lung heathclimate change
Children with asthma are especially vulnerable to the climate-related exposures like air pollution and heat waves.

The impact of climate on respiratory health was the subject of a meeting alomngside the World Health Assembly (WHA) in Geneva. This comes as the UN General Assembly endorsed a landmark International Court of Justice ruling that holds countries accountable to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

“Imagine you are running. You are tired and want to stop. But I keep telling you to run. You can’t breathe,” said Dr Helena Pité, describing what it means to have a ‘lung attack,’ which can be caused by asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), or an allergic reaction. 

The Lisbon allergist and respiratory expert from Hospital CUF Tejo outlined how climate change is linked to lung inflammation through longer pollen seasons, severe wildfires, air pollution, and extreme heat. 

Respiratory health was central to a discussion on climate change at the Geneva Health Forum, and came as the Pan-European Commission on Climate and Health (PECCH) released new recommendations in The Lancet for the fastest-warming continent. 

The report calls on the World Health Organization (WHO) and heads of governments to confront climate change as a “catastrophic threat to human health, security, and social stability.”

Furthermore, the authors urge the WHO to formally declare climate change a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) on par with the recent Ebola outbreak, COVID-19, and mpox.   

Climate change destabilizes the four pillars needed for health: access to food, water, shelter, and clean air, said Dr Maria Neira, former WHO director for the department of Public Health, Environment and Social Determinants of Health. 

“This is not just a matter of reducing emissions,” she said, but “a negotiation for our health.”

Air quality and climate change 

Delhi air pollution during peak days in mid-November 2025.

The connection between climate change and health began more than 30 years ago, when the scientific evidence base quickly outpaced any sort of action. 

A landmark 2008 WHA resolution on climate and health pushed member states to take urgent action to develop what it termed “health measures” and to “integrate them into plans for adaptation to climate change as appropriate,” among four other action items.

“Health is the argument for climate action,” Neira argued. The  causes of climate change and the causes of air pollution overlap 85%–the UN Environment Programme calls the combustion of fossil fuels “two sides of the same coin.” 

This is why Neira and others at the intersection of climate and health see climate treaties as “the best public health treaties” with innumerable benefits.

Allergies and asthma 

Seven-year old Princess developed asthma growing up near coal mines in Emaalahleni, South Africa.

Roughly one in three people will suffer from allergies during their lifetime, whether from seasonal, food, medicinal, or animal bite allergens. 

Pite is seeing more and more patients with severe environmental allergies and asthma conditions. Her patients are now younger than she’s seen in her 20 years of practice.

Her Lisbon-based practice sees patients with severe allergies and asthma – and the Portuguese city’s extended pollen season is only exacerbating the problem. 

“Plants are suffering,” she said in explaining the longer seasons. Rising temperatures due to climate change have exacerbated pollen seasons, driving plants to produce more of the irritating substance earlier and for prolonged periods.  

In the US, Australia, and across Europe, pollen levels have risen in the past decades, causing discomfort in many and severe respiratory distress in others. 

This is why Pite hopes to reframe the narrative around climate change and respiratory health: “People know that air pollution can cause heart attacks–that extreme heat can do that. But what about a ‘lung attack?’” She argued that more education for medical professionals on climate risks–and proactive policies to prevent lung attacks–would mean less suffering for the vulnerable: children, those with chronic diseases, and older adults.

It’s just one health outcome that can be linked to climate change, but oftentimes the most severe, as Neira argued in saying the price of climate change is “paid by our lungs.” 

Life dictated by avoiding heatwaves and pollutants

Climate changeHeat wave
Berliners cooling off during a summer heat wave.

For patients living with these conditions, day-to-day life is often dictated by avoiding climate change hazards, Panagiotis Chaslaridis, a senior policy advisor at the European Federation for Patients with Allergies and airway diseases (EFA). His organization represents patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, lung cancer, and other conditions. 

“Patients have to be especially vigilant,” his organization’s website warns. One such patient, identified only by her first name, Kelly, shared her story with the UK’s Asthma + Lung advocacy group. She said she was “forced to move out” of central London after 14 life-threatening asthma attacks, which she attributes to the city’s air. Now, she’s worried for her one-year-old daughter, who has been rushed to the hospital twice for breathing difficulties. “We’ve decided to move farther out of London to the seaside,” she told the advocacy organization.

Europe is the fastest warming continent with an average increase of 0.56 C per decade since the mid-1990s. That’s nearly twice the global rate of 0.27 C per decade.

The PECCH Lancet report calls on ministries of health to embed climate-health topics into health profession education–and integrate climate change considerations into disease management. 

“Climate change poses significant health risks for patients with chronic respiratory diseases, allergies, and skin conditions. These environmental hazards are no longer distant threats; they are becoming increasingly prevalent in Europe,” the EFA continues. 

Neira and Pite also called for national health systems to track health outcomes linked to climate crises–so that countries can track just how much a burden heatwaves, air pollution, and prolonged pollen seasons have on their health systems. 

The role of cities

Health experts see cities as the pioneers for action. The built environment–buildings, schools, and homes–is one frontier the UN Environmental Programme has charted metrics of climate progress.

Cities like London, Barcelona, and Nairobi are all pioneering solutions, such as ultra-low-emission zones, green spaces, congestion pricing, bike lanes, and urban gardens. The group C40 Cities has brought together a coalition of over 90 mayors to implement and share lessons learned from these solutions. 

“Across the world, mayors are showing that good urban planning is climate action, from creating more connected and inclusive communities, to reducing emissions and protecting people from growing climate risks,” the group’s CEO Mark Watts said in a  statement. “The decisions cities make today about how they grow and develop will shape the resilience, health, and prosperity of urban residents for generations to come.”

Neira sees mayors as the real leaders for climate-health action–especially for their ability to bridge multiple sectors. She explained that improving the lives of millions of people with respiratory diseases depends on coordination between the ministries of health, transport, environment, and energy. The Lancet PECCH report also echoes this call for coordination.

At the launch of the PECCH, WHO European regional director Hans Kluge said: “We have known for years what climate change does to human health. What we have lacked is the political architecture to act at the scale the evidence demands.”

Kluge asked the commission to “close that gap – not by producing more analysis, but by translating what we know into actionable recommendations that governments and WHO itself can no longer defer into the future.”

UN approves International Court of Justice climate ruling

This all comes at a particularly critical time in global climate action. As member states gathered in Geneva for the World Health Assembly, the UN General Assembly endorsed a landmark decision by the International Court of Justice which ruled international law binds countries to limit the carbon emissions driving the climate crisis

The Hague-based ICJ ruling holds significant “symbolic weight,” especially for bolstering legal arguments in climate litigation. Likely, though, major greenhouse gas emitters will ignore the ICJ ruling.

What this means for health is yet to be seen–especially for those suffering from “lung attacks” across the world.

See related story: https://healthpolicy-watch.news/un-backs-landmark-icj-climate-crisis-ruling-defying-us-and-petrostates/

Image Credits: Kelly Sikkema/ Unsplash, Chetan Bhattacharji, Dylan Paul, Center for Environmental Rights, CC.

GENEVA — Hundreds of hours of formal negotiations and corridor-side bargaining in the halls of the Palais des Nations and World Health Organization (WHO) headquarters this week ended on Saturday afternoon – more or less on schedule, an outcome rare enough at the United Nations to be cause for celebration.

The sunshine, Mont Blanc’s snow-covered peak, the shining waters of Lake Geneva, and the fancy canapés circulating at side-event receptions drew a sharp contrast to the storm of crises unfolding in the global health world throughout the week.

A fresh Ebola emergency ripping through the Democratic Republic of Congo. The tail end of a hantavirus outbreak. Diplomatic wars over conflicts from Iran to Gaza and Ukraine. And a WHO finding, released days before the assembly, that the world is on track to miss every single one of the health-related UN 2030 development goals.

Between the headlines on the global health financing emergency, WHO’s declining budget, Argentina’s withdrawal from the organisation and the first-ever absence of the United States — whose voting rights were formally suspended for the 2027 Assembly — member states quietly adopted more than 20 decisions and 13 new resolutions.

Several of them updated health frameworks decades to more than half a century old. Most went unnoticed. Here’s what they decided.

Stop stealing our health workers!

Perhaps the most consequential text adopted that went uncovered this week was the first revision in 16 years to the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel – the people on whom, after all, every other resolution depends.

Ahead of the assembly, an Expert Advisory Group appointed by the WHO to conduct the third review in the Code’s 16-year history delivered a verdict on its efficacy unusually direct for a UN document; it is not working.

“High income destination countries make substantial savings on the costs of health professional education through international recruitment, while the desired investments in the health systems of developing source countries have not materialised to yield the expected proportional benefits,” the Expert group said.

The updated recommendations now explicitly cover health personnel recruited abroad to work as care workers, closing a loophole that wealthy, ageing societies have used to staff elder care with workers trained in lower-income countries.

The new Code’s recommendations also apply during “pandemics and other health emergencies, environmental disasters and humanitarian, economic or crises situations”, a change intended to stop wealthy destination countries from treating ethical recruitment as a fair-weather principle.

During COVID-19, several high-income countries did the opposite, accelerating recruitment of nurses and doctors from the Philippines, India and across sub-Saharan Africa, even as those countries’ systems strained under the pandemic.

“The continuous migration of skilled health workers from source countries like ours directly weakens our primary health system and our path to universal health coverage,” Eswatini’s delegate told the committee.

“We call on destination countries to uphold ethical recruitment standards on bilateral commitments and support health workforce strengthening in source countries.”

A WHO assessment of 108 low- and lower-middle-income countries earlier this year found that 63% had already reported job losses, salary suspensions or cuts among health and care workers as a result of donor aid retrenchment. Nearly 70% anticipated future recruitment problems.

Speaking at the WHA, Jamaica, which “continues to experience the impact of migration of skilled health professionals, particularly nurses, midwives, and allied health workers,” emphasised that “recruitment practices must not compromise the source country’s health systems.”

Its delegation added Jamaica is now negotiating south-south agreements with the Philippines, India, Ghana and Nigeria – hinting that source countries are tiring of waiting for destination countries to follow the WHO’s rules.

Wealthy destination countries, despite drawing millions of healthcare professionals to their systems, are in crisis too.

The WHO European region, which absorbs much of the workforce migration, faces a shortfall of 1.8 million health workers, expected to double to 4 million by 2030. WHO Europe Director Hans Kluge has called the region’s workforce crisis a “ticking time bomb.”

Even money, it turns out, cannot buy a full health workforce. For the source countries nurses and doctors are leaving, a voluntary set of recruitment guidelines is unlikely to close that gap.

A stroke of progress

For the world’s second-leading cause of death and third-leading cause of disability, stroke has spent decades waiting for its turn at the World Health Assembly. On Friday, that finally changed.

The first-ever WHA resolution dedicated to stroke, led by Egypt and co-sponsored by Chile, Georgia, Palestine, Paraguay and Tunisia, addresses a disease responsible for an estimated 11.9 million new cases globally in 2021.

In high-income countries, the typical stroke patient is older and presents at a hospital equipped with CT scanners, preventive drugs and stroke units.

