendments notched up several key victories for air quality advocates, who had sought to strengthen the Parliament’s position on Europe’s largest environmental health threat. Ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe -Extracts from the debate (12/09)-Extracts from the vote (13/09) & -Statement by Rapporteur @javilopezEU 🎦Watch and download: https://t.co/o5ResUVRfq pic.twitter.com/VGFGzI011J — European Parliament Audiovisual Service (@europarlAV) September 13, 2023 Significantly, an amendment by political conservatives that would have stripped EU citizens of their right to seek financial compensation from companies and governments for health damages caused by unlawful levels of air pollution was defeated. “It should be a relic of the past that polluting industries continue their delay game to reap profit while tax-payers pay the health costs,” Dr Ebba Malmqvist, professor of environmental health at the University of Lund, said after the vote. New provisions were added to address the training and education of healthcare professionals, health inequalities caused by healthcare costs associated with air pollution, and stricter rules for air quality monitoring systems. Alignment with WHO guideline levels pushed to 2035 Most fundamentally, a provision aligning member states to World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines, which are much stricter than EU standards currently in force, passed comfortably, albeit with a five-year delay to 2035 to appease some centrist members of parliament. Current EU rules, for instance, permit annual average concentrations of PM2.5 to be as high as 25 micrograms/cubic meters of air. Adherence to WHO guidelines would reduce these concentrations fivefold, to just 5 micrograms per cubic meter of air. Although Europe can boast some of the best air quality in the world, air pollution still causes nearly 300,000 premature deaths each year. Despite improvements in air quality across the European Union since 2005, air pollution remains the largest single environmental health risk for its citizens, causing an estimated 287,000 premature deaths annually. Almost the entire global population breathes polluted air which can cause premature death, heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases, according to the WHO. Air pollution is a silent killer, cutting short nearly 7 million lives globally every year. “Anything less than alignment with the WHO would not have been acceptable from a health point of view,” said Dr Cale Lawlor, senior policy manager for global public health at the European Public Health Alliance. “To know the science and not act to protect health is not acceptable.” Another blow to the crusade against the Green Deal Air pollution is the 10th leading cause of death in the European Union. This vote over the air pollution legislation effectively meant another battle lost by the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest party in the European Parliament and political home of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which has sought to derail the 2020 European Green Deal, the centrepiece of her legislative legacy. A campaign by the EPP and far-right allies such as Spain’s populist Vox party to portray the air pollution law as a car ban – which it is not – failed to gain traction. Provisions in the draft law compelling municipal authorities to consider proven air quality measures such as low-emission zones, speed limits, and low-traffic neighbourhoods passed easily. “There’s clearly a strategy to demonise these measures and the way the directive works,” said Zachary Azdad, a policy officer at the advocacy NGO Transport & Environment, who followed the Parliament negotiations. “It’s reassuring to see that this didn’t take and that decisions were made from a more rational point of view.” The EPP Group stands for INCENTIVES, not BANS. We are against banning cars from inner cities. The new rules must not lead to shutting down industry sites or, as the Socialists wanted, even closing nurseries on certain days. 📖 https://t.co/6oxiMapFCL #FitFor55 pic.twitter.com/gu3ZdGdI2J — EPP Group (@EPPGroup) September 12, 2023 Long and difficult battle through the EU legislative labyrinth The ambitious targets established in the Parliament’s vote on new air pollution rules set the stage for what will be a long and difficult battle through the EU’s legislative labyrinth. To get over the line and become law, the new legislation must also win the approval of the European Commission and the European Council. Environmental groups were not happy with the Parliament’s compromise agreement Wednesday to postpone the deadline for meeting WHO’s air quality guidelines from 2030 to 2035, calling it a “lifeline for dirty cars”. But that target date is nearly certain to be the most ambitious to come out of the EU’s three legislative institutions. The European Commission, the EU governing body, had earlier proposed that WHO air quality guidelines only come into force in 2050. The EU Council, comprising the governments of all 27 member states, is widely expected to water down the ambitions set by the Parliament, as it has done with nearly all environmental legislation. The Council is expected to publish its position on the revised air quality rules in December. The publication of the EU Council’s position will mark the beginning of inter-institutional negotiations to finalise the law. Negotiations between the three branches of the European Union’s legislature take place behind closed doors, making the process more difficult for civil society to follow and influence. “That’s why the Parliament vote was so important,” said Azdad. “We really wanted Parliament to send the signal to the other institutions that the people elected by European citizens want clean air.” In April 2024, the Spanish presidency of the European Council ends, and the position rotates to another EU government, setting a tight timeline for lawmakers to finalise the first update to Europe’s air quality directives since 2008. A rightward shift in the balance of power in the Parliament could derail negotiations altogether if the deadline is not met. “There’s a risk of the whole file being forgotten after the European elections,” said Azdad. “That’s why we absolutely want it to be adopted before.” Image Credits: CC, IQ Air , Mariordo. UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit 18/09/2023 Stefan Anderson NEW YORK CITY – World leaders issued a political declaration Monday warning that the world is nowhere close to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) it set in 2015. The declaration, adopted at the first UN high-level political forum on the SDGs since 2019, comes at a time when progress on the goals has been slowed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, and other crises. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres billed the Sustainable Development Goals summit as a chance to agree on a “global rescue plan” to save the SDGs. Failure to achieve the SDG targets will leave millions of people around the world without access to education, quality healthcare, food, and routes out of poverty, Guterres told world leaders gathered at UN headquarters in New York City. “You made a solemn promise, a promise to build a world of health, progress and opportunity for all, a promise to leave no one behind, and the promise to pay for it,” Guterres told world leaders at the summit’s opening ceremony. “This was not a promise made to one another, as diplomats, from the comfort of these chambers. It was always a promise to people. “Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind,” said Guterres. “The SDGs need a global rescue plan.” Politics over people Since the start of his invasion of Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin has leveraged the importance of the Black Sea corridor to global food security to obtain concessions from the international community. The political declaration was approved by world leaders without objection on Monday morning. However, a coalition of 11 authoritarian countries, led by North Korea, Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Syria and Belarus, also published a 17 September letter to UN General Assembly President Dennis Francis in which they stated that they did not consider today’s decision binding. The countries said that their objections to language in the declaration had been ignored and they “reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration” of the documents in the UN General Assembly later in this autumn’s session. The countries are reportedly upset over the deletion of a clause in the declarations calling on countries to refrain from “unilateral” trade and economic sanctions. But the rift also goes to the heart of the world’s major geopolitical battles, and the political and social conservatism of the countries involved (see related story). The first in-person appearance of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the UN General Assembly has heightened political tensions. At a critical juncture for the SDGs that are supposed to help the world’s poorest people, experts worry the week could be derailed by politics. “Rising authoritarianism, democratic backsliding, but also geostrategic competition and economic distress: those are likely to overshadow other fundamental issues related to climate change and global development,” Noam Unger, a development expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies told AFP. At half-time, the world is not close to SDGs The world is set to miss its 2030 hunger eradication target by 600 million people. The SDG targets were set in 2015, and the deadline was fixed for 2030. At halftime, the score is depressing: just 15% of the 17 targets to transform the world are on track to be achieved by 2030, and eight are going backwards. Half a billion people are on course to remain in poverty in 2030, while nearly 100 million children will be out of school. Last year, 735 million people faced acute hunger. “Can we accept these numbers? Or because they make us uncomfortable, should we pretend they do not exist and carry on with business as usual?” said UN General Assembly President Dennis Francis. Poverty eradication, gender equality, education and hunger have all faced setbacks amid several crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a food and energy crisis and climate shocks. Finance is “fuel” The success of Guterres’ rescue plan hinges on several key financial provisions that all have one thing in common: more money. The provisions in the draft declaration include a call to recapitalise the multilateral development banks – the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank – and rework the “international financial architecture” that forces developing countries to pay more to borrow money and blocks foreign investment. “Instead of leaving no one behind, we risk leaving the SDGs behind,” said Guterres. “This can be a game changer … [we] need to reform the international financial architecture that I consider outdated, dysfunctional and unfair.” Financing is the lifeblood of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), but developing countries are falling short on the trillions of dollars they need to achieve them, Guterres warned. “I accept that there may not be enough public money, and to that extent, how do we mobilise money?” said Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, a leading figure in the fight for global financial reform. “The major multinational corporations have balance sheets that dwarf and miniaturise the majority of countries in this room. “We have to find a way of them contributing to the financing of global public goods,” said Mottley. In some regions of the world, the deadly interplay between conflict, climate and poverty means money is just one part of the solution. Conflict hits women, children and other vulnerable groups the hardest. “[We] need to recognise the intertwined nature of the challenges that we are facing with climate, with pandemics, with fragility, with war, and with food insecurity,” said World Bank President Ajay Banga. “We cannot solve one without having a holistic view of the total. Hunger: missing SDGs leaves people behind Global hunger took centre stage as a stirring example of the lives changed by missing the SDGs. The world is currently set to fall 600 million people short of its goal of ensuring not a single person goes hungry. Some 2.4 billion people, 30% of the global population, did not have constant access to food in 2022. “In our world of plenty, hunger is a shocking stain on humanity and an epic human rights violation,” said Guterres. “It is an indictment that millions of people are starving in this day and age. “The SDGs aren’t just a list of goals. They carry the hopes, dreams, rights and expectations of people everywhere,” said Guterres. Image Credits: Mohammed Omer Mukhier/Twitter , UNCTAD. Russia and Allies Refuse to Support High Level UN Declarations on Health and Sustainable Development Goals 18/09/2023 Kerry Cullinan Eleven conservative countries have declared that they will not support the adoption of the political declarations on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), pandemic prevention, preparedness and response (PPPR), universal health coverage (UHC), and tuberculosis (TB) on the United Nations agenda this week. Although the countries did not raise their objections during Monday’s SDG Summit, the first in this week’s series of high level meetings, they declared in a letter to the UN General Assembly President that they “reserve the right to take appropriate action” during the subsequent UN General Assembly debate and formal vote on the declarations, which must follow the HLM convocations. “Our delegations oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively. In addition, we reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration of these four (04) draft outcome documents in the coming weeks, after the conclusion of the High-Level Segment of the 78th Session of the General Assembly, when they must all be considered by the General Assembly in accordance with its rules of procedures.” It was unclear what the practical implications of their reservations would be. Typically, the UNGA formalizes the declarations of high level political meetings in a vote on the Assembly floor after the meetings are over. The letter opens the door for further debate and deliberations, however, before the close of the 78th GA session, now scheduled for 26 September – along with the possibility that the declarations may have to be approved by a vote count, rather than unanimously, as has been the tradition. Oppose the removal of language on unilateral sanctions In their letter to UN president Dennis Francis, dated Sunday 17 September, Belarus, Bolivia, Cuba, North Korea, Eritrea, Iran, Nicaragua, Russia, Syria, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe alluded to a “political stalemate” relating to “unilateral coercive measures (UCMs)” as the motive for the reservations. The claimed that their objections had been ignored or set aside at various stages in the development of the declarations, contrary to UN procedural rules. According to the UN Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights Commission (OHRHC), UCMs “usually refers to economic measures taken by one state to compel a change in the policy of another state”, including trade sanctions, embargoes, asset freezing and travel bans. One of the issues that has apparently angered the 11 countries is that earlier drafts of the health and sustainable development declarations initially had language calling on countries to refrain “from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law”. However, this has been removed from the final drafts. the United States, Europe and its allies have slapped a range of trade and economic sanctions on Russia as a result of the Ukraine war; Iran has faced a variety of US-led sanctions since 1979 and more recently, as a result of its nuclear programme, and Latin American countries such as Cuba have faced a US trade blockade for even longer. An earlier version of the Political Delcaration of the High-Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage (23 June 2023) – PP31 had language on "refraining from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law". pic.twitter.com/ywyY4Whd6n — Balasubramaniam (@ThiruGeneva) September 18, 2023 However, Lucica Ditiu, Executive Director of the Stop TB Partnership (STBP), told a webinar last week that long-held health rights had also been contested during the negotiations on all three political declarations on health. “I was in the room and I could hear with my own ears and see with my own eyes Member States literally saying ‘we don’t want to see any language around gender’; ‘can you remove everything that is about the rights of the key and vulnerable populations’. Bodily autonomy and integrity is like up there in the sky,” said Ditiu. “Even as weak, as watered down as these declarations are, as far as I understand, none of them is actually fully endorsed.” Four grievances In the Letter to UNGA 17 September 2023, sent on a letterhead from the Venezuelan Representative to the UN, the countries outline four key grievances. First, a small group of developed countries were unwilling to “engage in meaningful negotiations to find compromises, forcing unfair practices which pretend to impose a kind of ‘veto’ on certain issues, and pretending to even prevent their discussion within the framework of intergovernmental negotiations”. Second, “negotiations were not conducted in a truly inclusive, fair and balanced way”, including the draft outcome of the SDGs Summit being “reopened with the purpose of exclusively accommodating the priorities of a few delegations from developed countries” while “nothing was done to reflect and accommodate the legitimate concerns of delegations from developing countries that, in addition, had broken silence repeatedly, including the Group of 77 and China”. Third, there were attempts to “ignore formal communications of delegations from developing countries, including from the Group of 77 and China, on behalf of its 134 Member States, indicating strong reservations and objections.” Finally, the letter claims that the UNGA president had attempted to “force consensus” when it is” evident that no consensus has been reached on any of these processes”. The delegations conclude by saying that they will “oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively”. Despite the formal objections, the Political Declaration on the SDGs was adopted at Monday’s SDG Summit. See related story. Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit Shenanigans in WHO South-East Asia as Politician’s Daughter Contests Regional Director Election 18/09/2023 Mukesh Kapila Numerous health challenges face the SEARO region, particularly in regard to women’s health. Election fever is sweeping through the World Health Organization (WHO) in three of its six regions – Eastern Mediterranean (EMRO), South-East Asia (SEARO), and Western Pacific (WPRO). It matters who becomes their regional directors because they have considerable decentralised authority to influence the health chances of billions. Its regions also make or break WHO globally. Close squeaks, as with Ebola and COVID-19, show that a divided WHO can be catastrophic. Conversely, a united WHO is a vital defence against borderless health threats yet to come. Take SEARO – the focus of this article, after we earlier considered EMRO. The South-East Asia Region is special in WHO annals as it is the first regional office that opened – in 1948 in New Delhi where it is still based. SEARO’s 11 members are home to two billion people – a quarter of humanity. They range from mighty India (1.4 billion) to the tiny Maldives (0.5 million), with Indonesia, Bangladesh, Thailand, Myanmar, Nepal, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, and Bhutan in between. Remarkable progress WHO was a household name during my childhood. I got my immunisations at its centres and treasured the stickers I received as a reward. We did not know what the WHO acronym meant but felt its goodness. Global health’s biggest battles were waged in SEARO with notable successes including the eradication of smallpox, wild poliovirus, and maternal and neonatal tetanus. Several countries have vanquished other conditions: Nepal eradicated trachoma, Maldives eliminated lymphatic filariasis while yaws went from India, rubella from Timor-Leste, measles from Bhutan, and malaria from Sri Lanka. The region’s people live better with all countries approaching and four exceeding global healthy life expectancy (63.7 years). World Health Statistics indicate that SEARO has posted the fastest decline (57%) in maternal mortality ratio since the millennium and reduced its under-five mortality by 78%. New HIV infections have declined by 50%. That is not all. The region has hot-housed crucial service innovations such as community health workers and financing, essential drug kits, integration of traditional healthcare systems, malnutrition management, reproductive health outreach, small-scale water and sanitation technologies, and mass health education, among many examples. To be accurate – these advances did not come from WHO but from increasing prosperity. All SEARO countries except DPRK are now middle-income with Thailand and Indonesia in the upper-middle-income category. There are also hordes of well-qualified professionals, passionate health advocates and civil society groups in the region. WHO wisely partnered with them to build significant national capacities. That is how WHO accompanied South-East Asia’s post-decolonisation to help countries stand on their feet. It also eased the birth pains of newer nations emerging from bloody civil wars: Bangladesh and Timor-Leste. Where next for SEARO? With increased geopolitical interest in health, WHO punches above its weight more than other technical agencies as seen by its participation in political fora such as the G20 whose latest summit was in India. Where does SEARO go next? It has plenty of unfinished business. COVID-19 was a reality check causing six million indirect excess deaths – the largest among all regions. Service disruptions meant that immunisation rates dipped, and tuberculosis treatment declined. SEARO will catch up but remains ill-prepared for the next pandemic with a low 68% score for self-reported International Health Regulations capacities. Women’s health struggles with 47% anaemia prevalence, the world’s highest. Child stunting rates of 30% with its most severe ‘wasting’ form contribute an embarrassing eight million of the 13 million children afflicted worldwide. Water and sanitation coverage lags dismally, contributing 40% of preventable global deaths. With urbanisation edging 40-50% across SEARO, record levels of particulate air pollution and road crashes take years off lifespans. Storm clouds on the horizon include rapidly increasing anti-microbial resistance. That is on top of climate change causing changes in vector and pathogen behaviours, risking the re-emergence of defeated conditions or increased virulence of familiar infections. Meanwhile, richer lifestyles fuel non communicable diseases risks such as rising blood pressures and obesity across the region. How will SEARO health systems respond? A prospering but grossly unequal region is pushing 100 million into catastrophic poverty through the world’s highest out-of-pocket healthcare costs. Ironically, the region is a mecca for medical tourism – valued at S$7.5 billion in India alone and projected to rise to $42 billion this decade. SEARO’s fast-digitising population has high expectations that won’t be satisfied by community health workers. They expect hospital-centered technology-dependent specialist attention. However, SEARO is short of around seven million health workers with only DPRK and Maldives above the WHO threshold of 44.5 per 10, 000 population. That is not for lack of training. India has the most medical schools in the world and exports thousands of doctors and allied personnel to OECD and Gulf countries. Contradictory trends mean that SEARO’s Universal Health Coverage (UHC) index has crawled to a disappointing 61 (on a 100-point scale). There is no chance of reaching the SDG target of 80 by 2030 by following WHO’s standard prescription. Where are the new ideas? Expectations from the new regional director In short, SEARO has already plucked the low-hanging fruit, and residual and new challenges are not amenable to quick fixes. What is to be expected from the new SEARO regional director elected on 30 October – 2 November by 10 voting states (Myanmar’s military regime is disenfranchised under UN sanctions)? The new leader must be humble to understand that whereas WHO was once indispensable to advancing health in the SEARO region, that is no longer the case. As ever-stronger nations grip their own destinies, and their populations’ health is dictated by externalities that only they can manage, SEARO (and wider WHO) must recalibrate its role. The region has a cornucopia of strategies, frameworks, goals and targets bestowed by global and regional governance bodies or special interest lobbies. The incoming regional director needs political courage and clarity of purpose to cut through them to define the few essential works that SEARO is best placed to do. Change at the regional level means more than moving into its smart new premises, a $30 million gift from the Indian government. It requires re-setting the bloated Delhi regional office with its wasteful, initiative-sapping rituals and regulations that have left staff at their lowest morale. A more collegiate leadership style and greater diversity of appointments from around Southeast Asia should reduce a stultifying atmosphere more reminiscent of the British Indian Raj than modern corporate management. A murky election Who can do this? Astonishingly, Southeast Asia’s vast reservoir of talent has turned up only two candidates (compared to six in EMRO and five in WPRO elections). The SEARO contenders are from Bangladesh and Nepal. Bangladesh’s nominee, Saima Wazed, also holds Canadian citizenship. She has a Master’s degree in psychology and specialises in autism. Her passion for this neglected aspect of mental health is admirable. Her pitch emphasises the continuity of SEARO flagship programmes while promoting partnerships and inclusion of marginalised groups. Unfortunately, her own capability statement does not reveal the “strong technical and public health background and extensive experience in global health”, required by the official criteria for the role. Or the mandatory substantive track record in public health leadership and significant competencies in organisational management. Her rival is Nepal’s Dr Shambhu Prasad Acharya with a public health doctorate and Masters qualifications in business administration and sociology. He has 30 years of substantive leadership and management experience at WHO headquarters, SEARO, and at country-level organising practical programmes in many places. Born in a rural farming community, he appears committed to diversity and sensitive to social disadvantage concerns. His future vision seeks population well-being, accelerated Universal Health Coverage, strengthened future pandemic and emergency preparedness, innovating to bridge inequities, and championing an inter-connected WHO. It is banal to say that the best candidate should get the job in a fair competition. But the SEARO election is no ordinary process. Wazed is the daughter of the Bangladesh Prime Minister. Of course, that should not he held against her as even the offspring of a privileged public figure has the right to make their own career. But being introduced by her mother at recent high-level summits such as BRICS, ASEAN, G20 and the UN General Assembly to craft deals in exchange for votes may be seen as crossing the fine line between a government’s legitimate lobbying for its candidate and craven nepotism. Earlier, intense political pressure from Bangladesh appears to have dissuaded good competitors from within Bangladesh and other countries. Nepal is now under intensified pressure to withdraw its nominee and allow Wazed to be anointed unopposed. The waters are further muddied by a complaint to WHO legal authorities alleging that Wazed may have faked her academic credentials and lacks the constitutionally required qualifications and experience. The requested investigation cites the dismissal of the previous Western Pacific Regional Director as an example of the Organization’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy towards lack of integrity. But it is unlikely that Geneva will wade in and future investigations – if any – will be long after the event. Such shenanigans in SEARO plumb a new low in multilateral ethics and standards. They undermine the WHO when we need global health cooperation more than ever. Whether raw politics or principled professionalism will decide the election of the next regional director remains to be seen while, regrettably, the health of Southeast Asians is just an afterthought. Mukesh Kapila is a physician and public health specialist who has worked in 120 countries, including as a former United Nations (UN) Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan and a UN Special Adviser in Afghanistan. Image Credits: UN Photo/Kibae Park/Flickr, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash. Breathing Clean: How Improving Indoor Air Quality Can Save Lives and Boost Productivity 16/09/2023 Maayan Hoffman Sealed windows and an aging HVAC system in a Stockholm apartment building – a combination that experts now say can lead to health risks from indoor air pollution. Nearly seven million people die prematurely each year because of ambient and household air pollution, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Moreover, studies have shown a direct correlation between classroom air quality and children’s performance in school. Finally, according to WHO, household air pollution exposure contributes to non-communicable diseases, including increased risk of illness and death from stroke, ischaemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer. However, most of WHO’s work on indoor air pollution has been focused on dirty wood, coal and biomass stove use in developing countries. Less studied are the health risks associated with poor ventilation in modern buildings – ranging from virus transmission to high CO2 levels and the outgassing of chemicals like formaldehyde from building materials and furnishings. With these challenges in mind, the WHO’s European Region, the Swiss government and the Geneva Health Forum are partnering on a first-ever Indoor Air Conference on September 20 in Bern, Switzerland. The day-long event will bring together diverse experts to discuss indoor air pollution, why it needs monitoring, and how to improve indoor air in older buildings. COVID triggered a re-evaluation of indoor air pollution risks Ventilation tips for reducing virus transmission risks, issued by the US Centers for Disease Control during the COVID pandemic. “We spend around 80% or 90% of our time indoors, so what we are exposed to there has an impact,” said Catherine Noakes, of lifestyle patterns in urban settings of developed countries. A professor of Environmental Engineering for Buildings at the University of Leeds, she will moderate the event. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the significance of proper ventilation in reducing the spread of viruses that cause respiratory illnesses; higher exchange rates reduced indoor virus transmission, WHO documented in a milestone set of guidelines for schools, homes and offices, issued during the pandemic. Chemical pollutants indoors getting more attention Particleboard often contains formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. But the risks are not limited to infectious diseases. In the absence of proper ventilation, even cooking on a modern gas stove can lead to excessive exposures of fine particulates and oxides of nitrogen (NOx), which have been linked to childhood asthma. Indoor dampness and mold also are associated with increased risks of asthma, chronic respiratory illnesses and allergic reactions, according to WHO. Chronic exposure to toxic cleaning products and carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde used in particleboard, glues and resins of many modern furniture and building materials can lead to increased risks of chronic health conditions over time. CO2 and cognitive performance A number of recent studies, including one published by a team of Harvard researchers, has documented how higher levels of CO2 indoors are associated with reduced cognitive performance. The team compared the performance of student volunteers engaged in a game simulation, in settings with indoor CO2 levels of 600 1000 and 2,500 parts per million (ppm). Outdoor levels typically range from 300-400 ppm although they can rise as high as 900 ppm in cities. The researchers found a slight drop in mental performance at CO2 concentrations of 1,000 ppm, and a significantly larger decline at 2500 ppm. Finally, in heavily polluted cities, outdoor air pollution can seep into buildings and cause harm – from allergies to respiratory conditions or, as WHO documented, even death. CO2 monitor measures indoor levels of carbon dioxide; high levels have recently been associated with reduced cognitive performance. ‘No magic bullet’ Unfortunately, there “is no single magic bullet” that can solve the indoor air pollution crisis, Noakes said. However, there are several recommendations – many of them inexpensive and applicable in the Global North and South. “There are lots of different strategies,” Noakes said. “You don’t need an expensive ventilation system in every building.” First, the best way to remove pollutants is to provide fresh air. Ventilation needs to be integrated into the design of a building – whether that includes windows that open or a sophisticated system of mechanical ventilation and air purification. In highly polluted cities, indoor air purification systems are increasingly a part of the equation, removing harmful particulates from, breaking down volatile organic compounds and neutralizing bad smells inside homes and office facilities. According to Noakes, part of the solution is also building awareness so that people can catch pollution before it causes lasting harm. A study by the Royal Academy of Engineering showed that improving ventilation could reduce long-range aerosol transmission of diseases by about 50%. Improving ventilation and ensuring good air quality could also enhance productivity by around 1-4%. Climate change vs. indoor air pollution Modern offices may be airtight and thus energy efficient – but also lack adequate indoor air exchanges and healthy ventilation. There is, however, a tension today between trying to save energy and reduce the impact on climate change and the environment by improving insulation and air tightness of a home or office and ensuring its proper ventilation, explained Noakes. While very well insulated homes and office buildings reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it also means the spaces cannot “breathe.” Without advanced mechanical ventilation systems and proper air filtration, harmful chemicals, viruses and CO2 may all build up. “On the one hand, the more we move to reduce fossil fuels, take gas, oil and solid fuels for heating and cooking out of the home, that is a good thing,” Noakes said. “On the other hand, some actions around net zero are potentially making indoor environments worse by sealing pollutants in buildings.” ‘We should be breathing good quality air’ Noakes said she hoped this event would spark discussion around the topic and bring about new solutions. “If you go back 100 or 150 years, we had the same discussions around clean water, and now it is just accepted that everyone should have clean water. It should be the same thing with air,” Noakes said. She acknowledged that there are costs associated with improving air quality, and those need to be considered in the equation. But ultimately there is no downside to having clean air. “We all breathe continuously,” she concluded. “We should be breathing good quality air.” For more information or to register for the First WHO/Europe Indoor Air Conference, click here. Image Credits: Pelle Sten/Flickr, US Centers for Disease Control, DMW/Flickr, Geneva Health Forum , Rachel Lovinger/Flickr. European Battle for Air Quality Heats Up as EU Parliament Votes to Toughen Rules 15/09/2023 Stefan Anderson The European Parliament’s ambitious air quality targets set the stage for the European battle on air pollution. European air quality activists have won a key victory in the European Parliament, which approved tough new air pollution rules that would require countries to meet stricter WHO air quality guidelines by 2035, and allow EU citizens to sue for financial compensation for air pollution-related health damage. But the draft legislation still faces an uphill battle for approval in the European Commission and European Council for it to become law. An air of uncertainty loomed over the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Wednesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on new air pollution rules that would set the bar for the European Union’s ambitions to tackle the unsafe air that 98% of its citizens breathe. The vote was seen by many as the latest test of the European Parliament’s commitment to the Green Deal, the EU’s flagship package of policies to fight climate change. Echoes of the highly politicized vote on biodiversity restoration in July, which passed by a razor-thin margin after an all-out push by right-wing parties to shoot it down, hung over Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s State of the Union address before voting began. “We are facing, with air pollution, a slow-motion pandemic,” Javi López, the centre-left Spanish MEP in charge of negotiating the Parliament’s position, said ahead of the vote. “The administration should fight against air pollution like we were fighting against the pandemic.” But the parliamentary vote, advertised as a down-to-the-wire affair, wasn’t even close. The final tally – 363 votes in favour, 226 against and 46 abstentions – was a welcome relief for environmental groups, who had feared that a campaign by the same right-wing coalition that joined forces to take down the biodiversity law would succeed the second time around. Key victories in voting marathon A 40-minute voting marathon on over 130 pages of amendments notched up several key victories for air quality advocates, who had sought to strengthen the Parliament’s position on Europe’s largest environmental health threat. Ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe -Extracts from the debate (12/09)-Extracts from the vote (13/09) & -Statement by Rapporteur @javilopezEU 🎦Watch and download: https://t.co/o5ResUVRfq pic.twitter.com/VGFGzI011J — European Parliament Audiovisual Service (@europarlAV) September 13, 2023 Significantly, an amendment by political conservatives that would have stripped EU citizens of their right to seek financial compensation from companies and governments for health damages caused by unlawful levels of air pollution was defeated. “It should be a relic of the past that polluting industries continue their delay game to reap profit while tax-payers pay the health costs,” Dr Ebba Malmqvist, professor of environmental health at the University of Lund, said after the vote. New provisions were added to address the training and education of healthcare professionals, health inequalities caused by healthcare costs associated with air pollution, and stricter rules for air quality monitoring systems. Alignment with WHO guideline levels pushed to 2035 Most fundamentally, a provision aligning member states to World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines, which are much stricter than EU standards currently in force, passed comfortably, albeit with a five-year delay to 2035 to appease some centrist members of parliament. Current EU rules, for instance, permit annual average concentrations of PM2.5 to be as high as 25 micrograms/cubic meters of air. Adherence to WHO guidelines would reduce these concentrations fivefold, to just 5 micrograms per cubic meter of air. Although Europe can boast some of the best air quality in the world, air pollution still causes nearly 300,000 premature deaths each year. Despite improvements in air quality across the European Union since 2005, air pollution remains the largest single environmental health risk for its citizens, causing an estimated 287,000 premature deaths annually. Almost the entire global population breathes polluted air which can cause premature death, heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases, according to the WHO. Air pollution is a silent killer, cutting short nearly 7 million lives globally every year. “Anything less than alignment with the WHO would not have been acceptable from a health point of view,” said Dr Cale Lawlor, senior policy manager for global public health at the European Public Health Alliance. “To know the science and not act to protect health is not acceptable.” Another blow to the crusade against the Green Deal Air pollution is the 10th leading cause of death in the European Union. This vote over the air pollution legislation effectively meant another battle lost by the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest party in the European Parliament and political home of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which has sought to derail the 2020 European Green Deal, the centrepiece of her legislative legacy. A campaign by the EPP and far-right allies such as Spain’s populist Vox party to portray the air pollution law as a car ban – which it is not – failed to gain traction. Provisions in the draft law compelling municipal authorities to consider proven air quality measures such as low-emission zones, speed limits, and low-traffic neighbourhoods passed easily. “There’s clearly a strategy to demonise these measures and the way the directive works,” said Zachary Azdad, a policy officer at the advocacy NGO Transport & Environment, who followed the Parliament negotiations. “It’s reassuring to see that this didn’t take and that decisions were made from a more rational point of view.” The EPP Group stands for INCENTIVES, not BANS. We are against banning cars from inner cities. The new rules must not lead to shutting down industry sites or, as the Socialists wanted, even closing nurseries on certain days. 