Global rules for global health: why we need an independent, impartial WHO
- 18 June 2014
- Vol. 348 (jun18 17) , g3841
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.g3841
Abstract
Devi Sridhar and colleagues argue that WHO’s unique political legitimacy makes it essential to achieving international action on global health and call for governments to re-establish guaranteed core funding Over the past few years the World Health Organization (WHO) has been undergoing substantial reform. The immediate trigger was a budget crisis in 2010 that spurred massive staff cuts. But at a more fundamental level, deeper systematic changes in global health governance have made reform imperative.1 Though WHO reform draws relatively little attention outside diplomatic circles in Geneva, at stake are critical concerns that will affect public health everywhere. The essential role of WHO is most often appreciated when outbreaks of infectious disease cross borders, such as the newly identified Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus, which has infected 636 people since 2012 and has a death rate of about one in three.2 With an increasing number of cases being reported, fears exist that it could infect thousands of people, similar to the SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) coronavirus in 2002-03.3 The international response to MERS has been more rapid than to SARS at least partly because of global structures that have facilitated epidemiological assessment, international information sharing, and the development of potential treatments. In an increasingly interconnected and interdependent world, global rules negotiated among governments are crucial for facilitating international cooperation and for protecting the health of the world’s population. Sometimes adhering to these rules requires governments to forgo some of their sovereignty and to trust an international organisation to act impartially and independently for the common good. One of the fundamental reasons for the creation of WHO in 1948 was to ensure that governments would “compromise their short-term differences in order to attain the long-run advantages of regularized collaboration on health matters.”4 Although many global …Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- BRICS cooperation in strategic health projectsBulletin of the World Health Organization, 2014
- Targeting Membrane-Bound Viral RNA Synthesis Reveals Potent Inhibition of Diverse Coronaviruses Including the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome VirusPLoS Pathogens, 2014
- Trojan Multilateralism: Global Cooperation in HealthGlobal Policy, 2013
- Governance Challenges in Global HealthNew England Journal of Medicine, 2013
- Who Sets the Global Health Research Agenda? The Challenge of Multi-Bi FinancingPLoS Medicine, 2012
- Innovation and Access to Medicines for Neglected Populations: Could a Treaty Address a Broken Pharmaceutical R&D System?PLoS Medicine, 2012
- The 2011 Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Framework: Global Health Secured or a Missed Opportunity?Political Studies, 2011
- World Health and World PoliticsInternational Organization, 1950