In LMICs, the patient is often younger and hypertensive, and reaches care, if at all, too late for the time-sensitive interventions that determine whether stroke is survivable or fatal.

The gap in care standards creates a seismic inequality: as new stroke cases rose 70% from 1990 to 2021, 87% of stroke deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. New stroke deaths rose 44% over the same period.

The resolution noted that only one in three adults in LMICs is aware they have hypertension; only around 8% have it under control.

The result is a higher prevalence of haemorrhaging strokes — the most lethal variety, which results from years of uncontrolled blood pressure — in poorer countries, leading to more deaths. Tobacco, air pollution, salt-heavy diets and limited access to preventive primary care push the mortality risks even higher.

Egypt, leading the resolution as part of a four-text package that also covered teleradiology, pharmacovigilance and precision medicine, stressed “the urgency of integrated national responses to strengthen prevention, early detection, acute care, rehabilitation, and long-term support, particularly in low and middle-income countries, where the [stroke] burden continues to rise.”

Early Cold War-era guidelines get update

If stroke waited decades for a resolution, the global system for monitoring whether medicines are killing the people taking them has waited longer.

The Berlin Wall went up and came down, the Soviet Union dissolved, Russia invaded Ukraine — twice — and the WHO’s pharmacovigilance architecture stayed where it was.

The architecture prior to WHA dated to resolution WHA16.36, adopted in 1963 in the aftermath of the thalidomide tragedy. The sedative, marketed to pregnant women across 46 countries to treat morning sickness in the early Cold War era, caused an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 babies to be born with severe limb malformations.

The 1963 resolution called for member states to systematically collect reports of serious adverse drug reactions. Pharmacovigilance — the WHO’s term for that surveillance — has not been substantively updated at this level since.

This week’s resolution teleports that framework into the era of COVID-19, real-world data and artificial intelligence. It calls on countries to leverage AI and machine learning “in a safe, transparent and ethical manner to improve safety signal detection and response, while also maintaining public trust.”

The recognition matters because pandemic-era mRNA vaccines and antivirals were rolled out in months, and post-marketing safety signals had to be tracked across populations of billions. The infrastructure built around paper reports and national centres was not designed for the speed or scale of modern global health crises.

“Significant inequities persist in pharmacovigilance capacity, with many developing countries facing capacity and resource constraints and contributing a disproportionately small share of global safety data, resulting in populations being unequally protected against adverse events,” the resolution states.

In other words, drug safety standards around the world are uneven because the quality and scale of surveillance data is uneven.

A similar gap is reflected in the gender divide, where women face a higher rate of adverse reactions due to data over decades of pharmacovigilance trials primarily focusing on men, the resolution says.

Tanzania’s delegation called the updated text “an essential pillar of patient safety, resilient health systems, and public trust.”

WHO will report back on implementation in 2028, 2030 and 2032.

Emergency care gets a nod

An estimated 38 million people die every year from conditions that emergency rooms, operating theatres and intensive care units could treat if patients could reach them in time, according to the new global strategy adopted this week, which notes the same conditions cause 1.3 billion disability-adjusted life years lost annually.

The new Integrated Emergency, Critical and Operative Care Strategy 2026–2035 gives countries a 10-year framework to fix one of the most glaring inequalities in global health: where this care is available, lives are saved; where it is not, the gap is stark.

“Globally, 6% of surgical procedures occur in low-resource countries, despite those being home to over a third of the world’s population,” the International Federation of Medical Students’ Associations told the committee.

Tens of millions of people, most of them in lower-middle-income countries, face catastrophic health expenditure from emergency care every year, the resolution states.

Tens of millions more face catastrophic expenditure from the non-medical costs alone — transport, food, lodging — of trying to reach a hospital with an emergency ward equipped to deal with critical health conditions, from childbirth complications and road traffic injuries to heart attacks, strokes, sepsis, malaria, diarrhoeal disease and pneumonia.

“Ukraine’s experience during Russia’s ongoing aggression shows that critical care must function as a continuum from prehospital response to surgery and rehabilitation,” Ukraine’s delegate told the committee. “We support strengthening workforce capacity, referral systems, and digital tools, especially in conflict-affected settings.”

Burkina Faso, hit by years of militant insurgent violence in the Sahel, described the pressure on its health system “in particular in terms of trauma care, critical care, and emergencies”. Its regional neighbour Chad also pressed the importance of the strategy “for countries facing humanitarian security in health crises, particularly in the Lake Chad Basin affected by terrorist attacks by Boko Haram.”

On the sidelines of the assembly, Ethiopia, Germany and Brazil launched the Global Health Emergency Corps Strategy, aiming to ensure 10% of every country’s health workforce is “organised, trained, exercised and connected to respond to emergencies by 2030.”

WHO will publish an action plan with targets by the end of 2026.

Remote radiology to the rescue

Another resolution on teleradiology, also led by Egypt, aims to make it easier for specialists in one country to read scans from another.

Teleradiology — the secure digital transmission of medical images for remote interpretation — has existed for decades, but its uneven uptake has left many countries with imaging machines and no one trained to read what they produce.

“The absence of trained personnel to interpret the images, or weak referral systems, leads to suboptimal utilisation of the equipment and may limit the effective use of existing imaging capacity,” the resolution notes.

The technology allows expertise to travel where infrastructure cannot. A radiologist in Cairo can read a scan taken in northern Mali. The same arrangement lets a doctor in a safer country read a chest X-ray from a besieged hospital in Khartoum, or a stroke scan from a frontline in eastern Ukraine.

The resolution builds in artificial intelligence as a clinical aid, requiring AI tools to be “developed, validated, safely deployed and governed ethically.”

“These solutions help bridge geographical barriers, strengthen diagnostics across islands, and reduce dependence on overseas referrals,” the Maldives told the committee.

Fiji noted that “digital X-ray systems with embedded artificial intelligence are now being deployed nationwide to improve diagnostic speed, accuracy, and equitable access to healthcare.”

The resolution requests a situation report back to WHA in 2030.

Two decades, missing genomes

The first WHA resolution on precision medicine updates a 22-year-old text on genomics and world health, adopted in 2004 when the human genome had only just been sequenced, and the cost of doing so ran into the millions of dollars per patient.

Today, sequencing giant Illumina says its reagents can sequence a human genome for under $200.

Precision medicine — the use of genomic, molecular and clinical data to tailor prevention, diagnosis and treatment — has delivered measurable gains in cancer survival, faster diagnosis of rare diseases, and safer prescribing, WHO said.

But this miracle of modern medicine is not available to everyone.

“Many populations, particularly women, children and older adults, remain underrepresented in the data and research that underpin precision medicine,” the resolution states, pointing to “developing countries facing limited laboratory infrastructure, underrepresentation in genomic and clinical datasets, shortage of skilled professionals, and inadequate governance mechanisms for ethical data use and sharing.”

A medicine designed using genomes drawn predominantly from people of European ancestry will work less well — sometimes much less well — on populations whose ancestry is not represented.

Without governance, the technology that promised to deliver the right treatment to the right patient at the right time risks delivering it only to the right zip code.

Egypt’s delegation emphasised precision medicine and AI-driven diagnostics “must remain accessible and affordable to all, so that it becomes a tool for equity rather than a source of widening disparities.”

The resolution aligns with last year’s WHA decision on rare diseases, which Egypt also championed. Nearly 80% of rare diseases are genetic, making precision medicine and rare disease policy two halves of the same agenda.

WHO will deliver a global strategy on precision medicine to the 82nd WHA in 2029.

Radiation in a year of nuclear strikes

The assembly’s first-ever comprehensive resolution on radiation and health, sponsored by Armenia, Chile, Egypt, Iraq, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Thailand and Tunisia, was adopted in a year marked by missiles, drones and projectiles striking or landing near nuclear facilities across three continents.

The resolution covers both ionising radiation (from medical imaging, radiotherapy, radon and nuclear sources) and non-ionising radiation (ultraviolet, electromagnetic fields) — a unified framework that previous WHA resolutions had treated seperately.

It acknowledges health risks to children and pregnant women, the increasing use of radiopharmaceuticals in cancer care, and “the non-radiological health impacts of radiation emergencies.”

The resolution explicitly recalls last year’s resolution on the health effects of nuclear war, a text the World Health Assembly fought bitterly over before adopting.

Russia and North Korea opposed it, saying there was nothing left for WHO to study. The Marshall Islands, Micronesia, other Pacific island states, Iraq and Kazakhstan pushed it through, citing decades of documented cancers, birth defects and chronic illness still afflicting populations near former Cold War test sites in the Pacific atolls and the Kazakh steppes generations after the last detonations.

The day before the assembly formally opened, a drone strike sparked a fire on the perimeter of the United Arab Emirates’ Barakah Nuclear Energy Plant, the first nuclear power station on the Arabian Peninsula. The strike drew “grave concern” from International Atomic Energy Agency Director-General Rafael Grossi, and featured as a pivotal part of the debate over a separate WHA resolution adopted this week on the public health consequences of Iranian attacks on civilian infrastructure across Gulf states and Jordan.

Earlier this year, projectiles struck near Iran’s Bushehr nuclear plant twice in eight days, and missiles were fired in the direction of Israel’s Dimona nuclear research centre. Russian forces continue to occupy the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in Ukraine, which remains disconnected from the country’s electrical grid and dependent on emergency diesel generators to cool its reactors — a worst-case-scenario configuration the IAEA has repeatedly warned poses ongoing radiological risk.

The resolution requests a global mapping of “relevant actors and initiatives” in radiation and health by 2028.

We have the text, but where’s the money?

The assembly closed by adopting a strategy on the economics of health for all for 2026–2030, building on the work of WHO’s Council on the Economics of Health for All.

The text is ideologically the most ambitious of the week: a “well-being economy” framework calling for governments to use tax, trade, industrial and labour policy as health levers, address “harmful commercial practices,” and confront the “financialization of healthcare delivery.”

It is also the text most exposed to the gap WHO itself now openly calls a “global health financing emergency.”

Global development assistance for health fell 21% between 2024 and 2025, driven almost entirely by a 67% drop in US financing — more than $9 billion — according to data from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.

But the US is not alone: Germany cut its bilateral health aid by 53%, the UK by 39%, and France by 33%. Total OECD official development assistance fell 23.1% in 2025, the largest single-year contraction on record.

That financing gap is the wall every resolution adopted this week will hit on its way out the door. The World Health Assembly issues guidance; it does not mobilise funds. Unlike UN climate summits, where the headline negotiation each year is over hundreds of billions to trillions of dollars in financing requests from global south countries, the WHA passes rules that national governments must then choose to fund on their own.

As African leaders at the Nairobi World Health Summit last month declared the end of the aid era, a Centre for Global Development audit found that only two African countries proposed new revenue measures to replace lost financing in their 2025 budgets, and none reprioritised spending from other sectors to protect health.

In other words: aid is gone, and the countries it left behind are not — for the most part — yet in a position to replace it.

The crisis framing of the global health funding shortfall stands in stark contrast to the reality that the missing money is, in global terms, comparatively negligible. Year after year, governments choose tanks over hospitals, missiles over medicines, and submarines over the surveillance systems that catch the next pandemic before it spreads.