📖 https://t.co/6oxiMapFCL #FitFor55 pic.twitter.com/gu3ZdGdI2J — EPP Group (@EPPGroup) September 12, 2023 Long and difficult battle through the EU legislative labyrinth The ambitious targets established in the Parliament’s vote on new air pollution rules set the stage for what will be a long and difficult battle through the EU’s legislative labyrinth. To get over the line and become law, the new legislation must also win the approval of the European Commission and the European Council. Environmental groups were not happy with the Parliament’s compromise agreement Wednesday to postpone the deadline for meeting WHO’s air quality guidelines from 2030 to 2035, calling it a “lifeline for dirty cars”. But that target date is nearly certain to be the most ambitious to come out of the EU’s three legislative institutions. The European Commission, the EU governing body, had earlier proposed that WHO air quality guidelines only come into force in 2050. The EU Council, comprising the governments of all 27 member states, is widely expected to water down the ambitions set by the Parliament, as it has done with nearly all environmental legislation. The Council is expected to publish its position on the revised air quality rules in December. The publication of the EU Council’s position will mark the beginning of inter-institutional negotiations to finalise the law. Negotiations between the three branches of the European Union’s legislature take place behind closed doors, making the process more difficult for civil society to follow and influence. “That’s why the Parliament vote was so important,” said Azdad. “We really wanted Parliament to send the signal to the other institutions that the people elected by European citizens want clean air.” In April 2024, the Spanish presidency of the European Council ends, and the position rotates to another EU government, setting a tight timeline for lawmakers to finalise the first update to Europe’s air quality directives since 2008. A rightward shift in the balance of power in the Parliament could derail negotiations altogether if the deadline is not met. “There’s a risk of the whole file being forgotten after the European elections,” said Azdad. “That’s why we absolutely want it to be adopted before.” Image Credits: CC, IQ Air , Mariordo. UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Russia and Allies Refuse to Support High Level UN Declarations on Health and Sustainable Development Goals 18/09/2023 Kerry Cullinan Eleven conservative countries have declared that they will not support the adoption of the political declarations on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), pandemic prevention, preparedness and response (PPPR), universal health coverage (UHC), and tuberculosis (TB) on the United Nations agenda this week. Although the countries did not raise their objections during Monday’s SDG Summit, the first in this week’s series of high level meetings, they declared in a letter to the UN General Assembly President that they “reserve the right to take appropriate action” during the subsequent UN General Assembly debate and formal vote on the declarations, which must follow the HLM convocations. “Our delegations oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively. In addition, we reserve the right to take appropriate action upon the formal consideration of these four (04) draft outcome documents in the coming weeks, after the conclusion of the High-Level Segment of the 78th Session of the General Assembly, when they must all be considered by the General Assembly in accordance with its rules of procedures.” It was unclear what the practical implications of their reservations would be. Typically, the UNGA formalizes the declarations of high level political meetings in a vote on the Assembly floor after the meetings are over. The letter opens the door for further debate and deliberations, however, before the close of the 78th GA session, now scheduled for 26 September – along with the possibility that the declarations may have to be approved by a vote count, rather than unanimously, as has been the tradition. Oppose the removal of language on unilateral sanctions In their letter to UN president Dennis Francis, dated Sunday 17 September, Belarus, Bolivia, Cuba, North Korea, Eritrea, Iran, Nicaragua, Russia, Syria, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe alluded to a “political stalemate” relating to “unilateral coercive measures (UCMs)” as the motive for the reservations. The claimed that their objections had been ignored or set aside at various stages in the development of the declarations, contrary to UN procedural rules. According to the UN Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights Commission (OHRHC), UCMs “usually refers to economic measures taken by one state to compel a change in the policy of another state”, including trade sanctions, embargoes, asset freezing and travel bans. One of the issues that has apparently angered the 11 countries is that earlier drafts of the health and sustainable development declarations initially had language calling on countries to refrain “from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law”. However, this has been removed from the final drafts. the United States, Europe and its allies have slapped a range of trade and economic sanctions on Russia as a result of the Ukraine war; Iran has faced a variety of US-led sanctions since 1979 and more recently, as a result of its nuclear programme, and Latin American countries such as Cuba have faced a US trade blockade for even longer. An earlier version of the Political Delcaration of the High-Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage (23 June 2023) – PP31 had language on "refraining from promulgating and applying any unilateral, economic, financial or trade measures not in accordance with international law". pic.twitter.com/ywyY4Whd6n — Balasubramaniam (@ThiruGeneva) September 18, 2023 However, Lucica Ditiu, Executive Director of the Stop TB Partnership (STBP), told a webinar last week that long-held health rights had also been contested during the negotiations on all three political declarations on health. “I was in the room and I could hear with my own ears and see with my own eyes Member States literally saying ‘we don’t want to see any language around gender’; ‘can you remove everything that is about the rights of the key and vulnerable populations’. Bodily autonomy and integrity is like up there in the sky,” said Ditiu. “Even as weak, as watered down as these declarations are, as far as I understand, none of them is actually fully endorsed.” Four grievances In the Letter to UNGA 17 September 2023, sent on a letterhead from the Venezuelan Representative to the UN, the countries outline four key grievances. First, a small group of developed countries were unwilling to “engage in meaningful negotiations to find compromises, forcing unfair practices which pretend to impose a kind of ‘veto’ on certain issues, and pretending to even prevent their discussion within the framework of intergovernmental negotiations”. Second, “negotiations were not conducted in a truly inclusive, fair and balanced way”, including the draft outcome of the SDGs Summit being “reopened with the purpose of exclusively accommodating the priorities of a few delegations from developed countries” while “nothing was done to reflect and accommodate the legitimate concerns of delegations from developing countries that, in addition, had broken silence repeatedly, including the Group of 77 and China”. Third, there were attempts to “ignore formal communications of delegations from developing countries, including from the Group of 77 and China, on behalf of its 134 Member States, indicating strong reservations and objections.” Finally, the letter claims that the UNGA president had attempted to “force consensus” when it is” evident that no consensus has been reached on any of these processes”. The delegations conclude by saying that they will “oppose any attempt to pretend to formally adopt any of the draft outcome documents in question, during the meetings scheduled for 18, 20, 21 and 22 September 2023, respectively”. Despite the formal objections, the Political Declaration on the SDGs was adopted at Monday’s SDG Summit. See related story. Global Leaders Sound Alarm on Sustainable Development Goals at UN SDG Summit Shenanigans in WHO South-East Asia as Politician’s Daughter Contests Regional Director Election 18/09/2023 Mukesh Kapila Numerous health challenges face the SEARO region, particularly in regard to women’s health. Election fever is sweeping through the World Health Organization (WHO) in three of its six regions – Eastern Mediterranean (EMRO), South-East Asia (SEARO), and Western Pacific (WPRO). It matters who becomes their regional directors because they have considerable decentralised authority to influence the health chances of billions. Its regions also make or break WHO globally. Close squeaks, as with Ebola and COVID-19, show that a divided WHO can be catastrophic. Conversely, a united WHO is a vital defence against borderless health threats yet to come. Take SEARO – the focus of this article, after we earlier considered EMRO. The South-East Asia Region is special in WHO annals as it is the first regional office that opened – in 1948 in New Delhi where it is still based. SEARO’s 11 members are home to two billion people – a quarter of humanity. They range from mighty India (1.4 billion) to the tiny Maldives (0.5 million), with Indonesia, Bangladesh, Thailand, Myanmar, Nepal, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, and Bhutan in between. Remarkable progress WHO was a household name during my childhood. I got my immunisations at its centres and treasured the stickers I received as a reward. We did not know what the WHO acronym meant but felt its goodness. Global health’s biggest battles were waged in SEARO with notable successes including the eradication of smallpox, wild poliovirus, and maternal and neonatal tetanus. Several countries have vanquished other conditions: Nepal eradicated trachoma, Maldives eliminated lymphatic filariasis while yaws went from India, rubella from Timor-Leste, measles from Bhutan, and malaria from Sri Lanka. The region’s people live better with all countries approaching and four exceeding global healthy life expectancy (63.7 years). World Health Statistics indicate that SEARO has posted the fastest decline (57%) in maternal mortality ratio since the millennium and reduced its under-five mortality by 78%. New HIV infections have declined by 50%. That is not all. The region has hot-housed crucial service innovations such as community health workers and financing, essential drug kits, integration of traditional healthcare systems, malnutrition management, reproductive health outreach, small-scale water and sanitation technologies, and mass health education, among many examples. To be accurate – these advances did not come from WHO but from increasing prosperity. All SEARO countries except DPRK are now middle-income with Thailand and Indonesia in the upper-middle-income category. There are also hordes of well-qualified professionals, passionate health advocates and civil society groups in the region. WHO wisely partnered with them to build significant national capacities. That is how WHO accompanied South-East Asia’s post-decolonisation to help countries stand on their feet. It also eased the birth pains of newer nations emerging from bloody civil wars: Bangladesh and Timor-Leste. Where next for SEARO? With increased geopolitical interest in health, WHO punches above its weight more than other technical agencies as seen by its participation in political fora such as the G20 whose latest summit was in India. Where does SEARO go next? It has plenty of unfinished business. COVID-19 was a reality check causing six million indirect excess deaths – the largest among all regions. Service disruptions meant that immunisation rates dipped, and tuberculosis treatment declined. SEARO will catch up but remains ill-prepared for the next pandemic with a low 68% score for self-reported International Health Regulations capacities. Women’s health struggles with 47% anaemia prevalence, the world’s highest. Child stunting rates of 30% with its most severe ‘wasting’ form contribute an embarrassing eight million of the 13 million children afflicted worldwide. Water and sanitation coverage lags dismally, contributing 40% of preventable global deaths. With urbanisation edging 40-50% across SEARO, record levels of particulate air pollution and road crashes take years off lifespans. Storm clouds on the horizon include rapidly increasing anti-microbial resistance. That is on top of climate change causing changes in vector and pathogen behaviours, risking the re-emergence of defeated conditions or increased virulence of familiar infections. Meanwhile, richer lifestyles fuel non communicable diseases risks such as rising blood pressures and obesity across the region. How will SEARO health systems respond? A prospering but grossly unequal region is pushing 100 million into catastrophic poverty through the world’s highest out-of-pocket healthcare costs. Ironically, the region is a mecca for medical tourism – valued at S$7.5 billion in India alone and projected to rise to $42 billion this decade. SEARO’s fast-digitising population has high expectations that won’t be satisfied by community health workers. They expect hospital-centered technology-dependent specialist attention. However, SEARO is short of around seven million health workers with only DPRK and Maldives above the WHO threshold of 44.5 per 10, 000 population. That is not for lack of training. India has the most medical schools in the world and exports thousands of doctors and allied personnel to OECD and Gulf countries. Contradictory trends mean that SEARO’s Universal Health Coverage (UHC) index has crawled to a disappointing 61 (on a 100-point scale). There is no chance of reaching the SDG target of 80 by 2030 by following WHO’s standard prescription. Where are the new ideas? Expectations from the new regional director In short, SEARO has already plucked the low-hanging fruit, and residual and new challenges are not amenable to quick fixes. What is to be expected from the new SEARO regional director elected on 30 October – 2 November by 10 voting states (Myanmar’s military regime is disenfranchised under UN sanctions)? The new leader must be humble to understand that whereas WHO was once indispensable to advancing health in the SEARO region, that is no longer the case. As ever-stronger nations grip their own destinies, and their populations’ health is dictated by externalities that only they can manage, SEARO (and wider WHO) must recalibrate its role. The region has a cornucopia of strategies, frameworks, goals and targets bestowed by global and regional governance bodies or special interest lobbies. The incoming regional director needs political courage and clarity of purpose to cut through them to define the few essential works that SEARO is best placed to do. Change at the regional level means more than moving into its smart new premises, a $30 million gift from the Indian government. It requires re-setting the bloated Delhi regional office with its wasteful, initiative-sapping rituals and regulations that have left staff at their lowest morale. A more collegiate leadership style and greater diversity of appointments from around Southeast Asia should reduce a stultifying atmosphere more reminiscent of the British Indian Raj than modern corporate management. A murky election Who can do this? Astonishingly, Southeast Asia’s vast reservoir of talent has turned up only two candidates (compared to six in EMRO and five in WPRO elections). The SEARO contenders are from Bangladesh and Nepal. Bangladesh’s nominee, Saima Wazed, also holds Canadian citizenship. She has a Master’s degree in psychology and specialises in autism. Her passion for this neglected aspect of mental health is admirable. Her pitch emphasises the continuity of SEARO flagship programmes while promoting partnerships and inclusion of marginalised groups. Unfortunately, her own capability statement does not reveal the “strong technical and public health background and extensive experience in global health”, required by the official criteria for the role. Or the mandatory substantive track record in public health leadership and significant competencies in organisational management. Her rival is Nepal’s Dr Shambhu Prasad Acharya with a public health doctorate and Masters qualifications in business administration and sociology. He has 30 years of substantive leadership and management experience at WHO headquarters, SEARO, and at country-level organising practical programmes in many places. Born in a rural farming community, he appears committed to diversity and sensitive to social disadvantage concerns. His future vision seeks population well-being, accelerated Universal Health Coverage, strengthened future pandemic and emergency preparedness, innovating to bridge inequities, and championing an inter-connected WHO. It is banal to say that the best candidate should get the job in a fair competition. But the SEARO election is no ordinary process. Wazed is the daughter of the Bangladesh Prime Minister. Of course, that should not he held against her as even the offspring of a privileged public figure has the right to make their own career. But being introduced by her mother at recent high-level summits such as BRICS, ASEAN, G20 and the UN General Assembly to craft deals in exchange for votes may be seen as crossing the fine line between a government’s legitimate lobbying for its candidate and craven nepotism. Earlier, intense political pressure from Bangladesh appears to have dissuaded good competitors from within Bangladesh and other countries. Nepal is now under intensified pressure to withdraw its nominee and allow Wazed to be anointed unopposed. The waters are further muddied by a complaint to WHO legal authorities alleging that Wazed may have faked her academic credentials and lacks the constitutionally required qualifications and experience. The requested investigation cites the dismissal of the previous Western Pacific Regional Director as an example of the Organization’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy towards lack of integrity. But it is unlikely that Geneva will wade in and future investigations – if any – will be long after the event. Such shenanigans in SEARO plumb a new low in multilateral ethics and standards. They undermine the WHO when we need global health cooperation more than ever. Whether raw politics or principled professionalism will decide the election of the next regional director remains to be seen while, regrettably, the health of Southeast Asians is just an afterthought. Mukesh Kapila is a physician and public health specialist who has worked in 120 countries, including as a former United Nations (UN) Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan and a UN Special Adviser in Afghanistan. Image Credits: UN Photo/Kibae Park/Flickr, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash. Breathing Clean: How Improving Indoor Air Quality Can Save Lives and Boost Productivity 16/09/2023 Maayan Hoffman Sealed windows and an aging HVAC system in a Stockholm apartment building – a combination that experts now say can lead to health risks from indoor air pollution. Nearly seven million people die prematurely each year because of ambient and household air pollution, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Moreover, studies have shown a direct correlation between classroom air quality and children’s performance in school. Finally, according to WHO, household air pollution exposure contributes to non-communicable diseases, including increased risk of illness and death from stroke, ischaemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer. However, most of WHO’s work on indoor air pollution has been focused on dirty wood, coal and biomass stove use in developing countries. Less studied are the health risks associated with poor ventilation in modern buildings – ranging from virus transmission to high CO2 levels and the outgassing of chemicals like formaldehyde from building materials and furnishings. With these challenges in mind, the WHO’s European Region, the Swiss government and the Geneva Health Forum are partnering on a first-ever Indoor Air Conference on September 20 in Bern, Switzerland. The day-long event will bring together diverse experts to discuss indoor air pollution, why it needs monitoring, and how to improve indoor air in older buildings. COVID triggered a re-evaluation of indoor air pollution risks Ventilation tips for reducing virus transmission risks, issued by the US Centers for Disease Control during the COVID pandemic. “We spend around 80% or 90% of our time indoors, so what we are exposed to there has an impact,” said Catherine Noakes, of lifestyle patterns in urban settings of developed countries. A professor of Environmental Engineering for Buildings at the University of Leeds, she will moderate the event. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the significance of proper ventilation in reducing the spread of viruses that cause respiratory illnesses; higher exchange rates reduced indoor virus transmission, WHO documented in a milestone set of guidelines for schools, homes and offices, issued during the pandemic. Chemical pollutants indoors getting more attention Particleboard often contains formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. But the risks are not limited to infectious diseases. In the absence of proper ventilation, even cooking on a modern gas stove can lead to excessive exposures of fine particulates and oxides of nitrogen (NOx), which have been linked to childhood asthma. Indoor dampness and mold also are associated with increased risks of asthma, chronic respiratory illnesses and allergic reactions, according to WHO. Chronic exposure to toxic cleaning products and carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde used in particleboard, glues and resins of many modern furniture and building materials can lead to increased risks of chronic health conditions over time. CO2 and cognitive performance A number of recent studies, including one published by a team of Harvard researchers, has documented how higher levels of CO2 indoors are associated with reduced cognitive performance. The team compared the performance of student volunteers engaged in a game simulation, in settings with indoor CO2 levels of 600 1000 and 2,500 parts per million (ppm). Outdoor levels typically range from 300-400 ppm although they can rise as high as 900 ppm in cities. The researchers found a slight drop in mental performance at CO2 concentrations of 1,000 ppm, and a significantly larger decline at 2500 ppm. Finally, in heavily polluted cities, outdoor air pollution can seep into buildings and cause harm – from allergies to respiratory conditions or, as WHO documented, even death. CO2 monitor measures indoor levels of carbon dioxide; high levels have recently been associated with reduced cognitive performance. ‘No magic bullet’ Unfortunately, there “is no single magic bullet” that can solve the indoor air pollution crisis, Noakes said. However, there are several recommendations – many of them inexpensive and applicable in the Global North and South. “There are lots of different strategies,” Noakes said. “You don’t need an expensive ventilation system in every building.” First, the best way to remove pollutants is to provide fresh air. Ventilation needs to be integrated into the design of a building – whether that includes windows that open or a sophisticated system of mechanical ventilation and air purification. In highly polluted cities, indoor air purification systems are increasingly a part of the equation, removing harmful particulates from, breaking down volatile organic compounds and neutralizing bad smells inside homes and office facilities. According to Noakes, part of the solution is also building awareness so that people can catch pollution before it causes lasting harm. A study by the Royal Academy of Engineering showed that improving ventilation could reduce long-range aerosol transmission of diseases by about 50%. Improving ventilation and ensuring good air quality could also enhance productivity by around 1-4%. Climate change vs. indoor air pollution Modern offices may be airtight and thus energy efficient – but also lack adequate indoor air exchanges and healthy ventilation. There is, however, a tension today between trying to save energy and reduce the impact on climate change and the environment by improving insulation and air tightness of a home or office and ensuring its proper ventilation, explained Noakes. While very well insulated homes and office buildings reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it also means the spaces cannot “breathe.” Without advanced mechanical ventilation systems and proper air filtration, harmful chemicals, viruses and CO2 may all build up. “On the one hand, the more we move to reduce fossil fuels, take gas, oil and solid fuels for heating and cooking out of the home, that is a good thing,” Noakes said. “On the other hand, some actions around net zero are potentially making indoor environments worse by sealing pollutants in buildings.” ‘We should be breathing good quality air’ Noakes said she hoped this event would spark discussion around the topic and bring about new solutions. “If you go back 100 or 150 years, we had the same discussions around clean water, and now it is just accepted that everyone should have clean water. It should be the same thing with air,” Noakes said. She acknowledged that there are costs associated with improving air quality, and those need to be considered in the equation. But ultimately there is no downside to having clean air. “We all breathe continuously,” she concluded. “We should be breathing good quality air.” For more information or to register for the First WHO/Europe Indoor Air Conference, click here. Image Credits: Pelle Sten/Flickr, US Centers for Disease Control, DMW/Flickr, Geneva Health Forum , Rachel Lovinger/Flickr. European Battle for Air Quality Heats Up as EU Parliament Votes to Toughen Rules 15/09/2023 Stefan Anderson The European Parliament’s ambitious air quality targets set the stage for the European battle on air pollution. European air quality activists have won a key victory in the European Parliament, which approved tough new air pollution rules that would require countries to meet stricter WHO air quality guidelines by 2035, and allow EU citizens to sue for financial compensation for air pollution-related health damage. But the draft legislation still faces an uphill battle for approval in the European Commission and European Council for it to become law. An air of uncertainty loomed over the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Wednesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on new air pollution rules that would set the bar for the European Union’s ambitions to tackle the unsafe air that 98% of its citizens breathe. The vote was seen by many as the latest test of the European Parliament’s commitment to the Green Deal, the EU’s flagship package of policies to fight climate change. Echoes of the highly politicized vote on biodiversity restoration in July, which passed by a razor-thin margin after an all-out push by right-wing parties to shoot it down, hung over Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s State of the Union address before voting began. “We are facing, with air pollution, a slow-motion pandemic,” Javi López, the centre-left Spanish MEP in charge of negotiating the Parliament’s position, said ahead of the vote. “The administration should fight against air pollution like we were fighting against the pandemic.” But the parliamentary vote, advertised as a down-to-the-wire affair, wasn’t even close. The final tally – 363 votes in favour, 226 against and 46 abstentions – was a welcome relief for environmental groups, who had feared that a campaign by the same right-wing coalition that joined forces to take down the biodiversity law would succeed the second time around. Key victories in voting marathon A 40-minute voting marathon on over 130 pages of amendments notched up several key victories for air quality advocates, who had sought to strengthen the Parliament’s position on Europe’s largest environmental health threat. Ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe -Extracts from the debate (12/09)-Extracts from the vote (13/09) & -Statement by Rapporteur @javilopezEU 🎦Watch and download: https://t.co/o5ResUVRfq pic.twitter.com/VGFGzI011J — European Parliament Audiovisual Service (@europarlAV) September 13, 2023 Significantly, an amendment by political conservatives that would have stripped EU citizens of their right to seek financial compensation from companies and governments for health damages caused by unlawful levels of air pollution was defeated. “It should be a relic of the past that polluting industries continue their delay game to reap profit while tax-payers pay the health costs,” Dr Ebba Malmqvist, professor of environmental health at the University of Lund, said after the vote. New provisions were added to address the training and education of healthcare professionals, health inequalities caused by healthcare costs associated with air pollution, and stricter rules for air quality monitoring systems. Alignment with WHO guideline levels pushed to 2035 Most fundamentally, a provision aligning member states to World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines, which are much stricter than EU standards currently in force, passed comfortably, albeit with a five-year delay to 2035 to appease some centrist members of parliament. Current EU rules, for instance, permit annual average concentrations of PM2.5 to be as high as 25 micrograms/cubic meters of air. Adherence to WHO guidelines would reduce these concentrations fivefold, to just 5 micrograms per cubic meter of air. Although Europe can boast some of the best air quality in the world, air pollution still causes nearly 300,000 premature deaths each year. Despite improvements in air quality across the European Union since 2005, air pollution remains the largest single environmental health risk for its citizens, causing an estimated 287,000 premature deaths annually. Almost the entire global population breathes polluted air which can cause premature death, heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases, according to the WHO. Air pollution is a silent killer, cutting short nearly 7 million lives globally every year. “Anything less than alignment with the WHO would not have been acceptable from a health point of view,” said Dr Cale Lawlor, senior policy manager for global public health at the European Public Health Alliance. “To know the science and not act to protect health is not acceptable.” Another blow to the crusade against the Green Deal Air pollution is the 10th leading cause of death in the European Union. This vote over the air pollution legislation effectively meant another battle lost by the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest party in the European Parliament and political home of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which has sought to derail the 2020 European Green Deal, the centrepiece of her legislative legacy. A campaign by the EPP and far-right allies such as Spain’s populist Vox party to portray the air pollution law as a car ban – which it is not – failed to gain traction. Provisions in the draft law compelling municipal authorities to consider proven air quality measures such as low-emission zones, speed limits, and low-traffic neighbourhoods passed easily. “There’s clearly a strategy to demonise these measures and the way the directive works,” said Zachary Azdad, a policy officer at the advocacy NGO Transport & Environment, who followed the Parliament negotiations. “It’s reassuring to see that this didn’t take and that decisions were made from a more rational point of view.” The EPP Group stands for INCENTIVES, not BANS. We are against banning cars from inner cities. The new rules must not lead to shutting down industry sites or, as the Socialists wanted, even closing nurseries on certain days. 📖 https://t.co/6oxiMapFCL #FitFor55 pic.twitter.com/gu3ZdGdI2J — EPP Group (@EPPGroup) September 12, 2023 Long and difficult battle through the EU legislative labyrinth The ambitious targets established in the Parliament’s vote on new air pollution rules set the stage for what will be a long and difficult battle through the EU’s legislative labyrinth. To get over the line and become law, the new legislation must also win the approval of the European Commission and the European Council. Environmental groups were not happy with the Parliament’s compromise agreement Wednesday to postpone the deadline for meeting WHO’s air quality guidelines from 2030 to 2035, calling it a “lifeline for dirty cars”. But that target date is nearly certain to be the most ambitious to come out of the EU’s three legislative institutions. The European Commission, the EU governing body, had earlier proposed that WHO air quality guidelines only come into force in 2050. The EU Council, comprising the governments of all 27 member states, is widely expected to water down the ambitions set by the Parliament, as it has done with nearly all environmental legislation. The Council is expected to publish its position on the revised air quality rules in December. The publication of the EU Council’s position will mark the beginning of inter-institutional negotiations to finalise the law. Negotiations between the three branches of the European Union’s legislature take place behind closed doors, making the process more difficult for civil society to follow and influence. “That’s why the Parliament vote was so important,” said Azdad. “We really wanted Parliament to send the signal to the other institutions that the people elected by European citizens want clean air.” In April 2024, the Spanish presidency of the European Council ends, and the position rotates to another EU government, setting a tight timeline for lawmakers to finalise the first update to Europe’s air quality directives since 2008. A rightward shift in the balance of power in the Parliament could derail negotiations altogether if the deadline is not met. “There’s a risk of the whole file being forgotten after the European elections,” said Azdad. “That’s why we absolutely want it to be adopted before.” Image Credits: CC, IQ Air , Mariordo. UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Shenanigans in WHO South-East Asia as Politician’s Daughter Contests Regional Director Election 18/09/2023 Mukesh Kapila Numerous health challenges face the SEARO region, particularly in regard to women’s health. Election fever is sweeping through the World Health Organization (WHO) in three of its six regions – Eastern Mediterranean (EMRO), South-East Asia (SEARO), and Western Pacific (WPRO). It matters who becomes their regional directors because they have considerable decentralised authority to influence the health chances of billions. Its regions also make or break WHO globally. Close squeaks, as with Ebola and COVID-19, show that a divided WHO can be catastrophic. Conversely, a united WHO is a vital defence against borderless health threats yet to come. Take SEARO – the focus of this article, after we earlier considered EMRO. The South-East Asia Region is special in WHO annals as it is the first regional office that opened – in 1948 in New Delhi where it is still based. SEARO’s 11 members are home to two billion people – a quarter of humanity. They range from mighty India (1.4 billion) to the tiny Maldives (0.5 million), with Indonesia, Bangladesh, Thailand, Myanmar, Nepal, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, and Bhutan in between. Remarkable progress WHO was a household name during my childhood. I got my immunisations at its centres and treasured the stickers I received as a reward. We did not know what the WHO acronym meant but felt its goodness. Global health’s biggest battles were waged in SEARO with notable successes including the eradication of smallpox, wild poliovirus, and maternal and neonatal tetanus. Several countries have vanquished other conditions: Nepal eradicated trachoma, Maldives eliminated lymphatic filariasis while yaws went from India, rubella from Timor-Leste, measles from Bhutan, and malaria from Sri Lanka. The region’s people live better with all countries approaching and four exceeding global healthy life expectancy (63.7 years). World Health Statistics indicate that SEARO has posted the fastest decline (57%) in maternal mortality ratio since the millennium and reduced its under-five mortality by 78%. New HIV infections have declined by 50%. That is not all. The region has hot-housed crucial service innovations such as community health workers and financing, essential drug kits, integration of traditional healthcare systems, malnutrition management, reproductive health outreach, small-scale water and sanitation technologies, and mass health education, among many examples. To be accurate – these advances did not come from WHO but from increasing prosperity. All SEARO countries except DPRK are now middle-income with Thailand and Indonesia in the upper-middle-income category. There are also hordes of well-qualified professionals, passionate health advocates and civil society groups in the region. WHO wisely partnered with them to build significant national capacities. That is how WHO accompanied South-East Asia’s post-decolonisation to help countries stand on their feet. It also eased the birth pains of newer nations emerging from bloody civil wars: Bangladesh and Timor-Leste. Where next for SEARO? With increased geopolitical interest in health, WHO punches above its weight more than other technical agencies as seen by its participation in political fora such as the G20 whose latest summit was in India. Where does SEARO go next? It has plenty of unfinished business. COVID-19 was a reality check causing six million indirect excess deaths – the largest among all regions. Service disruptions meant that immunisation rates dipped, and tuberculosis treatment declined. SEARO will catch up but remains ill-prepared for the next pandemic with a low 68% score for self-reported International Health Regulations capacities. Women’s health struggles with 47% anaemia prevalence, the world’s highest. Child stunting rates of 30% with its most severe ‘wasting’ form contribute an embarrassing eight million of the 13 million children afflicted worldwide. Water and sanitation coverage lags dismally, contributing 40% of preventable global deaths. With urbanisation edging 40-50% across SEARO, record levels of particulate air pollution and road crashes take years off lifespans. Storm clouds on the horizon include rapidly increasing anti-microbial resistance. That is on top of climate change causing changes in vector and pathogen behaviours, risking the re-emergence of defeated conditions or increased virulence of familiar infections. Meanwhile, richer lifestyles fuel non communicable diseases risks such as rising blood pressures and obesity across the region. How will SEARO health systems respond? A prospering but grossly unequal region is pushing 100 million into catastrophic poverty through the world’s highest out-of-pocket healthcare costs. Ironically, the region is a mecca for medical tourism – valued at S$7.5 billion in India alone and projected to rise to $42 billion this decade. SEARO’s fast-digitising population has high expectations that won’t be satisfied by community health workers. They expect hospital-centered technology-dependent specialist attention. However, SEARO is short of around seven million health workers with only DPRK and Maldives above the WHO threshold of 44.5 per 10, 000 population. That is not for lack of training. India has the most medical schools in the world and exports thousands of doctors and allied personnel to OECD and Gulf countries. Contradictory trends mean that SEARO’s Universal Health Coverage (UHC) index has crawled to a disappointing 61 (on a 100-point scale). There is no chance of reaching the SDG target of 80 by 2030 by following WHO’s standard prescription. Where are the new ideas? Expectations from the new regional director In short, SEARO has already plucked the low-hanging fruit, and residual and new challenges are not amenable to quick fixes. What is to be expected from the new SEARO regional director elected on 30 October – 2 November by 10 voting states (Myanmar’s military regime is disenfranchised under UN sanctions)? The new leader must be humble to understand that whereas WHO was once indispensable to advancing health in the SEARO region, that is no longer the case. As ever-stronger nations grip their own destinies, and their populations’ health is dictated by externalities that only they can manage, SEARO (and wider WHO) must recalibrate its role. The region has a cornucopia of strategies, frameworks, goals and targets bestowed by global and regional governance bodies or special interest lobbies. The incoming regional director needs political courage and clarity of purpose to cut through them to define the few essential works that SEARO is best placed to do. Change at the regional level means more than moving into its smart new premises, a $30 million gift from the Indian government. It requires re-setting the bloated Delhi regional office with its wasteful, initiative-sapping rituals and regulations that have left staff at their lowest morale. A more collegiate leadership style and greater diversity of appointments from around Southeast Asia should reduce a stultifying atmosphere more reminiscent of the British Indian Raj than modern corporate management. A murky election Who can do this? Astonishingly, Southeast Asia’s vast reservoir of talent has turned up only two candidates (compared to six in EMRO and five in WPRO elections). The SEARO contenders are from Bangladesh and Nepal. Bangladesh’s nominee, Saima Wazed, also holds Canadian citizenship. She has a Master’s degree in psychology and specialises in autism. Her passion for this neglected aspect of mental health is admirable. Her pitch emphasises the continuity of SEARO flagship programmes while promoting partnerships and inclusion of marginalised groups. Unfortunately, her own capability statement does not reveal the “strong technical and public health background and extensive experience in global health”, required by the official criteria for the role. Or the mandatory substantive track record in public health leadership and significant competencies in organisational management. Her rival is Nepal’s Dr Shambhu Prasad Acharya with a public health doctorate and Masters qualifications in business administration and sociology. He has 30 years of substantive leadership and management experience at WHO headquarters, SEARO, and at country-level organising practical programmes in many places. Born in a rural farming community, he appears committed to diversity and sensitive to social disadvantage concerns. His future vision seeks population well-being, accelerated Universal Health Coverage, strengthened future pandemic and emergency preparedness, innovating to bridge inequities, and championing an inter-connected WHO. It is banal to say that the best candidate should get the job in a fair competition. But the SEARO election is no ordinary process. Wazed is the daughter of the Bangladesh Prime Minister. Of course, that should not he held against her as even the offspring of a privileged public figure has the right to make their own career. But being introduced by her mother at recent high-level summits such as BRICS, ASEAN, G20 and the UN General Assembly to craft deals in exchange for votes may be seen as crossing the fine line between a government’s legitimate lobbying for its candidate and craven nepotism. Earlier, intense political pressure from Bangladesh appears to have dissuaded good competitors from within Bangladesh and other countries. Nepal is now under intensified pressure to withdraw its nominee and allow Wazed to be anointed unopposed. The waters are further muddied by a complaint to WHO legal authorities alleging that Wazed may have faked her academic credentials and lacks the constitutionally required qualifications and experience. The requested investigation cites the dismissal of the previous Western Pacific Regional Director as an example of the Organization’s ‘zero tolerance’ policy towards lack of integrity. But it is unlikely that Geneva will wade in and future investigations – if any – will be long after the event. Such shenanigans in SEARO plumb a new low in multilateral ethics and standards. They undermine the WHO when we need global health cooperation more than ever. Whether raw politics or principled professionalism will decide the election of the next regional director remains to be seen while, regrettably, the health of Southeast Asians is just an afterthought. Mukesh Kapila is a physician and public health specialist who has worked in 120 countries, including as a former United Nations (UN) Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan and a UN Special Adviser in Afghanistan. Image Credits: UN Photo/Kibae Park/Flickr, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash. Breathing Clean: How Improving Indoor Air Quality Can Save Lives and Boost Productivity 16/09/2023 Maayan Hoffman Sealed windows and an aging HVAC system in a Stockholm apartment building – a combination that experts now say can lead to health risks from indoor air pollution. Nearly seven million people die prematurely each year because of ambient and household air pollution, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Moreover, studies have shown a direct correlation between classroom air quality and children’s performance in school. Finally, according to WHO, household air pollution exposure contributes to non-communicable diseases, including increased risk of illness and death from stroke, ischaemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer. However, most of WHO’s work on indoor air pollution has been focused on dirty wood, coal and biomass stove use in developing countries. Less studied are the health risks associated with poor ventilation in modern buildings – ranging from virus transmission to high CO2 levels and the outgassing of chemicals like formaldehyde from building materials and furnishings. With these challenges in mind, the WHO’s European Region, the Swiss government and the Geneva Health Forum are partnering on a first-ever Indoor Air Conference on September 20 in Bern, Switzerland. The day-long event will bring together diverse experts to discuss indoor air pollution, why it needs monitoring, and how to improve indoor air in older buildings. COVID triggered a re-evaluation of indoor air pollution risks Ventilation tips for reducing virus transmission risks, issued by the US Centers for Disease Control during the COVID pandemic. “We spend around 80% or 90% of our time indoors, so what we are exposed to there has an impact,” said Catherine Noakes, of lifestyle patterns in urban settings of developed countries. A professor of Environmental Engineering for Buildings at the University of Leeds, she will moderate the event. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the significance of proper ventilation in reducing the spread of viruses that cause respiratory illnesses; higher exchange rates reduced indoor virus transmission, WHO documented in a milestone set of guidelines for schools, homes and offices, issued during the pandemic. Chemical pollutants indoors getting more attention Particleboard often contains formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. But the risks are not limited to infectious diseases. In the absence of proper ventilation, even cooking on a modern gas stove can lead to excessive exposures of fine particulates and oxides of nitrogen (NOx), which have been linked to childhood asthma. Indoor dampness and mold also are associated with increased risks of asthma, chronic respiratory illnesses and allergic reactions, according to WHO. Chronic exposure to toxic cleaning products and carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde used in particleboard, glues and resins of many modern furniture and building materials can lead to increased risks of chronic health conditions over time. CO2 and cognitive performance A number of recent studies, including one published by a team of Harvard researchers, has documented how higher levels of CO2 indoors are associated with reduced cognitive performance. The team compared the performance of student volunteers engaged in a game simulation, in settings with indoor CO2 levels of 600 1000 and 2,500 parts per million (ppm). Outdoor levels typically range from 300-400 ppm although they can rise as high as 900 ppm in cities. The researchers found a slight drop in mental performance at CO2 concentrations of 1,000 ppm, and a significantly larger decline at 2500 ppm. Finally, in heavily polluted cities, outdoor air pollution can seep into buildings and cause harm – from allergies to respiratory conditions or, as WHO documented, even death. CO2 monitor measures indoor levels of carbon dioxide; high levels have recently been associated with reduced cognitive performance. ‘No magic bullet’ Unfortunately, there “is no single magic bullet” that can solve the indoor air pollution crisis, Noakes said. However, there are several recommendations – many of them inexpensive and applicable in the Global North and South. “There are lots of different strategies,” Noakes said. “You don’t need an expensive ventilation system in every building.” First, the best way to remove pollutants is to provide fresh air. Ventilation needs to be integrated into the design of a building – whether that includes windows that open or a sophisticated system of mechanical ventilation and air purification. In highly polluted cities, indoor air purification systems are increasingly a part of the equation, removing harmful particulates from, breaking down volatile organic compounds and neutralizing bad smells inside homes and office facilities. According to Noakes, part of the solution is also building awareness so that people can catch pollution before it causes lasting harm. A study by the Royal Academy of Engineering showed that improving ventilation could reduce long-range aerosol transmission of diseases by about 50%. Improving ventilation and ensuring good air quality could also enhance productivity by around 1-4%. Climate change vs. indoor air pollution Modern offices may be airtight and thus energy efficient – but also lack adequate indoor air exchanges and healthy ventilation. There is, however, a tension today between trying to save energy and reduce the impact on climate change and the environment by improving insulation and air tightness of a home or office and ensuring its proper ventilation, explained Noakes. While very well insulated homes and office buildings reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it also means the spaces cannot “breathe.” Without advanced mechanical ventilation systems and proper air filtration, harmful chemicals, viruses and CO2 may all build up. “On the one hand, the more we move to reduce fossil fuels, take gas, oil and solid fuels for heating and cooking out of the home, that is a good thing,” Noakes said. “On the other hand, some actions around net zero are potentially making indoor environments worse by sealing pollutants in buildings.” ‘We should be breathing good quality air’ Noakes said she hoped this event would spark discussion around the topic and bring about new solutions. “If you go back 100 or 150 years, we had the same discussions around clean water, and now it is just accepted that everyone should have clean water. It should be the same thing with air,” Noakes said. She acknowledged that there are costs associated with improving air quality, and those need to be considered in the equation. But ultimately there is no downside to having clean air. “We all breathe continuously,” she concluded. “We should be breathing good quality air.” For more information or to register for the First WHO/Europe Indoor Air Conference, click here. Image Credits: Pelle Sten/Flickr, US Centers for Disease Control, DMW/Flickr, Geneva Health Forum , Rachel Lovinger/Flickr. European Battle for Air Quality Heats Up as EU Parliament Votes to Toughen Rules 15/09/2023 Stefan Anderson The European Parliament’s ambitious air quality targets set the stage for the European battle on air pollution. European air quality activists have won a key victory in the European Parliament, which approved tough new air pollution rules that would require countries to meet stricter WHO air quality guidelines by 2035, and allow EU citizens to sue for financial compensation for air pollution-related health damage. But the draft legislation still faces an uphill battle for approval in the European Commission and European Council for it to become law. An air of uncertainty loomed over the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Wednesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on new air pollution rules that would set the bar for the European Union’s ambitions to tackle the unsafe air that 98% of its citizens breathe. The vote was seen by many as the latest test of the European Parliament’s commitment to the Green Deal, the EU’s flagship package of policies to fight climate change. Echoes of the highly politicized vote on biodiversity restoration in July, which passed by a razor-thin margin after an all-out push by right-wing parties to shoot it down, hung over Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s State of the Union address before voting began. “We are facing, with air pollution, a slow-motion pandemic,” Javi López, the centre-left Spanish MEP in charge of negotiating the Parliament’s position, said ahead of the vote. “The administration should fight against air pollution like we were fighting against the pandemic.” But the parliamentary vote, advertised as a down-to-the-wire affair, wasn’t even close. The final tally – 363 votes in favour, 226 against and 46 abstentions – was a welcome relief for environmental groups, who had feared that a campaign by the same right-wing coalition that joined forces to take down the biodiversity law would succeed the second time around. Key victories in voting marathon A 40-minute voting marathon on over 130 pages of amendments notched up several key victories for air quality advocates, who had sought to strengthen the Parliament’s position on Europe’s largest environmental health threat. Ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe -Extracts from the debate (12/09)-Extracts from the vote (13/09) & -Statement by Rapporteur @javilopezEU 🎦Watch and download: https://t.co/o5ResUVRfq pic.twitter.com/VGFGzI011J — European Parliament Audiovisual Service (@europarlAV) September 13, 2023 Significantly, an amendment by political conservatives that would have stripped EU citizens of their right to seek financial compensation from companies and governments for health damages caused by unlawful levels of air pollution was defeated. “It should be a relic of the past that polluting industries continue their delay game to reap profit while tax-payers pay the health costs,” Dr Ebba Malmqvist, professor of environmental health at the University of Lund, said after the vote. New provisions were added to address the training and education of healthcare professionals, health inequalities caused by healthcare costs associated with air pollution, and stricter rules for air quality monitoring systems. Alignment with WHO guideline levels pushed to 2035 Most fundamentally, a provision aligning member states to World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines, which are much stricter than EU standards currently in force, passed comfortably, albeit with a five-year delay to 2035 to appease some centrist members of parliament. Current EU rules, for instance, permit annual average concentrations of PM2.5 to be as high as 25 micrograms/cubic meters of air. Adherence to WHO guidelines would reduce these concentrations fivefold, to just 5 micrograms per cubic meter of air. Although Europe can boast some of the best air quality in the world, air pollution still causes nearly 300,000 premature deaths each year. Despite improvements in air quality across the European Union since 2005, air pollution remains the largest single environmental health risk for its citizens, causing an estimated 287,000 premature deaths annually. Almost the entire global population breathes polluted air which can cause premature death, heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases, according to the WHO. Air pollution is a silent killer, cutting short nearly 7 million lives globally every year. “Anything less than alignment with the WHO would not have been acceptable from a health point of view,” said Dr Cale Lawlor, senior policy manager for global public health at the European Public Health Alliance. “To know the science and not act to protect health is not acceptable.” Another blow to the crusade against the Green Deal Air pollution is the 10th leading cause of death in the European Union. This vote over the air pollution legislation effectively meant another battle lost by the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest party in the European Parliament and political home of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which has sought to derail the 2020 European Green Deal, the centrepiece of her legislative legacy. A campaign by the EPP and far-right allies such as Spain’s populist Vox party to portray the air pollution law as a car ban – which it is not – failed to gain traction. Provisions in the draft law compelling municipal authorities to consider proven air quality measures such as low-emission zones, speed limits, and low-traffic neighbourhoods passed easily. “There’s clearly a strategy to demonise these measures and the way the directive works,” said Zachary Azdad, a policy officer at the advocacy NGO Transport & Environment, who followed the Parliament negotiations. “It’s reassuring to see that this didn’t take and that decisions were made from a more rational point of view.” The EPP Group stands for INCENTIVES, not BANS. We are against banning cars from inner cities. The new rules must not lead to shutting down industry sites or, as the Socialists wanted, even closing nurseries on certain days. 📖 https://t.co/6oxiMapFCL #FitFor55 pic.twitter.com/gu3ZdGdI2J — EPP Group (@EPPGroup) September 12, 2023 Long and difficult battle through the EU legislative labyrinth The ambitious targets established in the Parliament’s vote on new air pollution rules set the stage for what will be a long and difficult battle through the EU’s legislative labyrinth. To get over the line and become law, the new legislation must also win the approval of the European Commission and the European Council. Environmental groups were not happy with the Parliament’s compromise agreement Wednesday to postpone the deadline for meeting WHO’s air quality guidelines from 2030 to 2035, calling it a “lifeline for dirty cars”. But that target date is nearly certain to be the most ambitious to come out of the EU’s three legislative institutions. The European Commission, the EU governing body, had earlier proposed that WHO air quality guidelines only come into force in 2050. The EU Council, comprising the governments of all 27 member states, is widely expected to water down the ambitions set by the Parliament, as it has done with nearly all environmental legislation. The Council is expected to publish its position on the revised air quality rules in December. The publication of the EU Council’s position will mark the beginning of inter-institutional negotiations to finalise the law. Negotiations between the three branches of the European Union’s legislature take place behind closed doors, making the process more difficult for civil society to follow and influence. “That’s why the Parliament vote was so important,” said Azdad. “We really wanted Parliament to send the signal to the other institutions that the people elected by European citizens want clean air.” In April 2024, the Spanish presidency of the European Council ends, and the position rotates to another EU government, setting a tight timeline for lawmakers to finalise the first update to Europe’s air quality directives since 2008. A rightward shift in the balance of power in the Parliament could derail negotiations altogether if the deadline is not met. “There’s a risk of the whole file being forgotten after the European elections,” said Azdad. “That’s why we absolutely want it to be adopted before.” Image Credits: CC, IQ Air , Mariordo. UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Breathing Clean: How Improving Indoor Air Quality Can Save Lives and Boost Productivity 16/09/2023 Maayan Hoffman Sealed windows and an aging HVAC system in a Stockholm apartment building – a combination that experts now say can lead to health risks from indoor air pollution. Nearly seven million people die prematurely each year because of ambient and household air pollution, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Moreover, studies have shown a direct correlation between classroom air quality and children’s performance in school. Finally, according to WHO, household air pollution exposure contributes to non-communicable diseases, including increased risk of illness and death from stroke, ischaemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer. However, most of WHO’s work on indoor air pollution has been focused on dirty wood, coal and biomass stove use in developing countries. Less studied are the health risks associated with poor ventilation in modern buildings – ranging from virus transmission to high CO2 levels and the outgassing of chemicals like formaldehyde from building materials and furnishings. With these challenges in mind, the WHO’s European Region, the Swiss government and the Geneva Health Forum are partnering on a first-ever Indoor Air Conference on September 20 in Bern, Switzerland. The day-long event will bring together diverse experts to discuss indoor air pollution, why it needs monitoring, and how to improve indoor air in older buildings. COVID triggered a re-evaluation of indoor air pollution risks Ventilation tips for reducing virus transmission risks, issued by the US Centers for Disease Control during the COVID pandemic. “We spend around 80% or 90% of our time indoors, so what we are exposed to there has an impact,” said Catherine Noakes, of lifestyle patterns in urban settings of developed countries. A professor of Environmental Engineering for Buildings at the University of Leeds, she will moderate the event. