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THE EXIT OF USA FROM THE WHO AND ITS GLOBAL IMPACT-The Panagora Blog
WE NEED A STRONG WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION MORE THAN EVER. THE U.S. EXIT WILL DRASTICALLY WEAKEN IT.
In 1948, health
leaders established the World Health Organization (WHO) out of a new spirit of
international cooperation. A world war had just ended and the United Nations
had been born. These leaders felt a moral responsibility to help people
who were falling sick and dying from preventable causes. The idea of WHO was
grounded in principles of solidarity and international collaboration, in the
realization that only by working together can we solve complex issues that
cause immense suffering and kill millions of people every year.
Global health organizations like the WHO was also built on that premise: We have the means to take action, and
a duty to do so. This immense undertaking was a success. The WHO coordinated
campaigns that eradicated smallpox, brought us the Ebola vaccine, made
significant gains against polio, HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, and
improved the health and livelihoods of millions of people worldwide. Today we
face the greatest pandemic threat in a century.
Our continued action
will help us prevail over COVID-19, noncommunicable diseases, and other dire
threats to our health. But the key to our success is unity, and unity requires
leadership.
In many cases and
countries, the WHO is that leader. Countries with scarce resources trust WHO to
provide credible advice and guidance, and view it as an extension of their own
health ministry. We look to the WHO for data, research, and guidance on many of
our projects; this provides a common ground from which we can ally ourselves
with local partners, other NGOs and private entities. The WHO leads
groundbreaking research and medical advances.
These historic gains
are thanks to humanity’s ingenuity and best instincts. They are now under
threat. The United States played an important role in creating and developing
and funding the WHO. A U.S. withdrawal could set back decades of work.
One clear setback
is the reversal of hard-won health progress. For example,
efforts to eradicate polio over the last two decades have reduced global cases
by 99.9%, but loss of U.S. funding could potentially allow annual global polio
cases to jump from a few hundred to 200,000 within a decade. This work has
progressed with global leadership from Rotary Clubs in the U.S. and worldwide,
partnering with WHO.
The U.S. exit will
erode the U.S.’s ability to shape and lead policy. Though the U.S.
may attempt to remain a global health leader by rerouting funding directly to
countries, or through global public-private partnerships, it will have far less
ability to shape rules such as the International Health Regulations, norms such
as the WHO Priority Bacterial Pathogen List, and programs.
It will lead to
duplicative and expensive efforts. The WHO is the global coordinator for long standing and
successful health programs, and is the central clearinghouse for information
that guides governments, institutions, and health facilities. For example, the
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, the U.S.’s signature achievement in
responding to HIV/AIDS, has relied on WHO to deliver health messages, ensure
quality medications, and set health workforce standards. To recreate
these systems from scratch will be enormously onerous and expensive.
It will slow pandemic
recovery. Withdrawing from
the WHO will inevitably cost lives. It will hamper or cut access to critical
health program information like key scientific data, health intelligence, and
insights globally to advance research on HIV, tuberculosis, malaria, neglected
tropical diseases, emerging infectious disease, and antimicrobial resistance.
It will hurt the U.S. response to the current pandemic, and slow the U.S.’s
ability to return to optimum health and productivity.
The global health
community still operates under our core values of duty and compassion. We are
poised to take advantage of improved communication and technology to end this
pandemic and continue to save and improve lives. As WHO Director-General, Dr.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, has said, the agency must
reform to improve its response to crises.
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