The $9 billion gap left by US withdrawal is roughly 2.4% of EU defence spending and 0.66% of combined EU-US defence outlays for 2024. EU defence expenditure alone rose to €381 billion in 2025, a 19% increase on the previous year.

Around 200 individuals with net worths above $10 billion hold approximately $5 trillion between them. The combined fortunes of the world’s three richest men — Musk, Google co-founder Larry Page ($257 billion), and Google co-founder Sergey Brin ($237 billion) — could fund the gap for 148 years, until the early 22nd century.

“Every resolution you adopt, every agreement you reach, only has value when it changes what happens in a clinic, in a community, or in a household,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told delegates in his closing remarks on Saturday evening. “When a health worker has what they need to do their job; when a child is vaccinated; when a mother survives childbirth; when an outbreak is contained before it spreads. That is now the task before us.”

The resolutions adopted this week, by any reasonable read, are good policy. Stroke needs a stroke unit. Drug safety needs surveillance. Genomes need to be sequenced from populations they will be used to treat. Health workers cannot be poached without consequence from countries that trained them. Emergencies do not respect borders.

But none of the resolutions are binding. They will sit in the WHO archive unless governments — finance ministries more than health ministries — find the money and the political appetite to implement them.

The history of the World Health Assembly is, among other things, a history of resolutions that did not. Whether any of the new resolutions become more than pages in the archive will not be decided in Geneva.

Image Credits: Chetan Bhattacharija .

Woman standing in front of formula options
Factors beyond individual lifestyle decisions continue to shape health–including

Three emerging threats to health: the commercial, digital, and climate determinants of health played centre stage at an event 40 years after a WHO charter shifted the focus of health from individual lifestyle choices to broader social and environmental determinants. Commercial formula company practices are just one case study of how structural factors like marketing can determine health across the life span.

GENEVA– New frontiers have emerged since the 1986 optimism of a global health document tackling the world’s health inequities: commercial, digital, and planetary health determinants. 

“The world has gotten more unequal,” asserted Ilona Kickbusch, one of the architects of the Ottawa Charter and a renowned global health expert. She pointed to the Charter as a political turning point–one that clearly defined health as a product of political actions and the first WHO document to do so. 

The 1986 document named peace, shelter, education, food and nutrition, income, stable ecosystem, social justice and equity as the key drivers of health–and attempted to usher these principles into action. “And of course, in the present geopolitical situation, these drivers become particularly clear,” Kickbusch said in reference to the conflicts in Iran, Israel, Sudan, and Ukraine.

Experts within public health repeatedly point to structural determinants of health as the real reasons for overburdened healthcare systems and ballooning national debt. 

UNICEF singles out the aggressive marketing of ultra-processed food as a driver of children’s rising obesity.

“If you think health is just what happens in hospitals, you are simply wrong,” said Dr Maria Neira, former WHO director for the department of Public Health, Environment and Social Determinants of Health, at an event at the annual Geneva Health Forum. 

Neira also challenged health ministers to focus on the causes of illness, not just the outcomes–diseases. Doing so is proven to be more cost effective as health systems spend billions on hospitals and tertiary care. 

“Governments need to stop mopping the floor and turn off the tap,” said Allison Cox, policy director at the NCD Alliance, who alluded to the benefits of prevention at a separate World Health Assembly side event on metabolic conditions.

Figure of tobacco industry and commercial determinants of health
The private sector influences a wide range of health factors through marketing, lobbying, and product design.

Both comments pointed to the idea of prevention–tackling upstream determinants of health and changing the environments that lead to disease–as fundamental to a robust public health. Health promotion aims to address the root causes of illness such as environmental, social, and economic factors. 

The convening at the Geneva Health Forum, held on the side of the World Health Organization’s annual Assembly, discussed the gap between the Ottawa Charter’s political discourse on the determinants of health and the reality of implementing them through funding, governance, accountability, and mediating commercial interests. 

The fight to protect infant health

A Nestle advertisement from 1911 with misleading health information.

Since the signing of the Ottawa Charter, Kickbusch underscored that three emerging issues now fundamentally shape health: those of commercial, digital, and climate influences. 

Exactly how corporations influence health is none more clear than the case of the aggressive marketing of infant formula, argued Patti Rundall, Policy Director of IBFAN Global, a leading international coalition dedicated to improving maternal and child health through breastfeeding. Her organization, founded in 1979, has fought to regulate the marketing of breastmilk substitutes in light of troubling data on infant health. 

“I couldn’t sleep when I found out about this. At that point 1.5 million babies were dying because they were not breastfed,” said Rundall, referencing UNICEF statistics that babies who are not breastfed at all are 14 times more likely to die than those who are fed only breastmilk.

The UN agency also notes that “any amount of breastmilk reduces a child’s risk of death,” and that “babies who received no breastmilk at all are seven times more likely to die from infections than those who received at least some breastmilk in their first six months of life.”

It is structural issues, like the “unrelenting” marketing of infant formula giants, most notably by Nestle, that Rundall points to as undermining a baby’s first few days.

“All over the world, women are impeded from protecting their own and their babies’ health–and often survival, because of factors beyond their control.” Rundall quoted the author and activist Gabrielle Palmer, to an audience at a large lecture hall at Geneva’s Campus Biotech.

Ottawa charterCommercial determinants of health Breastmilk substitutes
Patti Rundall displays a photo of coercive marketing techniques. Her organization was founded in the 1970s to combat the rise of corportate influence on infant health.

“We have to remember that a lot of the blame is put on parents for not doing the right thing. But these are things that are not in a parent’s control–there are structures around women that prevent them from breastfeeding,” Rundall said. She displayed pictures of formula nurse representatives in a developing country in the 1970s with Nestle’s company policy at the time was to provide medical aid if the clinic would promote their products.

The civil society outrage and boycott of Nestle that ensued fueled the first consumer protection code against these harmful marketing practices in 1981. 

Baby food Egypt
Baby food companies have faced scrutiny over different formulations–often added sugars–in their products in lower income countries. IBFAN and the WHO have also worked to increase transparency and information sharing of contaminated products.

But the discussion around marketing, lobbying, and other forms of influence bans continue. Last year, the World Health Assembly adopted a resolution calling for regulation of the digital marketing of breast milk substitutes. Rundall called it “controversial” but important. 

The resolution expresses “deep concern over inappropriate digital marketing strategies used by manufacturers and distributors of breast-milk substitutes, feeding bottles and teats, and food for infants and young children to target pregnant women, parents and carers, as well as health professionals, including with personalized content.” 

Furthermore, conflict and humanitarian settings are often the most vulnerable to corporate influence. In Gaza, Ukraine, and Sudan, donated baby products falsely advertise unfounded health benefits of breastmilk substitutes. Rundall called the practice “just nonsense. Those babies are now more likely to die.”

Because of these practices, 148 countries have laws that to some extent incorporate the original 1981 code protections. 

“The industry continues to fight the legislation,” noted Randull. “We need people on the ground to close all the loopholes–because it’s very clear that in places with good legislation, breastfeeding rates are higher.”

Other kinds of commercial determinants continue to shape health: notably the tobacco, alcohol, ultra processed food, and fossil fuel industries.

“We know early childhood conditions have life long consequences,” Kickbusch said. But she pointed out that translating evidence into policy action–and overcoming commercial and political resistance– remains difficult.

The political elements of health

Ilona Kickbusch points out that global health reform is fundamentally a struggle over power.
Ilona Kickbusch points out that the decades-long struggle to address root causes of disease is fundamentally a question of political will.

The shift in understanding that health is more than the sum of individual choices but the result of policies and environments is political, the panelists argued. 

“We understood very clearly that health is political,” Kickbusch said. “What we now call the ‘political determinants of health’ was actually at the basis of our work of the Charter,” she explained. These political determinants, as Kickbusch and others recalled, include power, poverty, and other social issues. 

Data from the US demonstrates that being born into poverty is directly correlated with a host of poor health outcomes. “Across the lifespan, residents of impoverished communities are at increased risk for mental illness, chronic disease, higher mortality, and lower life expectancy,” the US Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion states

Ottawa Charter – four decades of evolution 

Geneva health promotion
Kickbusch explains the immense burden of the determinants of health at the Geneva Health Forum at during the World Health Assembly meetings.

Since the Ottawa Charter outlined that health is often a result of structural, social, economic, and environmental conditions, the WHO established a commission on social determinant of health (CSDH) that paved the way to another important political declaration in Rio more than two decades ago.

The text, which emphasizes collective action and the injustice of health inequities, seems at odds with the current geopolitical context. It expresses what it terms a “global political commitment” for reducing health inequities through a social determinants lens.

Still, “four industries kill an estimated 7,400 people in our region every day,” said Dr Hans Henri P. Kluge, WHO regional director for Europe in reference to the tobacco, ultra-processed foods (UPFs), fossil fuels, and alcohol industries. “The same large commercial entities block regulation that would protect the public from harmful products and marketing, and protect health policy from industry interference,” he added in a WHO statement.

Kickbusch and others point to the important role of litigation against companies as driving the health promotion agenda forward. Lawsuits against tobacco companies, opioid manufacturers, and even social media companies for wrongful deaths have resulted in settlements and meaningful policies. 

See related article:

https://healthpolicy-watch.news/tobacco-junk-food-fossil-fuel-and-alcohol-industries-drive-millions-of-deaths/

Image Credits: FDA, The Lancet, S. Samantaroy/HPW, World Health Summit.

WHO’s first AMR strategy overhaul since 2015 cleared the World Health Assembly after a months-long fight over technology transfer.

WHO Member States approved a new 10-year global action plan to combat antimicrobial resistance (AMR) on Friday after a months-long fight over how the world should share AMR-related medical technologies.

The plan, which runs through 2036, maps out strategies for countries to implementing the ambitious targets set at a UN High Level Meeting, including reducing deaths from AMR by 10% by 2030. It’s also the first overhaul of the WHO’s circa-2015 AMR strategy, adopted in an era when the public health threat of drug resistance was less, as was awareness.  

Today, the AMR crisis is associated with nearly five million annual deaths, with 1.14 million directly attributable to drug-resistant bacterial infections, a more than six-fold increase over the last decade. And pathogen resistance to many lifesaving drugs, particularly antibiotics but also antiviral and parasitic treatments, is growing rapidly.

Left unchecked, AMR could shave 1.8 years off global life expectancy within the decade, cause up to 39 million deaths by 2050, and generate total GDP losses of $575 billion, WHO reports.

“Do we realize enough that [AMR] also affects all of us already today?” the Dutch delegate asked the assembly. “Often framed as a long-term health threat with negative consequences expected by 2050, the reality is different.”

“This crisis is already unfolding today. Framing it solely as impacting us in the future is not only outdated but also dangerous.”

The 79th World Health Assembly in session.

The investment case is equally staggering: action on infection prevention, water and sanitation, vaccination and responsible drug prescribing could avert 110 million AMR associated deaths and yield nearly $1 trillion in economic gains by 2050, WHO says.