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the significance of proper ventilation in reducing the spread of viruses that cause respiratory illnesses; higher exchange rates reduced indoor virus transmission, WHO documented in a milestone set of guidelines for schools, homes and offices, issued during the pandemic. Chemical pollutants indoors getting more attention Particleboard often contains formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. But the risks are not limited to infectious diseases. In the absence of proper ventilation, even cooking on a modern gas stove can lead to excessive exposures of fine particulates and oxides of nitrogen (NOx), which have been linked to childhood asthma. Indoor dampness and mold also are associated with increased risks of asthma, chronic respiratory illnesses and allergic reactions, according to WHO. Chronic exposure to toxic cleaning products and carcinogenic chemicals such as formaldehyde used in particleboard, glues and resins of many modern furniture and building materials can lead to increased risks of chronic health conditions over time. CO2 and cognitive performance A number of recent studies, including one published by a team of Harvard researchers, has documented how higher levels of CO2 indoors are associated with reduced cognitive performance. The team compared the performance of student volunteers engaged in a game simulation, in settings with indoor CO2 levels of 600 1000 and 2,500 parts per million (ppm). Outdoor levels typically range from 300-400 ppm although they can rise as high as 900 ppm in cities. The researchers found a slight drop in mental performance at CO2 concentrations of 1,000 ppm, and a significantly larger decline at 2500 ppm. Finally, in heavily polluted cities, outdoor air pollution can seep into buildings and cause harm – from allergies to respiratory conditions or, as WHO documented, even death. CO2 monitor measures indoor levels of carbon dioxide; high levels have recently been associated with reduced cognitive performance. ‘No magic bullet’ Unfortunately, there “is no single magic bullet” that can solve the indoor air pollution crisis, Noakes said. However, there are several recommendations – many of them inexpensive and applicable in the Global North and South. “There are lots of different strategies,” Noakes said. “You don’t need an expensive ventilation system in every building.” First, the best way to remove pollutants is to provide fresh air. Ventilation needs to be integrated into the design of a building – whether that includes windows that open or a sophisticated system of mechanical ventilation and air purification. In highly polluted cities, indoor air purification systems are increasingly a part of the equation, removing harmful particulates from, breaking down volatile organic compounds and neutralizing bad smells inside homes and office facilities. According to Noakes, part of the solution is also building awareness so that people can catch pollution before it causes lasting harm. A study by the Royal Academy of Engineering showed that improving ventilation could reduce long-range aerosol transmission of diseases by about 50%. Improving ventilation and ensuring good air quality could also enhance productivity by around 1-4%. Climate change vs. indoor air pollution Modern offices may be airtight and thus energy efficient – but also lack adequate indoor air exchanges and healthy ventilation. There is, however, a tension today between trying to save energy and reduce the impact on climate change and the environment by improving insulation and air tightness of a home or office and ensuring its proper ventilation, explained Noakes. While very well insulated homes and office buildings reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it also means the spaces cannot “breathe.” Without advanced mechanical ventilation systems and proper air filtration, harmful chemicals, viruses and CO2 may all build up. “On the one hand, the more we move to reduce fossil fuels, take gas, oil and solid fuels for heating and cooking out of the home, that is a good thing,” Noakes said. “On the other hand, some actions around net zero are potentially making indoor environments worse by sealing pollutants in buildings.” ‘We should be breathing good quality air’ Noakes said she hoped this event would spark discussion around the topic and bring about new solutions. “If you go back 100 or 150 years, we had the same discussions around clean water, and now it is just accepted that everyone should have clean water. It should be the same thing with air,” Noakes said. She acknowledged that there are costs associated with improving air quality, and those need to be considered in the equation. But ultimately there is no downside to having clean air. “We all breathe continuously,” she concluded. “We should be breathing good quality air.” For more information or to register for the First WHO/Europe Indoor Air Conference, click here. Image Credits: Pelle Sten/Flickr, US Centers for Disease Control, DMW/Flickr, Geneva Health Forum , Rachel Lovinger/Flickr. European Battle for Air Quality Heats Up as EU Parliament Votes to Toughen Rules 15/09/2023 Stefan Anderson The European Parliament’s ambitious air quality targets set the stage for the European battle on air pollution. European air quality activists have won a key victory in the European Parliament, which approved tough new air pollution rules that would require countries to meet stricter WHO air quality guidelines by 2035, and allow EU citizens to sue for financial compensation for air pollution-related health damage. But the draft legislation still faces an uphill battle for approval in the European Commission and European Council for it to become law. An air of uncertainty loomed over the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Wednesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on new air pollution rules that would set the bar for the European Union’s ambitions to tackle the unsafe air that 98% of its citizens breathe. The vote was seen by many as the latest test of the European Parliament’s commitment to the Green Deal, the EU’s flagship package of policies to fight climate change. Echoes of the highly politicized vote on biodiversity restoration in July, which passed by a razor-thin margin after an all-out push by right-wing parties to shoot it down, hung over Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s State of the Union address before voting began. “We are facing, with air pollution, a slow-motion pandemic,” Javi López, the centre-left Spanish MEP in charge of negotiating the Parliament’s position, said ahead of the vote. “The administration should fight against air pollution like we were fighting against the pandemic.” But the parliamentary vote, advertised as a down-to-the-wire affair, wasn’t even close. The final tally – 363 votes in favour, 226 against and 46 abstentions – was a welcome relief for environmental groups, who had feared that a campaign by the same right-wing coalition that joined forces to take down the biodiversity law would succeed the second time around. Key victories in voting marathon A 40-minute voting marathon on over 130 pages of amendments notched up several key victories for air quality advocates, who had sought to strengthen the Parliament’s position on Europe’s largest environmental health threat. Ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe -Extracts from the debate (12/09)-Extracts from the vote (13/09) & -Statement by Rapporteur @javilopezEU 🎦Watch and download: https://t.co/o5ResUVRfq pic.twitter.com/VGFGzI011J — European Parliament Audiovisual Service (@europarlAV) September 13, 2023 Significantly, an amendment by political conservatives that would have stripped EU citizens of their right to seek financial compensation from companies and governments for health damages caused by unlawful levels of air pollution was defeated. “It should be a relic of the past that polluting industries continue their delay game to reap profit while tax-payers pay the health costs,” Dr Ebba Malmqvist, professor of environmental health at the University of Lund, said after the vote. New provisions were added to address the training and education of healthcare professionals, health inequalities caused by healthcare costs associated with air pollution, and stricter rules for air quality monitoring systems. Alignment with WHO guideline levels pushed to 2035 Most fundamentally, a provision aligning member states to World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines, which are much stricter than EU standards currently in force, passed comfortably, albeit with a five-year delay to 2035 to appease some centrist members of parliament. Current EU rules, for instance, permit annual average concentrations of PM2.5 to be as high as 25 micrograms/cubic meters of air. Adherence to WHO guidelines would reduce these concentrations fivefold, to just 5 micrograms per cubic meter of air. Although Europe can boast some of the best air quality in the world, air pollution still causes nearly 300,000 premature deaths each year. Despite improvements in air quality across the European Union since 2005, air pollution remains the largest single environmental health risk for its citizens, causing an estimated 287,000 premature deaths annually. Almost the entire global population breathes polluted air which can cause premature death, heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases, according to the WHO. Air pollution is a silent killer, cutting short nearly 7 million lives globally every year. “Anything less than alignment with the WHO would not have been acceptable from a health point of view,” said Dr Cale Lawlor, senior policy manager for global public health at the European Public Health Alliance. “To know the science and not act to protect health is not acceptable.” Another blow to the crusade against the Green Deal Air pollution is the 10th leading cause of death in the European Union. This vote over the air pollution legislation effectively meant another battle lost by the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest party in the European Parliament and political home of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which has sought to derail the 2020 European Green Deal, the centrepiece of her legislative legacy. A campaign by the EPP and far-right allies such as Spain’s populist Vox party to portray the air pollution law as a car ban – which it is not – failed to gain traction. Provisions in the draft law compelling municipal authorities to consider proven air quality measures such as low-emission zones, speed limits, and low-traffic neighbourhoods passed easily. “There’s clearly a strategy to demonise these measures and the way the directive works,” said Zachary Azdad, a policy officer at the advocacy NGO Transport & Environment, who followed the Parliament negotiations. “It’s reassuring to see that this didn’t take and that decisions were made from a more rational point of view.” The EPP Group stands for INCENTIVES, not BANS. We are against banning cars from inner cities. The new rules must not lead to shutting down industry sites or, as the Socialists wanted, even closing nurseries on certain days. 📖 https://t.co/6oxiMapFCL #FitFor55 pic.twitter.com/gu3ZdGdI2J — EPP Group (@EPPGroup) September 12, 2023 Long and difficult battle through the EU legislative labyrinth The ambitious targets established in the Parliament’s vote on new air pollution rules set the stage for what will be a long and difficult battle through the EU’s legislative labyrinth. To get over the line and become law, the new legislation must also win the approval of the European Commission and the European Council. Environmental groups were not happy with the Parliament’s compromise agreement Wednesday to postpone the deadline for meeting WHO’s air quality guidelines from 2030 to 2035, calling it a “lifeline for dirty cars”. But that target date is nearly certain to be the most ambitious to come out of the EU’s three legislative institutions. The European Commission, the EU governing body, had earlier proposed that WHO air quality guidelines only come into force in 2050. The EU Council, comprising the governments of all 27 member states, is widely expected to water down the ambitions set by the Parliament, as it has done with nearly all environmental legislation. The Council is expected to publish its position on the revised air quality rules in December. The publication of the EU Council’s position will mark the beginning of inter-institutional negotiations to finalise the law. Negotiations between the three branches of the European Union’s legislature take place behind closed doors, making the process more difficult for civil society to follow and influence. “That’s why the Parliament vote was so important,” said Azdad. “We really wanted Parliament to send the signal to the other institutions that the people elected by European citizens want clean air.” In April 2024, the Spanish presidency of the European Council ends, and the position rotates to another EU government, setting a tight timeline for lawmakers to finalise the first update to Europe’s air quality directives since 2008. A rightward shift in the balance of power in the Parliament could derail negotiations altogether if the deadline is not met. “There’s a risk of the whole file being forgotten after the European elections,” said Azdad. “That’s why we absolutely want it to be adopted before.” Image Credits: CC, IQ Air , Mariordo. UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
European Battle for Air Quality Heats Up as EU Parliament Votes to Toughen Rules 15/09/2023 Stefan Anderson The European Parliament’s ambitious air quality targets set the stage for the European battle on air pollution. European air quality activists have won a key victory in the European Parliament, which approved tough new air pollution rules that would require countries to meet stricter WHO air quality guidelines by 2035, and allow EU citizens to sue for financial compensation for air pollution-related health damage. But the draft legislation still faces an uphill battle for approval in the European Commission and European Council for it to become law. An air of uncertainty loomed over the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Wednesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on new air pollution rules that would set the bar for the European Union’s ambitions to tackle the unsafe air that 98% of its citizens breathe. The vote was seen by many as the latest test of the European Parliament’s commitment to the Green Deal, the EU’s flagship package of policies to fight climate change. Echoes of the highly politicized vote on biodiversity restoration in July, which passed by a razor-thin margin after an all-out push by right-wing parties to shoot it down, hung over Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s State of the Union address before voting began. “We are facing, with air pollution, a slow-motion pandemic,” Javi López, the centre-left Spanish MEP in charge of negotiating the Parliament’s position, said ahead of the vote. “The administration should fight against air pollution like we were fighting against the pandemic.” But the parliamentary vote, advertised as a down-to-the-wire affair, wasn’t even close. The final tally – 363 votes in favour, 226 against and 46 abstentions – was a welcome relief for environmental groups, who had feared that a campaign by the same right-wing coalition that joined forces to take down the biodiversity law would succeed the second time around. Key victories in voting marathon A 40-minute voting marathon on over 130 pages of amendments notched up several key victories for air quality advocates, who had sought to strengthen the Parliament’s position on Europe’s largest environmental health threat. Ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe -Extracts from the debate (12/09)-Extracts from the vote (13/09) & -Statement by Rapporteur @javilopezEU 🎦Watch and download: https://t.co/o5ResUVRfq pic.twitter.com/VGFGzI011J — European Parliament Audiovisual Service (@europarlAV) September 13, 2023 Significantly, an amendment by political conservatives that would have stripped EU citizens of their right to seek financial compensation from companies and governments for health damages caused by unlawful levels of air pollution was defeated. “It should be a relic of the past that polluting industries continue their delay game to reap profit while tax-payers pay the health costs,” Dr Ebba Malmqvist, professor of environmental health at the University of Lund, said after the vote. New provisions were added to address the training and education of healthcare professionals, health inequalities caused by healthcare costs associated with air pollution, and stricter rules for air quality monitoring systems. Alignment with WHO guideline levels pushed to 2035 Most fundamentally, a provision aligning member states to World Health Organization’s (WHO) air quality guidelines, which are much stricter than EU standards currently in force, passed comfortably, albeit with a five-year delay to 2035 to appease some centrist members of parliament. Current EU rules, for instance, permit annual average concentrations of PM2.5 to be as high as 25 micrograms/cubic meters of air. Adherence to WHO guidelines would reduce these concentrations fivefold, to just 5 micrograms per cubic meter of air. Although Europe can boast some of the best air quality in the world, air pollution still causes nearly 300,000 premature deaths each year. Despite improvements in air quality across the European Union since 2005, air pollution remains the largest single environmental health risk for its citizens, causing an estimated 287,000 premature deaths annually. Almost the entire global population breathes polluted air which can cause premature death, heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and respiratory diseases, according to the WHO. Air pollution is a silent killer, cutting short nearly 7 million lives globally every year. “Anything less than alignment with the WHO would not have been acceptable from a health point of view,” said Dr Cale Lawlor, senior policy manager for global public health at the European Public Health Alliance. “To know the science and not act to protect health is not acceptable.” Another blow to the crusade against the Green Deal Air pollution is the 10th leading cause of death in the European Union. This vote over the air pollution legislation effectively meant another battle lost by the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest party in the European Parliament and political home of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, which has sought to derail the 2020 European Green Deal, the centrepiece of her legislative legacy. A campaign by the EPP and far-right allies such as Spain’s populist Vox party to portray the air pollution law as a car ban – which it is not – failed to gain traction. Provisions in the draft law compelling municipal authorities to consider proven air quality measures such as low-emission zones, speed limits, and low-traffic neighbourhoods passed easily. “There’s clearly a strategy to demonise these measures and the way the directive works,” said Zachary Azdad, a policy officer at the advocacy NGO Transport & Environment, who followed the Parliament negotiations. “It’s reassuring to see that this didn’t take and that decisions were made from a more rational point of view.” The EPP Group stands for INCENTIVES, not BANS. We are against banning cars from inner cities. The new rules must not lead to shutting down industry sites or, as the Socialists wanted, even closing nurseries on certain days. 📖 https://t.co/6oxiMapFCL #FitFor55 pic.twitter.com/gu3ZdGdI2J — EPP Group (@EPPGroup) September 12, 2023 Long and difficult battle through the EU legislative labyrinth The ambitious targets established in the Parliament’s vote on new air pollution rules set the stage for what will be a long and difficult battle through the EU’s legislative labyrinth. To get over the line and become law, the new legislation must also win the approval of the European Commission and the European Council. Environmental groups were not happy with the Parliament’s compromise agreement Wednesday to postpone the deadline for meeting WHO’s air quality guidelines from 2030 to 2035, calling it a “lifeline for dirty cars”. But that target date is nearly certain to be the most ambitious to come out of the EU’s three legislative institutions. The European Commission, the EU governing body, had earlier proposed that WHO air quality guidelines only come into force in 2050. The EU Council, comprising the governments of all 27 member states, is widely expected to water down the ambitions set by the Parliament, as it has done with nearly all environmental legislation. The Council is expected to publish its position on the revised air quality rules in December. The publication of the EU Council’s position will mark the beginning of inter-institutional negotiations to finalise the law. Negotiations between the three branches of the European Union’s legislature take place behind closed doors, making the process more difficult for civil society to follow and influence. “That’s why the Parliament vote was so important,” said Azdad. “We really wanted Parliament to send the signal to the other institutions that the people elected by European citizens want clean air.” In April 2024, the Spanish presidency of the European Council ends, and the position rotates to another EU government, setting a tight timeline for lawmakers to finalise the first update to Europe’s air quality directives since 2008. A rightward shift in the balance of power in the Parliament could derail negotiations altogether if the deadline is not met. “There’s a risk of the whole file being forgotten after the European elections,” said Azdad. “That’s why we absolutely want it to be adopted before.” Image Credits: CC, IQ Air , Mariordo. UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