Low- and middle-income countries bear the heaviest burden. People in LMICs are 1.5 times more likely to die from AMR than those in high-income countries, and 99.65% of children under five who die from drug-resistant infections live in poorer nations, according to research from the Global Research on Antimicrobial Resistance (GRAM) Project published in The Lancet.

In Zambia, “resistance to some commonly used antibiotics exceeds 80% in tertiary hospitals,” its delegation said. “More than 50% of prescriptions fall within the WHO Watch category,” referring to antibiotics flagged by the WHO due to their higher potential to drive resistance.

“This type of resistance is a global threat comparable in magnitude to other major challenges for humanity, including climate change,” Colombia’s delegate said.

Despite the threat, only 10% of countries reported dedicated domestic funding for their national AMR action plans in 2024, and just 29% have costed and budgeted plans, according to WHO.

“The magnitude of the threat means that we need to translate global strategies into real capacities at national level,” Colombia added. “The effects require us to act urgently.”

What’s the plan?

The 10-year plan pivots away from new drug development and toward prevention.

The plan pins itself to the goals adopted by member states in the 2024 UN political declaration on AMR. Along with the headline target of a 10% reduction in bacterial AMR-associated deaths by 2030. The declaration outlined a four-part strategy to combat AMR. It calls for more careful use of antimicrobial agents in healthcare, farming, and animal sectors, alongside improved management of untreated sewage and hospital emissions.  

The significant departure from the architecture of the 2015 strategy is a turn towards prevention as the key to the crisis, as compared to a prior focus overwhelmingly on new drug innovation. The plan elevates infection prevention and control, water and sanitation, vaccination, biosecurity, husbandry practices and pollution prevention as the primary tools, with new drug development framed as complementary.

The logic underpinning the plan is that the antibiotics the world already has can be made to last far longer if the drivers of resistance, such as overuse, poor sanitation and low vaccination coverage, are addressed.

“Preventing infections is central to minimizing the spread of resistant pathogens, thereby decreasing the need for antimicrobials, lowering morbidity and mortality and reducing the discharges into the environment,” the plan states.

New drug development for AMR remains slow and commercially unattractive, with pharmaceutical companies reluctant to invest the years and billions of dollars required to bring a new antibiotic to market for a drug that, if used responsibly, will be held in reserve and rarely prescribed.

New incentives have begun to address the R&D pipeline, such as the United Kingdom’s ‘subscription model’ to ensure that drug innovation is rewarded even if new antibiotics are used sparingly, have begun to address those issues.

But innovation, in the absence of a more holistic “One Health” approach that rations drug use and reduces opportunities for pathogens to mutate into resistant viruses and bacteria in agriculture and ecosystems, cannot solve the problem alone, policymakers now realize.  

Setting standards

World Health Assembly delegates debate the newly adopted Global Health Architecture Reform in Committee B.

Environmental dimensions of AMR are also written into the strategy as obligations for the first time, covering pharmaceutical manufacturing discharges, wastewater from healthcare facilities and agricultural run-off.

The plan also calls upon the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) to develop a veterinary equivalent of WHO’s AWaRe (Access, Watch, Reserve) classification of antibiotics to fill the surveillance gap resulting from livestock and aquaculture accounting for the majority of global antimicrobial use.

WOAH, a non-UN agency, has faced stiff resistance from agrobusiness as well as from veterinarians to more transparent reporting of drug consumption trends and stricter guidance on use.  

While the WHO strategy is not legally binding, it sets a global standard that can outlast changes in national governments and shifting domestic priorities. Thailand’s delegate noted that effective AMR governance at the national level often fluctuates with changing policy priorities and transitions in leadership.

“Strong global mechanisms can help maintain political commitment, accountability, multi-sectoral coordination, and sustainable financing, particularly during periods when national policy attention or institutional support may weaken,” the delegate said.

WHO’s director-general will report on implementation progress to the World Health Assembly in 2027, 2029, and 2031.

The tech transfer fight

The secretariat presides as experts note the UN will likely list Argentina and the US as members.
Brazil, Colombia and Indonesia demanded the removal of language that would have limited technology sharing to “voluntary and mutually agreed” terms, in a fight that mirrors the deadlock holding up the annex to the WHO Pandemic Agreement on Pathogen Access and Sharing of Benefits (PABS).

The plan’s adoption this year was initially postponed at WHO’s Executive Board in February after Brazil, Colombia and Indonesia objected to language in the action plan stating that transfers of patents, manufacturing know-how and data from pharmaceutical companies to producers in developing countries for AMR innovations should happen on “voluntary and mutually agreed” terms.

The fight is, at its core, about whether developing countries can override drug patents during national health emergencies to produce generic versions of a drug. That is as per a core pillar of the World Trade Organization’s  TRIPPS agreement. The 1995 agreement set out the conditions under which countries can exercise a sovereign right to override a patent. 

Access advocates argued that voluntary-only language effectively set an unwanted precedent, ignoring the TRIPPS precedent that established countries’ rights to issue “compulsory licenses” for new, still patented drugs, in an emergency.

“This type of threat can’t be dealt with only with mechanisms that are voluntary in nature”, Colombia’s delegate said.

The compromise text adopted Friday softens the language to “the promotion of knowledge sharing and the transfer of AMR-related technologies, respecting international and national rules in line therewith.” Reference to “international and national rules”, access advocates said, leaves open legal room for countries to pursue compulsory patents in a crisis.

Knowledge Ecology International (KEI), one of the civil society groups that lobbied hardest against the original draft, declared victory.

“KEI is pleased that WHO negotiators eliminated problematic language on technology transfer in the global action plan on antimicrobial resistance,” the group said. “Governments have a responsibility to regulate industry, which can include mandates on sharing access to intellectual property rights, data, biological resources, and manufacturing know-how.”

Brazil thanked the secretariat “for holding consultations on the question of technology transfer,” adding that “for Brazil, meaningful tech transfer is essential for developing countries to achieve the global planning goals.”

European states and pharma push back

While European states, which host some of the world’s largest pharma firms, agreed to the compromise language, the UK delegation said it would continue to interpret the strategy as encouraging  “the promotion of voluntary, mutually agreed technology transfer to build trusted relationships.”

Germany echoed the line, telling the assembly that the plan’s reference to international rules “includes the key principle of voluntary technology transfer on mutually agreed terms.”

The pharmaceutical industry association IFPMA “broadly” supports the strategy, its delegate said, but called on governments to work with industry “firmly grounded in a collaborative approach, including prioritizing the principle of voluntary and mutually agreed terms for technology transfer.”

China was the only delegation to call for a more far-reaching approach. One of the world’s largest producer of generic health products, it urged WHO to “promote the building of a fair and reasonable technology transfer mechanism,” as well as a dedicated One Health financing window and uniform standards for environmental AMR surveillance.

The same fight over technology transfer is holding up adoption of the Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) annex to the WHO Pandemic Agreement. There, the sharing mechanism is far more pivotal to the entire agreement, which aims to set out rules to ensure more equitable access to vaccines, drugs and diagnostics in a global crisis, avoiding the inequalities seen during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Until the annex is settled, the entire agreement, which was approved by the World Health Assembly in 2025, cannot undergo ratification by member states. 

The conflict blind spot

Sudan, three years into a civil war that has shattered its health system, told the assembly it cannot fight AMR alone. The plan offers war zones no dedicated guidance.

The updated strategy is largely silent on AMR in war zones.

“Conflict-affected settings” appears only in passing lists in the plan, with no dedicated section, operational guidance or indicators, despite war zones being where collapsing health systems, broken supply chains, damaged water and sanitation systems and crowded displacement camps accelerate resistance fastest.

The UK flagged the gap in supporting adoption, calling for “explicit guidance on AMR in conflict settings.”

Several delegations from countries at war also noted the omission.

“Despite Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine, our country continues to strengthen work in AMR and protect the effectiveness of antimicrobials,” the delegate said. “At the same time, war creates serious additional risks. This includes more infections, higher use of antimicrobials and even pressure on health systems.”

Sudan’s delegate, speaking three years into a civil war that has displaced more than 12 million people and collapsed much of the country’s health infrastructure, said the country could not deal with the crisis alone.

“Sudan faced one of the most severe humanitarian crises, in which antimicrobial resistance is rapidly escalating within a fragile and overstretched health system,” the Sudanese delegate said. “The ongoing war has severely disrupted the supply chain for medicine and laboratory agents and reduced access to qualified healthcare workers and microbiology services.”

Sudan, the delegate concluded, “cannot confront AMR alone while simultaneously responding to displacement, epidemics and healthcare system collapse.”

Over half of falsified medicines are antimicrobials

More than half of all substandard medical products reported to the WHO are antimicrobials

The AMR debate also overlapped with another issue on the WHA agenda this week: substandard and falsified medical products.

“The intersection of these two crises is where the danger lies,” the Maldives delegation told the assembly. “Weak regulatory systems and the infiltration of substandard antimicrobials directly accelerate the spread of resistant pathogens, threatening to unravel global health progress.”

A falsified antibiotic containing too little active ingredient kills off susceptible bacteria but leaves resistant strains to multiply, accelerating exactly the dynamic the global action plan is designed to slow.

“Over half of substandard products reported to WHO are antimicrobials. These contribute to creating new resistance,” Dr Yukiko Nakatani, WHO’s assistant director-general for health systems, access and data, told delegates.

Like AMR, falsified medicines hit poorer countries hardest. The WHO estimates 1 in 10 medical products in low- and middle-income countries is substandard or falsified, with Africa carrying a prevalence of 18.7%, nearly double the LMIC average. Globally, the WHO estimates substandard and falsified medicines kill over one million people every year.

In sub-Saharan Africa alone, 267,000 people die annually from falsified antimalarial drugs and 169,000 from fake antibiotics used to treat childhood pneumonia, according to a 2023 UN Office on Drugs and Crime report.

Chad’s delegate said the proliferation of falsified medical products and AMR represent “a double threat to public health and global health security, particularly in countries facing security, humanitarian, and persistent logistical issues.”

Nigeria flagged a vulnerability that has surfaced repeatedly in recent years: contaminated excipients, the inactive ingredients used to bind, dissolve or preserve active drugs. “We remain concerned about contaminated excipients and unsafe online sales,” Nigeria’s delegate said.

Ethiopia echoed the concern. “Incidents occurring across multiple regions demonstrate that no country is insulated, in that vulnerabilities in raw material supply chains translate directly into patient harm.”

Online markets and threats to generics

Online and informal markets came up repeatedly throughout the debate. France told the assembly that despite a secure legal supply chain, “we continue to see the circulation of illegal products online, for instance, and that is why we need to have intensified surveillance activities.”

Brazil, meanwhile, warned that the fight against falsified products must not come at the cost of legitimate generic medicines, which are critical to expanding access for low- and middle-income populations and form the backbone of treatment programs across the developing world.

“A critical challenge is eradicating falsified products without stifling legitimate, affordable, generic medicines,” Brazil’s delegate said. “A regulatory framework must be precise, risk proportionate, and globally harmonized, aggressively targeting illicit networks, while safeguarding streamlined pathways for quality-assured generics.”

No new strategy or resolution was adopted on the falsified medicines file. The Executive Board’s report on the issue was noted, with member states broadly endorsing a streamlined 2026-2027 work plan focused on regulatory strengthening, detection technologies and supply chain oversight.

AI and Sustainable Development Goals Crammed into final WHA hours in scramble to finish

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told delegates the global financing emergency must be seized as an opportunity to push digital health and AI forward.

Committee A wrapped up its business on Friday afternoon with the room noticeably emptier than at the start of the week, as national delegations began flying home from Geneva.

The last grouped agenda item, covering progress on the health-related Sustainable Development Goals and the harmonisation of digital health and artificial intelligence governance, drew no resolution. Member states “noted” the Director-General’s reports and closed the file.

Member states used the floor to confront the fact that the world is on course to miss every one of the 52 health-related SDG targets by 2030, according to a WHO report released earlier this week.

Once considered the most achievable of the SDGs, the health goals have been derailed by stalling progress on maternal mortality, flatlining childhood immunisation, a reversal in malaria gains, and what the WHO has called a “global health financing emergency”.

Nigeria put numbers to that emergency on the floor of the assembly. “Around 4.5 billion people still lack access to essential health services,” its delegate said. “In 2025 official development assistance fell by about 23%, the largest annual decline on record.”

Catching up with AI

AI, despite its rapidly expanding role in healthcare and the concerns it poses around bias, privacy and equity, did not get much airtime. The discussion centred on the “harmonization” of governance frameworks that, in most of the world, do not yet exist.

The European Union’s AI Act remains the only substantive AI legislation in force anywhere, and even that is not health-specific.

Countries said they were taking steps to catch up. India has launched a national AI in health strategy. Russia has produced a code of ethics. Singapore passed a Health Information Bill in January and is using regulatory sandboxes. Indonesia has set up a Health AI committee.

Switzerland’s delegation announced it will host the Global AI Summit in Geneva in 2027, positioning the event as a “a concrete impetus for globally sustainable AI governance, which is also critical to global public health.”

In the final minutes of a committee that began a week ago, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus made an unscheduled appearance to weigh in on the digital health and AI debate.

“The future of health services is digital, whether we like it or not,” he told delegates, framing the funding crunch as a forcing function for digital transformation. “There is a crisis, unprecedented global challenges, and health financing emergency that demands actually to seize digital health and AI as opportunity.”

Colombia pushed back on the UN health chief’s crisis-as-opportunity framing, warning that without equity at the centre, digital transformation risked entrenching the very inequalities it promises to solve.

“The future of health cannot consist in replacing old-fashioned inequalities with digital inequalities,” its delegate said. “Innovation only makes sense when the benefits reach all people and communities.”

With that, the chair declared all business allocated to Committee A — and the final day of the World Health Assembly — closed.

Image Credits: X/WHO, Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, Gale Julius Dada/MSF, WHO.

World Health Assembly delegates debate the newly adopted Global Health Architecture Reform in Committee B.
World Health Assembly delegates debate the newly adopted Global Health Architecture Reform in Committee B.

The 79th World Health Assembly adopted a widely anticipated Global Health Architecture Reform initiative. While WHO and many member states lauded it as a landmark move, the actual mandate is, in fact, highly restrictive. The process will not yield recommendations on “revisions to organizational mandates nor specific mergers or consolidations” in the often overlapping functions of multiple UN global health agencies. The process also must navigate sharp developed and developing world priorities, regarding equity. And the framework faces fierce backlash from civil society groups over their exclusion from the joint task force steering the initiative.

The World Health Assembly on Friday endorsed a joint process for Global Health Architecture (GHA) Reform with the United Nations and other major, multilateral health agencies.

Dr Tedros promises bottom-up reform.
Dr Tedros promises bottom-up reform.

The process complementing the broader UN80 reform initiative, aims to yield recommendations that:  a) enhance “alignment of the mandates and capacities” of global health actors with essential functions across global, regional and national levels; b) enhance “coordination and collaboration” and c) align financing, especially to “advance national self-reliance and ensure sustainable and predictable support”. But the carefully curated mandate also precludes concrete recommendations for agency mergers or revisions to their mandates, leaving big questions about where the process will really lead.

Proponents have promoted the reform as a means of shifting power dynamics toward national authorities, aligning multilateral financing with sovereign priorities.

WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus emphasised that the overhaul must remain intrinsically bottom-up and mirror the agency’s own recent 16-month internal restructuring efforts. He explained that the Secretariat is identifying its absolute core mandates and will explicitly delegate non-core responsibilities to other global health partners based on their comparative advantages, thereby eliminating systemic duplication.

“All we do in the GHA should actually be bottom up, and we need to understand the needs of the countries we support,” said Dr Tedros.

Consolidating governance and the Lusaka agenda

Chef de Cabinet Razia Pendse reassures the Assembly that robust safeguards protect WHO’s constitutional mandate.
Chef de Cabinet Razia Pendse reassures the Assembly that robust safeguards protect WHO’s constitutional mandate.

Leading the process is a 25-member task force, including 14 WHO member state representatives, including developed and developing nation co-chairs. The task force will also include up to four representatives of other UN health-related entities, as well as the World Bank and “a regional health organization.”

And the task force will include five representatives of the largest, non-UN global health organizations, including Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance; Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations; Unitaid; and the World Bank-hosted Pandemic Fund.

Governed by consensus, the body must hold regular Geneva-based consultations to ensure member states retain ultimate decision-making authority over international health policies. To synthesise its recommendations, the task force will engage with parallel reform efforts like the UN80 Initiative and the Lusaka agenda, a non-binding agreement launched in 2023 that aligns external financing with domestic health priorities.

Reassuring the Assembly, Chef de Cabinet Razia Pendse confirmed that the reform includes robust safeguards to protect the WHO’s constitutional mandate, noting that member states will ultimately review all proposed reform recommendations.

“WHO will approach this mandate with humility and with an inclusive spirit,” said Pendse.

Core mandate lacks ambition 

Some member states, as well as a leading philanthropy, Wellcome Trust, criticised the lack of a real mandate to enact substantive structural changes in the way the UN agencies and its partners do business. These restrictive boundaries are explicitly defined in the proposal, stating:

“The process will propose neither revisions to organizational mandates nor specific mergers or consolidations, which fall within the authority of the relevant governing bodies, and will not address disease- or intervention-specific approaches.”

Currently, multiple United Nations entities – including UNICEF, UNFPA, UNAIDS, UN Women, and Unitaid, as well the UN Environment Programme and a range of UN humanitarian agencies, all engage in global health activities to some extent, with oft-overlapping activities as well as sometimes fierce competition for donor funds.

As for major non-UN agencies like Gavi, and the Global Fund, critics have suggested that the vertical, disease-focused nature of those programmes also reinforces that tendency at national level and thus countervenes the needed drive towards integration of health system services. For instance, The Global Fund manages a huge, and efficient mechanism for procurement supporting diagnostics and medicines access across dozens of low and middle income countries. But that mandate covers only the three major diseases. That leaves national governments scrambling to procure health products to address the soaring burden of noncommunicable diseases through other channels. 

In light of all of that, a meaningful process must consider opportunities to streamline institutions through concrete recommendations regarding the merger and consolidation of global health organizations, argued Wellcome’s representative during the WHA debate.

This lack of practical objectives or outcomes to the reform process was also challenged by some member states. The delegate from Colombia expressed concern that the WHO Secretariat’s proposal focused heavily on methodology without clearly addressing the central, substantive issues of the reform. The Belgian delegate echoed the demand for a robust approach.

“We expect this reform to be ambitious and not just cosmetic,” he emphasised.

See also:

Outbreak Threats, Geopolitical Divides and Financial Crises Hover Over 79th World Health Assembly

Civil society condemns exclusion

The Women Deliver representative demands civil society from the Global South be meaningful reform co-designers.
The Women Deliver representative demands civil society from the Global South be meaningful reform co-designers.

Meanwhile, non-state actors, led by the NCD Alliance, condemned their structural exclusion from the core, joint task force, noting that sidelining affected communities undermines meaningful governance and removes a critical force for accountability. To preserve the primarily intergovernmental nature of the reform, civil society groups other than the five named to the task force, would be relegated to peripheral consultations in “stakeholder constituency groups.”

“By excluding civil society and people living with NCDs from the joint task force set up to oversee this process, Member States are sidelining the voices of those most affected,” said NCD Alliance Policy and Advocacy Director Alison Cox in a statement to Health Policy Watch.

Pivoting to demands for direct representation, a coalition including the NCD Alliance, Save the Children and Wellcome argued, to no avail, for a modification of the process so that more civil society and frontline humanitarian expertise are embedded directly into the core task force body. They warned that ignoring these voices contradicts existing commitments to social participation and leaves the new architecture vulnerable to health-harming commercial interference.

“We urge member states to ensure that civil society, especially from the global south, are meaningful co-designers throughout all phases of this reform to truly leave no one behind,” said the Women Deliver representative during a continuation of the debate on Friday.

Complicating this push for inclusion, the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA) argued that the joint task force must also include private sector representation. The industry group further cautioned that the reform process should avoid encroaching upon intellectual property, licensing, and pricing decisions.

North-South frictions: demanding equity and sovereign control

The Cypriot delegate, representing nearly 50 nations, calls for urgent multilateral reform to stabilise the strained global system.
The Cypriot delegate, representing nearly 50 nations, calls for urgent multilateral reform to stabilise the strained global system.

Despite civil society concerns, a broad coalition of member states unanimously supported the draft WHA decision on GHA Reform – describing it as a crucial response to declining official development assistance and escalating health emergencies.

Speaking on behalf of the European Union and nearly 50 aligned nations, Cyprus praised the resolution as a timely intervention for a highly strained multilateral system. The delegation noted that existing structures have reached their operational limits amid severe funding cuts, economic instability, and complex geopolitical conflicts.

“The time to act is now, and we should seize this opportunity,” said the Cypriot delegate during the debate.

Underlying frictions that emerged during the debate also revealed a divide between high-income countries focused on streamlining and stabilising the strained multilateral system and the Global South’s demands for more equity in health financing and to shift more control to countries.

Representing the 47 member states of the WHO African Region, Zimbabwe underscored that while they support the process, the reform must actively reflect regional political priorities rather than merely streamlining at headquarters. The delegation demanded that the new design secure sustainable financing while protecting essential health functions and regional coordination capacities worldwide.

“The region calls for the provision of focused support to countries most affected by financial shocks, including WHO Africa member states, with a view to rationalising international health financing and strengthening regional coordination capacities,” said the Zimbabwean delegate.

Echoing these Global South concerns, Thailand, representing the South-East Asia Region, requested that the Secretariat translate multilateral decisions into practical country-level support. And Indonesia demanded robust equity safeguards to protect developing nations.

Pakistan demands ‘lean must not mean less’

The Pakistani delegate warns against organisational streamlining, insisting that a "lean" WHO must not mean less.
The Pakistani delegate warns against organizational streamlining, insisting that a “lean” WHO must not mean less.

Pakistan also warned against the unintended consequences of organizational streamlining.

“Lean must not become synonymous with less,” said the Pakistani delegate, who expressed worries that agency consolidation seen as more efficient by donor nations also could weaken WHO’s country-level footprint.  Taking issue with language in the document, he stressed that the task force should organize regular “consultations”  rather than “information sessions” with other WHO member states to ensure their ongoing involvement in the process.