UN Political Declaration on Universal Health Coverage: Ambitious Aspirations Against Litany of Failures 15/09/2023 Elaine Ruth Fletcher A doctor examines a child at a refugee camp in northwestern Syria in April 2021. At next week’s UN High Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage, member states will consider how to get back on track after the huge setbacks to services during the COVID pandemic. NEW YORK CITY – There has been little progress in expanding universal health service coverage (UHC) since the last UN High Level Meeting (HLM) meeting on the issue in 2019, and trends in financial protection are even worsening, with catastrophic out-of-pocket spending increasing when compared to 2015. The final draft of the political declaration for next week’s UN HLM on Universal Health Coverage on 21 September provides a painful autopsy of UHC’s massive failures to date – with detailed data going beyond the usual political rhetoric. It also charts an ambitious course for reducing current trends with a number of clear, albeit aspirational, commitments. These include a commitment to ensure that an additional 523 million people get access to quality, essential health services by 2025 to belatedly reach the 2019 goal of reaching one billion more people with UHC, a goal that was supposed to have been met by the end of this year. Expensive treatments for accidents or chronic diseases can impoverish families already living marginally. The declaration also commits to “reverse the trend of rising catastrophic out-of-pocket health expenditure” by 2030. It also pledges to “accelerate action to address the global shortfall of health workers” along with addressing the causes of health worker migration and dropout, which are increasingly serious problems in poor as well as more affluent health systems. While such commitments are clearly aspirational, they are still more concrete than any language of the companion declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response, which is due to be approved at a UNGA HLM on Wednesday, 20 September. A third declaration on tuberculosis (TB) will be considered at a HLM on Friday, 22 September – all contributing to an unprecedented focus on health at this year’s General Assembly. Building resilient health systems and coverage is a prerequisite for pandemic preparedness, said Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for UHC, at a WHO press briefing on Thursday. Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, at a WHO press briefing just ahead of the UN General Assembly´s three high-level meetings on UHC, pandemic preparedness and response, and tuberculosis. “What they’re really putting the emphasis on is the fundamental need for universal health coverage to make us more resilient – as communities and societies, as countries – to threats such as pandemics going forward but as well as others,” Aylward said. “And they’ve really been focusing on three key things to achieve that,” he added. “Radically reorienting their health systems toward a primary health care approach, which really focuses on equity, getting everyone …right interventions in the right order, and in an efficient manner that includes the communities themselves. … that everyone has access to the basic package. “The second big emphasis is to fund the systems and also to protect people from catastrophic financial expenditures. “And the third thing [is] looking at how do we tackle this whole issue of ensuring we have the people on the ground that can do this work,” he said, referring to the health workforce. Shortcomings in achieving WHO ‘triple billion’ targets The world is only halfway to the WHO target for extending universal health coverage to another 1 billion people by 2023 (in comparison to 2018) . In its unforgiving litany, the draft text bluntly describes the missed goals and targets of the last UN Political Declaration on UHC adopted in 2019. Echoing WHO’s own “triple billion” targets laid out pre-pandemic, global leaders in 2019 had pledged to extend UHC to one billion more people between 2018 and 2023, as well as protecting one billion more people from health emergencies and ensuring that one billion people enjoy healthier lives and lifestyles. All three goals are off course, and the world is less than midway towards the target for expanding UHC coverage, the text states: “There is a global shortfall of 523 million people in achieving the commitment made in the political declaration of 2019 to progressively provide one billion additional people by 2023 with quality essential health services and quality, safe, effective, affordable and essential medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and health technologies.” Limited service coverage – particularly for NCDs A woman in Sierre Leone gets her blood pressure checked as part of a cutting-edge collaboration between the public and private sectors. Service coverage for many of the world’s leading causes of death and disease continues to be limited, the draft text notes, citing over a dozen key risk factors from alcohol and drug abuse to environmental risks. Many of these risk factors are linked to the large burden of deaths from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) including cancer, cardiovascular and lung diseases and diabetes- responsible for some 74% of deaths worldwide. Some 86% of premature NCD deaths (before the age of 70) occur in low- and middle-income countries. In comparison to the last 2019 HLM declaration on UHC, this year’s text makes an unprecedented leap towards broader recognition of the multiple dimensions of NCD risk and disease that must be addressed to really achieve UHC. There are multiple references, for instance, to the health inequities experienced by people living with disabilities. With “many likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities, and experience higher health costs and gaps in service availability, including for primary care, long-term care, assistive technologies and specialized services.” Mental health disorders, which affect more than a billion people worldwide, get more than 20 references in the text, alongside more classic references to alcohol and substance abuse (three million deaths a year) and tobacco use, responsible for 8.7 million deaths a year. Article 19 of the declaration talks about the “2.2 billion people living with vision impairments, half with 90% of those with unaddressed vision impairment or blindness living in low-income countries” Comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery Meanwhile, Article 55, of the Declaration commits countries to more “comprehensive approaches and integrated service delivery” – which global health policy advocates have long stated is critical to more effective response. Such delivery can be more inclusive of diagnosis and treatment of a broader range of communicable and NCD conditions, including “cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities, and neurological conditions, including dementia.” The text also calls for more action on “eye health conditions, hearing loss, musculoskeletal conditions, oral health, and rare diseases” as well as road traffic injuries and drowning deaths.” “I’m excited to see that NCDs are more comprehensively reflected in the political declaration of UHC,” Dr Bente Mikkelson, director of the WHO NCD department, told Health Policy Watch. “It is a sign that member states are finally recognizing that NCDs are an integral part of universal health coverage. “But we need follow-through on firm commitments and investments,” she warned. Communicable disease threats: progress still far off track An infant TB patient at Brooklyn Chest Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Nearly half of the estimated 10 million new TB cases annually go undiagnosed. The declaration also warns that progress remains far “off track” on the big communicable disease risks of HIV, TB and malaria, which dominated health policy goals and discussions in the first two decades of the millennium. “That includes an estimated 1.5 million new HIV infections in 2021; an estimated 1.6 million deaths from TB and a rise in the TB incidence rate by 3.6 per cent between 2020 and 2021; 247 million malaria cases globally, 1.65 billion people still requiring treatment and care for neglected tropical diseases; and 3 million new hepatitis infections and over 1.1 million deaths from hepatitis-related illnesses every year.” according to the declaration. “Progress in reducing maternal mortality has also stalled, with almost 800 women and girls dying every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. “Five million children, almost half of which were newborns, died before reaching their fifth birthday in 2021, mostly due to preventable or treatable causes, with around 45 per cent linked to undernutrition. “Twenty-five million children under the age of 5 years missed out on routine immunization in 2021, a 5 per cent decline from 2019 and the largest sustained decline in childhood immunizations in approximately 30 years.” Environment, antimicrobial resistance, occupational diseases and rehabilitation Drug-resistant microbes can fester and multiply in the sediment of polluted rivers and lakes, fostering antimicrobial resistance. Environmental factors contribute to around 13 million deaths, with ambient and indoor air pollution causing at least seven million preventable deaths. There are also nearly two billion people a year dying from occupational diseases and injuries; 1.27 million deaths from antimicrobial resistance. Finally, an estimated 2.4 billion people live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation. And “rehabilitation needs are largely unmet globally and that in many countries more than 50 per cent of people do not receive the rehabilitation services they require,” the text recalls, another reference to a long-neglected issue common to both NCD and communicable disease recovery. Gaps strike the old, young, poor and refugees People with disabilities are more likely to live in poverty and have reduced life expectancy. With NCDs soaring, there’s a growing gap between life expectancy and healthy life expectancy for older people, the declaration states. But over 1.5 million adolescents and young adults aged 10-24 died in 2021 from injuries, drowning, interpersonal violence and self-harm, among other factors. Meanwhile, women and girls of reproductive age continue to have inadequate access to quality reproductive health services. People with disabilities experience health inequities so severe that many are likely to die 20 years earlier than those without disabilities. Migrants, refugees and internally displaced people face high cost, language and legal barriers in accessing essential healthcare services, as do indigenous peoples and those who are poor. The “high prices of some health products, and inequitable access to such products within and among countries, as well as financial hardships associated with high prices of health products, continue to impede progress towards achieving universal health coverage,” the declaration notes. Pandemic disruptions Patients seek out essential health services during COVID-19 pandemic in Jangamakote Village, India. The COVID-19 pandemic severely affected the provision of essential health services in countries, with 92 % of countries reporting disruptions during the height of the pandemic resulting in millions of excess deaths globally and creating “new obstacles to the realization of all the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The pandemic also revealed sharp disparities in national, regional and global levels of preparedness and response with African countries, in particular, unable to obtain safe, effective and affordable vaccines and treatments for COVID-19. A study published in July in the BMJ highlights how most countries with higher levels of pandemic preparedness, as defined by ratings in a Global Health Security (GHS) index, also had comparatively lower COVID death rates – when adjusted for differences in the average age of countries’ populations. The GHS quantifies countries’ abilities to prevent, detect and report on emerging risks, with references to 37 indicators such as access to, and use of diagnostic tests. Water, sanitation, hygiene and electricity access in health services Close to one billion people, or nearly one-eighth of the global population, do not have access to health facilities with reliable electricity. The GHS report raises red flags about issues that have long been neglected, such as the lack of electricity access in health services which can impede access to many modern health technologies and treatments. Some “22% of health care facilities lack basic water services, half lack basic hand hygiene facilities at point of care and at toilets, and 10 per cent have no sanitation service, one in four facilities do not practice waste segregation, “Close to one billion people in low- and lower-middle income countries are served by health care facilities with unreliable or no electricity supply,” states the declaration, citing a milestone June 2023 joint report by WHO and UNICEF on these critical but long-ignored aspects of health infrastructure. Financing and healthcare workforce Health workers in Lombardy, Italy, in early 2020 at the outset of the COVID pandemic, which exacerbated healthworker burnout and dropouts worldwide. The dismal state of health care financing is not overlooked either. “On average, in low- and middle-income countries more than one third of national health expenditure is covered by out-of-pocket expenses, leading to high levels of financial hardship, and government spending accounts for less than 40% of funding for primary health care,” the declaration notes. Donor funding accounts for an outsized 30% of national health spending in low-income countries even though it comprises just 0.2 % of global health expenditure. Waste and corruption are other factors that deplete the scarce, available resources. And the finance shortages are felt most acutely in the healthcare workforce itself, with a global shortfall of more than 10 million health workers projected for 2030 – primarily in low- and middle-income countries. Migration of health workers to more high-income countries or wealthier regions accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, with approximately 15 % of health and care workers now working outside of their country of origin. Meanwhile, women health workers are generally paid 24% less than men. Call to action – political leadership first of all The pharmacy at Zouan Health Centre, Cote d’Ivoire: access to quality medicines remains a huge challenge in many parts of Africa, South Asia and the Americas. Along with the big aspirational commitments to more investments, a greater focus on primary health care, and the health workforce, the text reaffirms commitments to goals and targets for dozens of diseases and risk factors. More access to diagnostics, vaccines and medicines as well as stronger data systems and better inclusion of women, children, older people and vulnerable groups such as migrants, minorities and people in extreme poverty all get a nod. But what’s included in the declaration remains far less important than the framing moment it can offer at a UN General Assembly where health will have an unprecedented focus. Will the UHC declaration and the companion declarations on TB and PPPR, really kickstart more action by countries in the final years leading up to 2030? “There are super important deliberations coming up,” said Aylward. “But the most important thing to achieve in universal health coverage, frankly, is the political decision [to make it happen]. It’s a big political decision because of the big financial commitment and the big commitment in terms of human resources. “And that’s why the solution will not be what happens next week at the UNGA, but it will be a critical piece of getting started on an accelerated path to solving the problem of ensuring everyone everywhere can have access to the services they need for their physical and mental health and social well being.” Image Credits: International Rescue Committee, Roche, WHO , Medtronics, USAID, Southern Africa/Flickr, Balasaheb Pokharkar, Adam Howarth/Flickr, Flickr – Trinity Care Foundation, (Fabio Fadeli), ©EC/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie. WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy
WHO Pandemic Treaty: The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly – An Interview With Larry Gostin 14/09/2023 Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan The World Health Organization has set a May 2024 deadline for negotiations on the Pandemic Accord, which are set to conclude at the 77th World Health Assembly n Geneva . Lawrence O. Gostin is “confident” that countries will adopt a pandemic accord at the 2024 World Health Assembly. The question is whether it will include the kind of “robust norms” necessary to ensure that the new accord is “transformative” with respect to correcting disparities and injustices uncovered in the last pandemic, and effective in its enforcement of new norms. As the head of Georgetown’s WHO Collaborating Center in national and global health law, Gostin is playing a key behind-the-scenes role in negotiations. Here is his take on what is at stake and what choices need to be made. Health Policy Watch: What is a pandemic treaty? What does it entail? Lawrence Gostin: The Pandemic Accord, currently in development, has the potential to be a landmark in global governance, akin to the Paris Agreement. Its impact will depend on its final content, mainly if it includes strong norms. These norms should ensure equitable sharing of lifesaving resources, promote a “One Health” approach to prevent zoonotic diseases and establish robust compliance mechanisms. The Accord could transform global health law by emphasizing equity, a holistic health strategy, and effective enforcement. HP-Watch: Based on your observations of the draft versions of the treaty, where are the opportunities for an “accord”? Gostin: I’m confident governments will adopt a Pandemic Accord at the May 2024 World Health Assembly. However, I’m concerned it might lack the robust norms I mentioned. This could weaken its impact. Bold norms and strong accountability mechanisms could make it powerful, but high-income countries might hesitate to ratify it. It could be diluted during negotiations, potentially failing to ensure equitable access to lifesaving resources or overlooking the “One Health” strategy. I urge all nations to seize this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Let’s make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. Failing to do so would be our own responsibility. HP-Watch: There has also been a lot of “discord” during the pandemic accord negotiations. Which countries are contributing to these disagreements, and why? Gostin: Failing now could postpone meaningful global health reforms for decades. The main hurdles lie in disagreements between high-income and low-income countries, particularly African nations and the US/Europe. Rich countries prioritize full access to scientific data for governments and scientists, like pathogen samples and genomic sequencing. This data is crucial for understanding and responding to pathogens. However, lower-income countries view these samples and data as their only bargaining power for equitable resource sharing. They’re concerned about sharing scientific information used to develop vaccines and drugs but not getting access to these lifesaving resources in return. The 76th World Health Assembly 76 in progress in May 2023. HP-Watch: What are the main stumbling blocks to a robust treaty? Gostin: Key obstacles revolve around equity, funding, compliance, and accountability. Like climate change discussions, a significant factor in these debates is the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (CBDR). CBDR, established as Principle 7 in the 1992 Rio Declaration, means that countries have distinct obligations based on their socioeconomic status and historical contributions to the issue, such as preventing pandemics. While all nations must protect the environment, wealthier countries have greater responsibilities in compliance and funding. However, disagreement persists regarding the application of this principle to pandemic governance. Currently, the CBDR principle is only an “option” for varying implementation of the Accord. HP-Watch: What are the gaps in the draft treaty? What are their origins, and what are some suggested solutions? Gostin: Various drafts of the Pandemic Accord are extensive, but the final version might have significant omissions. Throughout the drafts, “options” range from robust action to inaction. For instance, one draft offered two choices: establish strong obligations for the One Health approach or take no action. This dichotomy leaves little room for compromise. The Accord’s direction depends on whether governments advocate for strong or weak norms. Those favoring weak norms may do so to safeguard their sovereignty, dilute obligations, emphasize sovereignty as a principle, distrust the WHO, or resist international obligations. Populist nationalist governments often oppose UN treaties. If governments opt for weak norms, critical areas like equity and One health will suffer from significant gaps. Equally important are deficiencies in what I call “good governance,” with inadequate mechanisms for ensuring transparency, compliance, enforcement, or accountability of state obligations. HP-Watch: What are your thoughts on the treaty’s negotiation mechanisms for promoting timely information sharing in the context of national interest conflicts? Gostin: During the COVID-19 pandemic, and even well before, the world suffered from two failures of cooperation. First, nations failed to promptly report novel and dangerous outbreaks or share pathogen and genomic sequence data. The second is that countries failed to equitably share those lifesaving resources once vaccines and therapeutics were developed. As a result, there is currently considerable distrust in the negotiations. The tensions often exist between higher and lower-income countries. The only real tool WHO currently has to encourage countries to prioritize global solidarity over their own national interests in the negotiations is diplomacy; reminding countries of the immense toll of the pandemic, both in terms of lives lost and economically, and that preventing history from repeating itself can only be achieved through strong norms and global cooperation. The World Health Organization defines One Health as “an approach to designing and implementing programmes, policies, legislation and research in which multiple sectors communicate and work together to achieve better public health outcomes”. HP-Watch: Could you comment on mechanisms the United States, Africa, and the European Union suggested? Gostin: African nations advocate waiving intellectual property rights for easier vaccine and drug development during health crises. Lower-income countries endorse “technology transfer” to enable local manufacturing. The WHO backs mRNA manufacturing hubs in countries like South Africa. The focus should shift from charitable donations to empowering nations for self-reliance, necessitating global cooperation. Meanwhile, the US and the EU emphasize timely, transparent reporting and access to pathogen data, with the EU favoring One Health provisions. HP-Watch: Why prioritize incentives over sanctions, especially when some experts argue for stronger enforcement measures? Gostin: The WHO has long been adverse to compulsory measures, including sanctions. Member states often can accept the idea of incentives but are resistant to enforcement measures. In my judgment, we need both carrots and sticks. Carrots could include financing for health systems in lower-income countries. Sticks might include public disclosure of countries that fail to abide by their international obligations. There could also be some form of adjudication system, such as occurs with the World Trade Organization. Compliance-enhancing measures are vital. These can include incentives but they also need to include other more formal means of encouraging compliance with norms. One idea that has been floated is that parties would establish a universal health and preparedness review or some other peer review mechanism, enhancing compliance with countries’ preparedness obligations under the Accord. HP-Watch: How confident are you in incentivizing compliance, given the IHR enforcement issues during the COVID-19 pandemic? Gostin: I am not at all confident. History with the IHR teaches us that without effective compliance mechanisms, countries often won’t abide by their international obligations. Good governance requires better forms of accountability, such as an independent oversight mechanism empowered to investigate outbreaks or treaty violations and enforce commitments, fair resource allocation, and regular reporting on progress, with some scope for civil society participation. The International Health Regulations Working Group concluded its fourth meeting on revisions to IHR in Geneva in July. HP-Watch: How will negotiators balance accountability and sovereignty when implementing compliance measures? Gostin: Right now negotiators are at a loss. One very interesting compromise might be found in proposals by the US and by the African bloc on compliance and implementation. There are good faith negotiations on those proposals in the IHR reform processes, which include a compliance committee comprised of key member states. This committee would be tasked with finding means to better ensure state compliance. We need that kind of buy-in for compliance in the Pandemic Accord, which currently includes draft language establishing an Implementation and Compliance Committee comprised of expert members elected by the Accord’s Governing Body. HP-Watch: Will equity discussions lead to concrete actions for fair access during health crises? Gostin: This is perhaps the most important topic in the negotiations. Right now we don’t have agreement on reliable and sustainable funding, technical support, technology transfer, and equitable allocation of life-saving resources. There are several innovative methods to seek greater equity. One promising model is the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework. Under the PIP Framework, pharmaceutical companies, laboratories, and academic centers pledge to give doses of vaccines or drugs, or to provide funding to WHO. In return, these actors gain access to pathogen samples. The WHO then distributes the benefits to countries on an equitable basis. I also mentioned the idea of diversified manufacturing or technology transfer. Ultimately, it is important for low- and middle-income countries to gain the capacity to manufacture emergency products themselves and not rely on philanthropy. HP-Watch: What are the potential consequences of the draft Accord’s narrow focus on health-centric solutions? Gostin: The issue of One health is essential. Everyone knows that there are vast connections between human health, animal health and the environment. Yet, this requires intersectoral cooperation and governance. The Pandemic Accord is a WHO instrument and we must find ways to link to the law and governance of animals and the environment. Relevant bodies include the World Organisation for Animal Health, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN Environment Programme and the World Trade Organization. This kind on intersectoral coordination is largely absent in the current draft. On 24 February 2021, a plane carrying the first shipment of 600,000 COVID-19 vaccines distributed by the COVAX Facility landed at Kotoka International Airport in Accra. HP-Watch: What’s the debate on equitable access to medical countermeasures, intellectual property, and trade language, and how will it influence the negotiations? Gostin: There are huge gaps between high and low-income nations. High-income countries are reluctant to sign onto binding obligations to share lifesaving resources. But low-income countries demand that they have a right to fair and affordable access to vaccines and drugs. The truth is we need both and we shouldn’t trade one important value for the other. It is clear that rapid reporting, sharing pathogen samples and genomic sequence data, and sharing scientific and epidemiologic information are vital for global health. It is equally clear that we cannot tolerate a system where all the benefits go to high-income countries and lower-income countries are left behind. HP-Watch: How does the ongoing United Nations high-level meeting discussion relate to the concurrent negotiations for a pandemic accord and amendments to the IHR? Gostin: The UN High Level Meeting (UNHLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response this September is our best chance to gain support and deep engagement of heads of state and government. The UNHLM is expected to adopt a Political Declaration on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response. Thus far, many civil society organizations have expressed disappointment in the draft Political Declaration. While the draft Political Declaration is high on lofty principles, it is wholly inadequate on concrete action, such as pledges for funding health systems. And while processes in Geneva and in New York must be synergistic, there has been too little cooperation between the UN and WHO. This is disappointing especially as WHO was the UN’s first specialized agency formed in 1948. HP-Watch: What’s behind the resistance to the UN High-Level Meeting, and how might it affect the Geneva discussions? Gostin: There are longstanding but subtle tensions between Geneva and New York. In my view action by both the UN and WHO is needed. WHO is undoubtedly the health leader. But we also need high-level political support and an all of government approach to pandemic preparedness and response, as the causes and impacts of pandemics go well beyond the health sector. The WHO is a UN agency and we need more cooperation at every level. This shouldn’t be a competition, but sometimes it seems to be. The Declaration on Pandemic Preparedness and Response passed by the United Nations General Assembly in September offers “little hope” of strengthening global readiness for the next pandemic, according to global health experts. HP-Watch: Why is the draft UN Political Declaration not ambitious, and how can it be strengthened, especially regarding the ‘Global Health Threats Council’? Gostin: The Global Health Threats Council aims to elevate pandemic preparedness discussions to the highest political level. Whether it’s based in New York or Geneva matters less than securing active engagement from heads of state or government. Adequate, sustainable funding is another crucial aspect. Pandemic preparedness involves various government ministries, and it should encompass an all-of-society approach, including public and private entities and robust civil society involvement. HP-Watch: What role does the pharma industry play in shaping the treaty, and how do we differentiate responsible advocacy from profit-focused lobbying? Gostin: Pharmaceutical companies are vital in vaccine development but must act cooperatively. They often prioritize profits, which can hinder global access. It’s crucial they don’t influence treaty negotiations. High-income countries have sometimes prioritized industry interests. Involving pharmaceutical companies in negotiations could risk such influence. HP-Watch: How can WHO and the UN tackle misinformation while preserving citizen privacy and free speech on social media through collaboration with governments? Gostin: Misinformation poses a serious health threat, especially in vaccine distribution. Balancing free speech with combating misinformation is challenging. An all-of-society approach is needed, involving medical societies, tech companies, and fact-checking organizations. WHO can lead partnerships between scientific experts and information disseminators to ensure credible information reaches the public. HP-Watch: What’s your take on the pandemic treaty timeline, balancing speed and thoroughness, and a realistic estimate for an ideal agreement’s timing? Gostin: Ideally, I would like to see WHO meet its deadline of presenting a draft treaty for adoption to the World Health Assembly in May 2024. I know that is pushing it, and member states are nowhere near to making enough progress. But the reason for speed is compelling. It is clear that the COVID-19 pandemic injected a sense of urgency. As memories of the pandemic fade, political will declines. If we wait too long, we may lose this historic opportunity. Now is the time to forge [an] agreement. With every passing week and month, the world’s attention shifts to other priorities, such as climate change, the war in Ukraine, and food insecurity. At the opening of the 73rd WHO Africa regional meeting in August, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that the slow pace of negotiations has put the pandemic accord at risk of missing the May 2024 deadline. HP-Watch: How do we address the draft treaty’s health-centric focus criticized by some, considering the need for a broader approach to pandemic response during negotiations? Gostin. In Geneva, most negotiators come from health backgrounds, lacking a comprehensive perspective. To improve this, we can draw inspiration from the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) negotiations, where civil society played a crucial role. While the WHO allows civil society input, it often remains formal. Unlike the FCTC negotiations, there’s a lack of robust advocacy in the Pandemic Accord negotiations, which is regrettable. The lessons from tobacco control and the AIDS pandemic highlight that real transformational reforms require strong bottom-up social mobilization. HP-Watch: What’s the current status of discussions on the Pandemic Fund, and how might it impact the treaty? Gostin: I don’t know of a single global health advocate who is optimistic about progress on a Pandemic Fund. The World Bank has an initiative, but the Fund is still significantly below its funding goal, and we have seen the Bank sputter in the past on pandemic funding. And while the G7 and G20 have made promising noises, I don’t see any concrete plans for ample and sustainable funding taking shape. That is a great missed opportunity because the only way to truly make the world more prepared is through funding, and especially funding of robust health systems. In the Pandemic Accord negotiations, there has been much discussion of funding. Still, there doesn’t seem to be agreement on a mechanism and long-term funding sources. Ultimately, rich countries will have to step up. But that hasn’t happened thus far despite the urgency. HP-Watch: How do initiatives like medical countermeasures and mRNA tech-transfer hubs fit into treaty discussions, and what’s your perspective on their impact, given the crisis faced by initiatives like ProMED? Gostin: In addition to all the other suggestions, we must remember that WHO is also working on a new multi-disease platform to coordinate equitable access to health information, tools, and countermeasures right from the onset of the next pandemic to replace fragmented initiatives and better ensure that all populations can be served. This new platform builds on lessons learned from the ACT-Accelerator. This ambitious platform was developed to share COVID-19 tools and resources but fell short of its goals. The new platform is facing challenges related to how it will function and how it will be governed. But getting such a platform in place before the next major epidemic or pandemic arises, one that reaches and incorporates the voice of all populations will be critical for health equity. WHO’s mRNA hub in South Africa began operating at full capacity in 2022. HP-Watch: What do you think about the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board‘s key asks for the UN HLM declaration on the treaty negotiations, like changing the language from ‘acknowledge’ to ‘commit’? Gostin: As I have stated above, there is a delicate balance between incorporating actual mechanisms for accountability into the Accord against national interests in sovereignty. We all need to step back and remember that if we fail to meet the moment, it could be many decades before we have the chance for significant reforms in global health. We need to be bold and an Accord that both high- and low-income countries will ratify. As I discussed above, there are ways to meet these interests through carrots and sticks. I want to reiterate that we genuinely have a historic opportunity to make the world safer, more secure, and fairer. If we don’t grasp this moment, we have no one to blame but ourselves. HP-Watch: What do you think about the social media backlash WHO has been experiencing, regarding social media listening/surveillance, which seemed to be included in the treaty draft and poses privacy threats to citizens in countries where social media expressions are turned against them? Gostin: I don’t accept this criticism because it is untrue. The Accord will not require disclosure of personally identifiable or sensitive health data. Privacy laws such as the EU Health Privacy Directive will remain in effect. The Accord would not interfere with a country’s protection of the health and privacy of its citizens. I should add that the public also has the right to accurate, evidence-based information. Social media often disseminates false or misleading information that can harm the health of individuals and populations, mainly misinformation about vaccinations. Surveillance in the context of the Pandemic Accord means public health surveillance, that is, early detection of infectious diseases in humans and potentially also in animals and the environment. It does not mean intrusive surveillance of citizens or privacy violations; nowhere in the Accord is this even considered. HP-Watch: How did the misconception that WHO agreements, like a pandemic accord, would erode national sovereignty start, and what can be done to combat this misinformation going forward? Gostin: In many nations and throughout social media, there is distrust of international institutions and a fundamental misunderstanding about international law built on state consent to be bound. Nationalism and populism have created a groundswell for “my nation first.” The problem is that the world would be less safe if all nations put themselves first. We need mutual solidarity and shared obligations. No one is safe unless everyone is safe. Lawrence Gostin, is the director of Georgetown University´s WHO Collaborating Center on National and Global Health Law. He holds a JD from Duke University Law School and a BA in psychology from SUNY Brockport. Prior to taking on his current position at Georgetown in public health law/Washington DC, he also taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins Universities. Gostin also led the development of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (a proposed law to give states more authority to handle bioterrorism or disease outbreaks, recommended by organizations like the CDC) and advises on various WHO expert committees. His expertise has been instrumental during global health crises, such as AIDS, Zika, and COVID-19, earning him accolades from organizations like the National Academy of Medicine. Image Credits: WHO, WHO , UNICEF/Kokoroko, UN Photo/Manuel Elias, WHO . Posts navigation Older postsNewer posts