Addressing specific regional vulnerabilities, South Africa also stressed that sexual and reproductive health rights needs to be embedded within the new frameworks to prevent unintentionally reversing hard-won development gains in crisis contexts. Voicing the distinct concerns of Pacific Island states, Tonga demanded that the redesign preserve equitable pooled procurement mechanisms to reduce high transaction costs across their vast ocean distances.

“We want to be part of this conversation so that we can share our skills and explain our needs,” said the Tongan delegate.

Although the fine print of the text was not modified at the meeting, Chef de Cabinet Pendse and Director General Tedros reassured member states that their calls for equity and inclusion had been heard and would be “acted upon as we move the process forward.”

Reform must address economic weaponisation and power

KEI warns the health architecture reform remains incomplete without addressing economic sanctions.
KEI warns the health architecture reform remains incomplete without addressing economic sanctions.

While the Secretariat emphasised inclusive decision-making and internal institutional safeguards, experts warn that real change requires moving beyond procedural vocabulary to address the external structural dependencies that produce global inequity.

Highlighting the profound humanitarian consequences of geopolitical trade restrictions, Knowledge Ecology International (KEI) insisted that the GHA Reform would remain fundamentally incomplete without addressing trade sanctions and economic barriers that fragile states and marginalised populations face amidst increased geopolitical tensions.

“Medicine, medical equipment, and humanitarian goods should not be used as weapons of economic warfare,” said KEI representative Thirukumaran Balasubramaniam on Friday.

Ilona Kickbusch points out that global health reform is fundamentally a struggle over power.
Ilona Kickbusch points out that global health reform is fundamentally a struggle over power.

Similar to this demand to tackle systemic barriers, Ilona Kickbusch, Co-Chair of the World Health Summit Council, cautioned that true institutional change requires confronting the political and financial interests of the states that dominate global governance.

“The current debate about reforming the global health architecture is, at its core, a debate about power – who holds it, who is losing it, and who intends to use this moment of rupture to consolidate it on new terms,” said Kickbusch ahead of this year’s World Health Assembly.

WHA reform success hinges on building consensus

While experts debate these broader power dynamics, the joint task force must focus on its operational mandate along a tight timeline. It will need to convene and begin synthesising evidence and proposals immediately, with the aim of submitting an interim report by late 2026 for review by the WHO Executive Board.

The ambition is high. For instance, member states also expect the joint task force to work to help align international funding with sovereign health strategies, ensuring greater readiness for emerging threats like the ongoing Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Ultimately, the success of the Global Health Architecture Reform will depend on whether the global community can navigate these competing priorities and translate them into a Geneva-based consensus for final approval at the Eightieth World Health Assembly.

See also:

WHA79 Must Make Universal Health Coverage the Compass for Global Health Architecture Reform

Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, World Health Summit.

The Botswana delegate addresses the World Health Assembly, emphasising workforce preservation amid severe budget cuts and operational risks.
The Botswana delegate addresses the World Health Assembly, emphasising workforce preservation amid severe budget cuts and operational risks.

Sweeping personnel cuts and a massive emergency funding shortfall trigger sharp warnings about acute WHO operational risks from member states and experts. Yet, diverging regional priorities complicate short-term and sustainable financing solutions.

GENEVA –Member states sounded alarms over severe WHO budget constraints on Thursday at the World Health Assembly. Delegates warned that a 9.4% staff reduction as of December 2025, culminating in reductions of nearly a quarter of staff by mid-2026, are depleting the organisation’s crisis response mechanisms, in particular and thus its ability to respond to emerging health risks.

The unprecedented financial squeeze follows the self-declared withdrawal of the organisation’s largest contributor, the United States, forcing a 21% reduction in the base budget for 2026-2027 – from the originally planned $5.3 billion down to $4.2 billion. This sweeping institutional restructuring leaves the global health architecture highly vulnerable just as deadly new pathogens such as the recent Ebola outbreak emerge.

WHO's Dr Maria van Kerkhove.
WHO’s Dr Maria van Kerkhove

The debate cast a harsh spotlight on the organisation’s capacity to manage global health emergencies. According to official financial reports, the WHO Emergency operations segment currently faces a massive $553 million funding gap. Emergencies and Polio eradication budgets, funded separately through special donor appeals, budgeted at about $2 billion for 2026-27. The Emergencies’ deficit is separate from the gaps in the base budget, which still faces a funding shortfall of $420 million or 10%. Additionally, the critical Contingency Fund for Emergencies has plummeted to a historic low balance of under $20 million, falling drastically short of its official $100 million target capitalisation.

“The financing that we need at the start of an outbreak, at the start of pandemics comes from our contingency fund for emergencies which is dangerously low right now,” warned Dr Maria Van Kerkhove, acting director of the Department of Epidemic and Pandemic management at the WHO at a World Health Assembly side event earlier this week.

Cuts cause operational risks

Delegates participate in a Committee B meeting to debate WHO administrative, financial, and governance matters.
Delegates participate in a Committee B meeting to debate WHO administrative, financial, and governance matters.

Independent oversight bodies had issued stark reminders about the deadly consequences of the sharp financial reductions. A Global Preparedness Monitoring Board report, released earlier this week, warned that while investments in pandemic preparedness strengthened post COVID-19 pandemic, “shifting geopolitical priorities threaten to undermine this progress.”

As warned in the Report of the Independent Oversight and Advisory Committee for the WHO Health Emergencies Programme, current cost-saving measures and workforce reductions risk repeating the fatal mistakes made after the 2008 global economic recession, when health emergency-related functions and teams were similarly deprioritized.

To weather the WHO’s fiscal shortfall, the global health body had managed 2,507 staff separations worldwide, of which 1,232 were direct post abolitions, as of 13 March 2026, according to the WHA report presented to member states.

“This trend reflects structural pressure which could compromise the operational capacity of the organisation, particularly at country level,” warned Panama’s delegate during the human resources debate on Thursday.

Speaking on behalf of 47 African member states, Botswana’s delegate reminded the Assembly that WHO’s workforce remains the organisation’s greatest asset.

“It is … critical that ongoing reforms and workforce adjustment preserve technical expertise, institutional memory, and adequate support to regional and country offices,” added Botswana’s delegate.

Secretariat warns against staff burnout

Assistant Director-General Raul Thomas urges member states to align expectations with the Secretariat's new fiscal realities.
Assistant Director-General Raul Thomas urges member states to align expectations with the WHO Secretariat’s new fiscal realities.

Beyond the loss of technical expertise, member states also expressed deep concerns over the mental health status of WHO staff who have weathered the current restructuring. Along with witnessing the job loss and departures of friends and peers, those who survived had to undergo months of internal departmental wrangling, fierce competition over a reduced number of organisational placements, and finally team, departmental or even geographic relocations. Panama highlighted a troubling spike in psychosocial support requests, while Poland emphasised that staff cannot sustain global health outputs without a supportive working environment.

Acknowledging the immense pressure on the remaining personnel, Assistant Director-General Raul Thomas noted that staff are also now struggling with unrealistic expectations.

“People are under the understanding that they will have to deliver the same results with a reduced workforce,” said Thomas on Thursday.

To protect the workforce from burnout, he urged that member states recalibrate their expectations to align with the stark new fiscal realities. The Secretariat emphasised that countries must focus purely on essential mandates, rather than pulling the organisation in other directions through earmarked funding.

No immediate funding solutions in sight

The Cyprus delegate addresses the World Health Assembly on Wednesday during tense institutional budget debates.
The Cyprus delegate addresses the World Health Assembly on Wednesday during tense institutional budget debates.

Addressing the persistent financial vulnerability, Bhutan, speaking for the South-East Asia Region, underscored the urgent need to broaden the WHO’s heavily concentrated base of “voluntary” donors who give far more than the required assessed contributions. These have generally included only the highest income economies but fewer of emerging upper-middle and middle-income countries that could well afford to contribute, as well, as they become more developed. Cyprus, speaking for the European Union, reaffirmed the absolute necessity of sustainable, flexible financing, and a clear way forward to address the remaining 15 percent programme budget funding gap.

Emphasising that a strong WHO is vital for responding to disease outbreaks and recurrent health emergencies, Zambia appealed to donors for “increased sustained, predictable and flexible financing.” Speaking on behalf of the African Region during Wednesday’s budget debate, the delegate argued that this flexibility is required to enable the organisation to efficiently allocate resources to core mandates like health system strengthening, primary healthcare, and universal health coverage.

To stabilise the organisation, delegates emphasised the critical role of mandatory assessed contributions, which in accordance with a milestone agreement in 2022, are being increased on a step-wise basis so that fixed contributions will comprise 50% of the overall base budget by the 2030-2031 cycle. However, collection rates remain stagnant at 70%, leaving over $184 million unpaid for 2025 alone. Member states that do not pay face suspension of WHA voting privileges – a sanction that nine member states currently remain under, while ten additional nations face the same penalty at next year’s Assembly if they fail to pay.

Looking ahead to long-term sustainability, the Secretariat confirmed that the next planned stage of increase in assessed contributions for the 2028-2029 biennium will be placed on the agenda of the WHO’s Regional Committees this autumn, ahead of a formal WHA decision in May 2027. However, timely solutions are of the essence; if member states fail to also inject flexible, voluntary funding in the interim, officials warn that frontline responses to concurrent humanitarian and viral crises would face immediate and fatal disruption.

See related story.

https://healthpolicy-watch.news/who-iran-voting-rights-us-faces-suspension/

Image Credits: Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW.

Ebola

An angry crowd set fire to Ebola isolation tents outside a hospital in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC) Ituri province on Thursday after the family of a young man who died of the virus was refused permission to take his body to be buried.

The attack on Rwampara General Hospital, near the city of Bunia, came as the World Health Organization (WHO) raised its risk assessment of the DRC outbreak from “high” to “very high” for the country, citing the rapid spread of cases and growing insecurity.

The risk remains “high” regionally and “low” globally, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a Geneva media briefing on Friday.

Six patients were being treated in the two tents set alight, according to ALIMA, the medical charity that ran the isolation unit. Police fired warning shots and teargas to disperse the crowd, and local authorities placed health workers at the hospital under military protection.

Dr Anne Ancia, WHO’s representative in DRC, told reporters that the incident would “significantly jeopardize” containment efforts in Bunia, one of three hotspots in the outbreak.

The tents had been set up to separate suspected Ebola patients from those receiving routine care in the main hospital building, said Ancia, addressing the media briefing via phone from the DRC.

She said that WHO security teams were meeting with the provincial governor and health authorities, and hoped that operations at the hospital “will be able to start again tomorrow”.

Contact tracing is uneven across the affected provinces. Ancia said tracing in South Kivu was “sufficient” at around 80%, with 89 contacts already identified for a single new case confirmed in Riho. 

But in violence-affected Bunia, the figure stood at just 11% as of Wednesday evening.

Dr Anne Ancia, WHO’s lead in the DRC.

“This outbreak can still be contained, but the window for action is narrow,” said Gabriela Arenas, the International Federation of the Red Cross’ region lead. “What happens in the coming days – in homes, in communities, and across borders – will matter enormously.”

While some media reports suggested that the infected patients had fled into the community during the chaos, all six patients from the isolation tents “are currently being cared for at the hospital,” ALIMA said in a statement.

ALIMA CEO Dr Moumouni Kinda told Health Policy Watch the response was being held back by a combination of conflict, weak local administration, and community members’ lack of knowledge about the disease in a region that had not previously faced Ebola.

“The war, the disorganization of local public authorities, and the lack of resources mean that, of course, the Ebola outbreak will continue to worsen,” Kinda said.

“This is a region that has not known Ebola. It is new, and the people do not necessarily have the reflexes as in zones like Goma or others which have seen Ebola in the past.”

A rare strain, with no vaccine or treatment

Health workers in the DRC put together protective gear during an Ebola outbreak in 2019.

The outbreak is caused by the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, a rare and deadly variant with no licensed vaccine or therapeutic that kills up to half of those it infects. WHO officials said this week that candidate vaccines in the pipeline could take up to nine months to reach patients.

The outbreak is “spreading rapidly”, with 82 cases and seven deaths confirmed in DRC, Tedros told reporters on Thursday.

“We know the epidemic in DRC is much larger,” Tedros said.

The outbreak is centred in Ituri province, with cases also confirmed roughly 350 miles southwest in Goma, in North Kivu. Across the two provinces, around four million people need urgent humanitarian assistance, two million are displaced, and 10 million face acute hunger, according to UN figures.

In neighbouring Uganda, two cases have been confirmed in people who travelled separately from DRC, including one death. Yet the situation in Uganda remains “stable”, Tedros said.

Ugandan authorities have suspended flights, boats, buses and all other public transport across the border for at least four weeks, a significant decision in a region where cross-border movement is fundamental to livelihoods.

More than 186,000 people per month moved across eight border points during the previous Ebola outbreak that killed 2,299 people over nearly two years, according to the International Organization of Migration (IOM).

Local beliefs, deep distrust

Ebola response workers in the DRC.

“There is significant distrust of outside authorities among the local population,” Tedros said. “Building trust in the affected communities is critical to a successful response, and is one of our highest priorities.”

The man whose death triggered Thursday’s violence was a well-known local footballer. His mother told Reuters she believed her son had died of typhoid fever, not Ebola.

Meanwhile, a local politician who witnessed the attack told the BBC that residents did not believe that the virus existed.

The bodies of Ebola victims remain highly infectious after death. Traditional funeral rites in the region, during which mourners touch and wash the deceased, have been a persistent driver of transmission in past outbreaks.

While WHO guidelines mandate “safe and dignified” burials handled by trained teams, convincing the local population to set aside their rituals can be a difficult task.

“We have learned from the past that epidemics are not contained by medical response alone,” Arenas said. “They are contained when communities trust the response, when people have reliable information, and when local action is supported quickly and consistently.”

He described community reactions as mixed: “For some people, the outbreak is very real, and they are seeking information on how to protect themselves and their families. For others, there is still suspicion and misinformation with claims that Ebola is fabricated.”

Valet Chebujongo, a community mobiliser in Bunia, told CNN that fear in the affected communities was being fuelled by superstition, and people were turning to prayer and traditional remedies.

ALIMA, the charity operating the tents, also warned against social media rumours that could “fuel fear, misinformation and mistrust towards health facilities and the teams involved in the Ebola response.”

A region with a history of attacks on health workers

WHO Scales Back Ebola Response Following Deadliest Attacks Ever On DRC Health Workers

The fire raised dark memories for veterans of DRC Ebola outbreak response in North Kivu and Ituri a few years ago, the second-largest on record.

At least 25 health workers were killed in violent attacks between 2018 and 2020, 13 of them working for international agencies, while 27 were abducted by armed groups, according to an analysis by Insecurity Insight. 

In total, more than 450 acts of violence or threats against health workers were recorded, the analysis found. 

Some attacks were targeted assassinations. Dr Richard Mouzoko, a Cameroonian WHO epidemiologist, was shot dead during a raid on a hospital in Butembo in April 2019. 

In Lwemba, civilians associated with a Mai-Mai militia set fire to four health facilities and 18 houses belonging to Ebola responders following the death of a local Red Cross worker.

Others were driven by community mistrust. A Lancet Infectious Diseases study conducted in Beni and Butembo found that one in four respondents believed the Ebola outbreak was not real, and that such beliefs were strongly associated with a “decreased likelihood of adopting preventive behaviours, including acceptance of Ebola vaccines.”

The violence in late November 2019 forced WHO to evacuate non-essential staff from the Biakato Mines area, the first time it had pulled personnel at that scale during an outbreak.

Cases surged in the weeks that followed.

Health workers also paid a direct toll from the virus itself. By the end of the outbreak, 171 health workers had contracted Ebola, accounting for roughly 5% of all cases.

Logistical challenges in the current outbreak compound the risks. Goma’s airport, the nearest major hub to Bunia, is under the control of the M23 rebel group and is no longer functioning.

In a statement this week, M23 – which has never handled a public health crisis as a governing authority – said it had identified and isolated all contacts of the confirmed Goma case and urged residents of “the liberated areas to remain vigilant, avoid panic, and strictly adhere to the preventive measures recommended by health services.”

“Surveillance and emergency response teams remain fully mobilised to monitor the situation and protect communities,” a spokesperson for the group said.

Image Credits: WHO, John Wessels/ MSF, WHO AFRO.

Gaza tent camp amidst rain and rubble in January 2026.  Flooding has now given way to heat waves and swarms of rats.

A stiffly-worded resolution approved this week by World Health Organization member states condemned the “wanton” destruction of Gaza’s health facilities and “extreme violence of the illegal Israeli settlers.” The decision called on Israel to ensure humanitarian access to Gaza of medicines, fuel, and other essentials, refrain from further destruction of food production and water supplies,  and release Palestinian civilians arbitrarily detained. 

After hours of debate straddling Tuesday and Wednesday, World Health Organization member states approved two overlapping reports and resolutions on the situation in Israeli-occupied territories, calling on WHO to convene a donor conference on the rehabilitation of Gaza’s health infrastructure before the next World Health Assembly.

The WHO report cites in painstaking detail the degree of destruction seen in Gaza during the two-year Israeli-Hamas war, along with desperate realities facing Palestinians today in the limbo of an uneasy ceasefire and with little progress so far in the reconstruction plans, hyped by the United States-sponsored Board of Peace. As of end 2025, some 75,000 lives had been lost since 7 October 2023, 72,373 of them Palestinian, while Gaza’s housing, health, water and sanitation and food production infrastructure all remain at their knees.  The report and companion resolution also points to the increasingly precarious situation of West Bank Palestinians in accessing health care in the face of tough new military clampdowns, Israeli settlement expansion and mounting settler violence. 

Heated debate over diverging narratives 

Children at a community kitchen in Khan Yunis, Gaza in August 2025, in months of hunger that preceeded the October cease-fire.

Hours of heated debate also reflected the often sharply diverging narratives held by member states around the root problems and solutions. 

On the one hand, there were multiple references to the genocide that had taken place in Gaza, led by regional actors as well as Brazil and South Africa, and a reference by Pakistan to Israel as a “genocidal state.” 

Pakistan, speaking on behalf of the Organisation of Islamic States (OIC), objected to a references in one WHO report to the war’s beginnings on 7 October 2023 when Hamas invaded about a dozen Israeli community, took over 200 Israeli hostages and killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians.  (A second report cites only Palestinian data for 2025)

“Israel has reduced Gaza to ruins, strewn with the blood of the innocent, where those who have managed to survive cling to a life of starvation, deprivation and disease. Its catalogue of horrors continues, notwithstanding the purported ceasefire. The victims are the intentional targets of a concerted campaign, a crime against humanity, aimed at erasing the Palestinian people as a group,” declared South Africa.

Ryad Awaja, Palestine delegate to the WHA.

Palestine’s WHA delegate, Ryad Awaja accused “the occupying power” of describing an “alternate reality … that hides the crimes that are taking place in Gaza today and the occupied Palestine territories, crimes of which the victims are women, the elderly, and children” in remarks that refrained from calling Israel by name.

Claiming that the real number of deaths from the two-year war in Gaza exceeds 200,000, Awaja described it as “the result of an occupation that  has lasted more than 70 years.”

The 1948 Arab-Israeli war that followed the UN’s resolution on the partition of Palestine into separate, independent Jewish and Arab states ended with Gaza under Egyptian rule and the West Bank under Jordanian control. 

Debate over October 7 references to Hamas attacks on Israeli communities 

Israeli Nova festival goers flee Hamas gunmen who broached Gaza’s fences and entered Israel on 7 October, 2023, killing some 1200 people.

Conversely, other member states expressed concerns that Hamas “terrorism” in the initial 7 October incursion, the holding of Israeli hostages and militarisation of health facilities still needs more scrutiny.  

That was reflected in the vote on the main resolution, approved 89-5, but with nearly 70 countries absent and another 31 countries abstaining, including the United Kingdom.

The United Kingdom’s abstention reflects “our continued concern about this country-specific agenda item that uniquely singles out the state of Israel.” At the same time the UK remains “firmly committed to Palestinian self-determination and a Palestinian state,” said the UK delegate. 

Canada, in its remarks, condemned the “October 7, 2023 terrorist attacks” on Israeli communities and called for Hamas’ disarmament to clear the way for new governance arrangements post ceasefire. But it also decried the “catastrophic humanitarian situation that remains in Gaza, despite the ceasefire, and “escalating needs in the West Bank caused by the expansion of Israel settlements and increasing extremist settler violence.” 

The Netherlands, similarly, denounced the “weaponising” of humanitarian aid, a veiled allusion to Israel. But it also expressed reservations about the resolution’s references to “wanton” attacks on health facilities. 

“We condemn indiscriminate attacks. We believe, however, an independent investigation is needed to determine whether all instances of destruction of health facilities can be categorically qualified as ‘wanton’, or that all medical and military facilities, including medical personnel, were, without exception, indiscriminately attacked,” said The Netherlands’ delegate. 

The Nasser Medical Complex in Gaza in the aftermath of military operations.
Gaza’s Nasser Hospital in the aftermath of Israeli operations in 2025. Former Israeli hostages have described being held there in the initial months of the war.

Growing risks of rodents and sanitary degradation 

Beneath the polemics, lurk the very real problems of Gaza’s stagnating, unresolved political and humanitarian situation and a festering West Bank status quo, plagued by a tightening vise of Israeli economic and military restrictions.

In Gaza, Israeli limits on the import of “dual use” items essential for health care, water and sanitation, as well as for demolition clearance and reconstruction is slowing down progress and adding to health risks, member states and civil society groups pointed out at the debate. 

“We call on Israel to facilitate…the delivery of sufficient humanitarian aid, including goods that classifies as dual use,” said the Netherlands.

One growing time bomb noted repeatedly is the proliferation of rodents due to rotting waste and sewage alongside cramped, improvised shelters. Even short-term fixes like imports of extermination products are often not allowed due to their dual use features.  

“The spread of rodents and insects in emergency shelters and tents is driving a worsening health crisis. We have children living in overcrowded and sewage contaminated conditions who are paying the price,” said Malaysia. 

The 365 square kilometre enclave also faces severe challenges in responding to people with ongoing needs from burns and trauma, in a place that is home to the largest number of child amputees per capita, in the world. WHO’s frequent appeals to Israel to resume referral of sick Gaza citizens to hospitals in East Jerusalem and the West Bank have so far gone unanswered. Referrals were halted at the outset of the 2023 war.  

Conundrum of the occupied Syrian Golan

Waleed Gadban, counselor in Israel’s Geneva’s UN Mission; Druze members of his extended family in the Golan enjoy good access to health services.

Alongside the Palestinian debate, some member states also pressed WHO to redouble its efforts to report on the “health conditions in the occupied Syrian Golan,” a mountainous region that Israel seized from Syria during the 1967 Six-Day War, and unilaterally annexed in 1981 with its international political status remains unresolved. 

According to the WHO report: “Comprehensive disaggregated health data on the Syrian populations in the occupied Syrian Golan remain limited, hindering a full assessment of the availability and coverage of health services. WHO continues to coordinate with relevant authorities and explore possibilities for a field mission by a multidisciplinary team of experts.”

The Golan’s population has been “rendered invisible by Israel’s continued unlawful and illegal occupation,” charged Pakistan.

But the WHO had never requested such a mission, Israel retorted, protesting that health conditions in the Golan Heights are “better than most places represented in these halls.”

The Golan’s 30,000-strong Druze minority community has lived under Israeli civil law since 1981 with access to Israeli health funds, social security and citizenship, and the realities of Druze communities are either poorly understood or misused, said Israel’s Waleed Gadban, political counsellor at the Geneva UN Mission. 

“Some of my family are Druze in the Golan and I am now hearing that they are being deprived of their fundamental right to health care and that is simply not the case. No one in the Golan is being deprived of their fundamental right to health – quite the contrary,” said Gadban, addressing the assembly in Arabic. 

“And if the idea here is to ensure that the Druze be protected, then why isn’t there more concern about the protection of the Druze in Sweida, Syria, where they were massacred only last year in July?” he asked, referring to the attacks of Druze communities by Syrian government-aligned forces that devastated tens of thousands of Druze homes, businesses and places of worship, and led to some 1,700 deaths. 

Two-track reporting on OPT to continue for another year 

Ever since 1967, WHO has issued an annual report on conditions in the occupied Palestinian territory, including East Jerusalem and the occupied Syrian Golan.

Map delineates the 2025 cease fire “Yellow Line”, with red dots showing positions of Israeli military outposts.

In the aftermath of the war in Gaza and consequent humanitarian emergency, a second WHO report specifically focused on Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem was commissioned and approved by WHA member states in 2024, and has since become a standing item on the annual agenda. 

Member states agreed to continue the two-track reporting system for another year in a companion resolution, heeding calls by Palestine and its allies regarding the “essential” nature of the two reports, and rejecting Israel’s appeals to consolidate the work. 

“Israel does not claim that it is above scrutiny,” said Israel’s representative ahead of the vote, adding  “In a time when efficiency should be prioritised, these agenda items drain precious resources while doing nothing for the improvement of health.”

Image Credits: m.saed.gaza/Haaretz, Palestinian Water Authority , X/UNHCR, X/via Israel Ha Yom, WHO, cc/Al Jazeera .

Delegates and the secretariat huddle to negotiate the complex legal text of resolutions on Argentina's withdrawal notification.
Delegates and the secretariat huddle to negotiate the complex legal text of resolutions on Argentina’s withdrawal notification.

After a full day of intense diplomatic debate, the World Health Assembly adopted a last-minute compromise text on Friday declining formal recognition of Argentina’s withdrawal notification, and leaving the nation’s legal status unresolved.

Draft resolution on Argentina’s WHO withdrawal compromise.
Final amendments to the draft resolution on Argentina’s WHO withdrawal notification.

GENEVA – Delegates at the Seventy-Ninth World Health Assembly in Geneva reached a compromise regarding Argentina’s withdrawal from the global health body. The finalised text, seen by Health Policy Watch, takes note of Argentina’s departure notification but officially resolves that “it is not considered that any further action at this stage is desirable”.

This passive manoeuvre effectively ignores the exit declaration, preventing a historic legal precedent for the international organisation. Had the assembly formally accepted the departure, it would have been the first time the organisation officially recognised a member state as leaving – despite the absence of a pre-existing constitutional caveat.

Diplomatic horse-trading behind the scenes

The Paraguayan delegation details their initial proposal regarding Argentina’s withdrawal at the World Health Assembly.
The Paraguayan delegation details their initial proposal regarding Argentina’s withdrawal at the World Health Assembly.

Ahead of the compromise vote, Norway and Paraguay agreed to a compromise amendment to endorse a unified resolution. Paraguay had initially proposed that the assembly formally recognise the exit, while an opposing bloc insisted that the body remain ambiguous.

The Norwegian delegation leads intense, last-minute negotiations on the assembly floor.
The Norwegian delegation leads intense, last-minute negotiations on the assembly floor.

The final compromise now contains both a direct reference to Argentina’s withdrawal notification – a reference that the Norwegian-led bloc had originally deleted in its draft – but it also states firmly the WHA decision to refrain from formally recognising the member state’s departure.

While the final resolution passed by consensus and was accompanied by applause in the UN Assembly Hall, a diplomat involved in the negotiations expressed deep frustration at the process. Speaking to Health Policy Watch, the diplomat criticised the introduction of last-minute amendments that caught negotiating delegations by surprise, eventually delaying the process by hours.

Navigating Argentina’s withdrawal legality

In contrast to the situation with Buenos Aires, the United States explicitly reserved the right to exit WHO when it joined the organisation in 1948. However, this week, the Assembly moved to suspend American voting rights by 2027 due to unpaid contributions, enforcing the strict financial conditions attached to that original American accession.

The American withdrawal required a one-year notice alongside the full payment of outstanding financial obligations. Because Washington failed to settle outstanding fees for 2024 and 2025, the WHO refused to recognise the US departure as legally binding.

Stars and Stripes No Longer Flying at WHO – But US Can’t Really Leave Until Dues are Paid, Agency Says

The WHO constitution lacks a formal mechanism for member states to withdraw, leaving diplomats without a clear protocol. Consequently, the organisation treats attempted departures with intentional ambiguity, classifying quitting states as inactive members who can return seamlessly.

WHA leaves backdoor open for Argentina

The secretariat presides as experts note the UN will likely list Argentina and the US as members.
The secretariat presides, as experts note the UN will likely continue listing Argentina and the US as members.

This non-decision leaves Argentina’s obligations and privileges suspended in a bureaucratic grey area. The member states were clear to state in the final text that the organisation will always welcome the South American nation’s full cooperation, leaving a backdoor for future administrations to rejoin the organisation.

“The UN, in the absence of an express decision by the WHA to recognise Argentina’s withdrawal, will probably continue to list both Argentina and the US as members,” explained Former WHO Legal Counsel, Gian Luca Burci, in a statement to Health Policy Watch.

The current decision on Argentina mirrors how the organisation handled seven Soviet-bloc nations that attempted to leave in 1949 and 1950. Those nations eventually resumed active participation years later, without navigating a formal re-accession process.

Image Credits: Thiru Balasubramaniam, Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW.

The Netherlands, speaking for Belgium and Luxembourg, requested WHO guidance on how to address the negative impact of social media on mental health.

Liver disease, social media harms and health taxes dominated the World Health Assembly’s (WHA) discussion on non-communicable diseases (NCDs) on Thursday.

For the first time, countries resolved to include steatotic liver disease (SLD), which is closely linked to obesity and diabetes, into NCD plans. 

Formerly known as fatty liver disease, SLD  affects an estimated 1.7 billion people and is one of the fastest-growing causes of chronic liver disease globally. Without effective prevention and care, SLD can progress to liver fibrosis, cirrhosis, and liver cancer.

WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that the resolution “highlights the growing recognition of the need to address metabolic conditions in a more integrated way.”

“Metabolic conditions are becoming an increasingly important challenge globally. The rising prevalence of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular and steatotic liver diseases, are driven by shared risk factors and determinants,” Tedros told an event convened by the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) in Geneva this week.

The resolution was sponsored by Egypt, and its Health Minister Khaled Abdel Ghaffar described it as “a missing piece in the global NCD response” at the EASL event.

Meanwhile, EASL said: “For the first time in history, WHO Member States have an explicit, formal international mandate to include liver disease in their national NCD strategies and health system planning – placing it alongside long-established priorities such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes.”

An estimated 780 Europeans die each day of liver disease, costing the region €55 billion a year.

During the same session, member states also endorsed a resolution committing to action on haemophilia, von Willebrand Disease, and other rare clotting factor deficiencies. 

Mental health and social media

Dr Dévora Kestel, WHO head of NCDs and mental health.

Netherlands, speaking for Belgium and Luxembourg, highlighted the impact of “digital technologies, including social media” on mental health.

“They can severely affect mental health by encouraging cyberbullying, unhealthy lifestyles, gambling, and screen addiction,” said the Netherlands, and called on the WHO to “advance research and provide effective guidance that can help countries to ensure that digital environments support rather than undermine health and well-being”.

“We would welcome clear recommendations on minimum age rules, robust age assurance, and age-appropriate design for social media use.”

Estonia, for the Nordic countries and Lithuania, also cited “harmful use of social media” as one of the driving factors of “the growing trend of mental health problems among youth and older people”.

Noting member states’ appeal for guidance, WHO head of NCDs and mental mealth, Dr Dévora Kestel, responded that the global body “is closely monitoring the evolving evidence on [social media] bans and promoting online safety through technology design, digital health literacy and strengthened oversight of digital platforms”.

The WHA was discussing the implementation of the political declaration of the United Nations High-Level Meeting on NCDs and mental health, adopted last year by all WHO member states (only the United States and Argentina opposed it).

Suicide prevention

Maldives, speaks on behalf of the WHO South East Asia region, said that the region “continues to confront the escalating mental health burden driven by social, economic, and environmental and humanitarian determinants, including the long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, climate-related emergencies, inequalities, economic insecurities, and rising psychosocial distress among young and vulnerable populations”. 

It also “recognises suicide prevention as an urgent public health priority and encourages strengthened multi-sectorial strategies, responsible media reporting, and expanded access to timely mental health and psychosocial support services, particularly for children, adolescents, and vulnerable populations.

South East Asia accounts for nearly 40% of global suicides with an estimated suicide incidence rate of 17.7 per 100,000 people – roughly 60% higher than the global average.

Health taxes

Estonia, for the Nordic countries and Lithuania, called for stronger action to address the “environmental and commercial drivers” of NCDs.

“Effective measures include health taxes and limiting the marketing of harmful products and vulnerable groups,” noted Estonia.

It also called for “promoting healthier diets and physical activity, and reducing harm caused by tobacco, nicotine products, and alcohol”. 

Ethiopia, speaking for the African region, also proposed sustainable financing for NCD prevention “through health taxes” and domestic budget allocation.