Hans Henri Kluge, the WHO/Europe Regional Director, emphasised that vaccines save lives in the midst of a new flu strain surging early.

Sudden fever, a severe cough and acute respiratory distress are the familiar onset symptoms of seasonal flu, which has affected WHO’s European Region with unusual intensity and speed this year. As the Northern Hemisphere enters winter, health systems are struggling to manage an epidemic driven by an aggressive, genetically mutated influenza strain A(H3N2) subclade K.

But a new report by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), published on Friday, concluded that current seasonal influenza vaccines remain effective against this new strain of the virus. Health experts urge vulnerable groups to get vaccinated.

The current influenza outbreak is dominated almost entirely by the A(H3N2) subclade K, which now accounts for up to 90 per cent of all confirmed cases in the region, according to data from WHO’s European Regional Office (EURO). Subclade K marks a “notable evolution in influenza A(H3N2) viruses,” having undergone genetic drift and displaying several amino acid changes in the hemagglutinin protein (the “key” the virus uses to unlock and enter human cells). Due to these slight changes, antibodies acquired from previous infections or older vaccines may not recognise the virus as effectively.

“Flu comes around every winter, but this year is a little different,” stated Hans Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe, in a press release on Wednesday. Although there is no evidence that it causes more severe disease, Kluge explained that the small genetic variation in the virus places “enormous pressure on our health systems because people don’t have built-up immunity against it.”

Flu season gains early momentum

Map of the Influenza cases in the WHO/Europe region.
A(H3N2) subclade K is fuelling a flu surge across the WHO/Europe region, with protection stalling as most countries fail to meet critical vaccination targets.

With the new strain spreading quickly, the current influenza season began approximately four weeks earlier than in previous years. High or very high activity is now being reported in at least 27 of the 38 countries being monitored by the WHO European Region. These countries range from EU Member States such as Ireland and Slovenia to Kyrgyzstan and Montenegro.

“This is expected to cause a significant burden in terms of morbidity and mortality, as observed in past years, and target groups should be vaccinated rapidly,” said Bruno Ciancio, an ECDC senior expert, in response to a query from Health Policy Watch.

WHO data shows that the strain has been detected in more than 34 countries globally over the last six months. While it is most prevalent in the European and Western Pacific regions, its expansion has also been confirmed in the WHO South-East Asia region. Since October, A(H3N2) subclade K sequences have been reported in Nepal, India and Thailand, as well as in the WHO African and Eastern Mediterranean Regions.

Vaccines remain primary shield against severe illness

Vaccinations remain the key protection against the new strain.
Vaccinations remain effective and a key protection against the new strain, experts emphasize, based on preliminary findings.

With cases expected to continue rising, likely peaking in late December or early January, protecting the most vulnerable is paramount. Public health authorities are emphasising urgently that vaccination is the most important protective measure for vulnerable groups, including adults aged 65 and over, pregnant women, people with chronic conditions and healthcare workers.

Although recent reports suggest that subclade K shows “reduced reactivity” to current vaccines, it remains effective in preventing severe health outcomes, the ECDC concluded. “The current influenza vaccine is not perfectly matched to circulating strains, including H3N2. However, the primary aim of vaccination is to prevent severe disease, and effectiveness against severe outcomes is expected to be preserved,” explained ECDC expert Ciancio.

According to the preliminary data published by the ECDC for this flu season, vaccine effectiveness in preventing influenza cases that require medical attention at the primary care level ranges from 52% in children (ages 0–17) and 57% in adults (ages 18–64). For the critical group of individuals aged 65 and older, it was not possible to estimate vaccine effectiveness separately, due to the low number of influenza cases so far considered in the study. ECDC experts emphasized, moreover, that the findings rely on small sample sizes from nine participating countries and have low statistical precision (e.g. wide confidence intervals). Efficacy could fluctuate as the season progresses.

According to a ECDC analysis released only this week, vaccines significantly cut hospital admission rates in the last 2024-25 flu season. The modeling study found that seasonal vaccines were 70-75% effective at preventing hospital admissions among children aged 2-17 years and 30-40% effective in adults. Using computer simulations, the analysis estimated that vaccination programmes prevented 26-41% of flu-related hospitalisations among adults aged 65 and over across European Union (EU) countries between August 2024 and June 2025.

Low vaccination rates remain public health concern

To protect the vulnerable and to reduce transmission, a multilayered approach following the WHO playbook is essential.

Within the EU, only Denmark, Portugal, and Ireland met the 75 percent target for older adults during the reporting period. The ECDC projects that a 75% vaccination rate can prevent up to three-quarters of flu-related hospitalisations, significantly reducing the strain on public health systems.

Influenza vaccination rates for high-risk groups in other EU countries remained below WHO targets in the past seasons, as ECDC data from the most recent available season (2021-2022) shows. The overall median influenza vaccine coverage for adults aged 65 years and older was only 43 percent.

The scale of the challenge is huge. Recent interim data from Germany’s Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for the 2024-25 season found that flu vaccination coverage among German adults aged 60+ declined from 39.7-34.5% since 2020-21, the first year of the COVID pandemic, reaching its lowest level in over 17 years. And at the same time, a severe flu season can strain hospital staff and capacity in already overburdened health systems.

Combating the flu requires a multi-layered approach, experts underline. Slowing transmission requires proactive public health and social measures alongside vaccination, says WHO. These steps, proven effective during the COVID-19 pandemic, include staying home if unwell, wearing a mask in public if symptomatic, maintaining regular hand hygiene, and improving indoor ventilation.

European health systems have “decades of experience managing influenza,” said Kluge, striking a note of optimism alongside the WHO warning. “We have safe vaccines that are updated annually, and we have a clear playbook of protective measures that work.”

Image Credits: European Union, WHO/Europe , World Health Organization, European Union.

 

Cervical Cancer
Though largely preventable, cervical cancer continues to kill thousands of Indian women each year.

MUMBAI, India – Cervical cancer kills more than 75,000 women in India each year, according to figures recently disclosed in Parliament – yet it is one of the most preventable cancers.

In India, low human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination coverage, limited access to routine screening and deep-rooted social behaviours – such as early marriage and low condom use – drive late diagnosis and high mortality.

Globally, cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women, with an estimated 660,000 new cases and 350,000 reported deaths in 2022, accoridng to WHO.

Public health experts say these factors increase exposure to HPV, the underlying cause of nearly all cervical cancer cases, while allowing the disease to progress silently for years before detection.

For Neha, a 29-year-old hotel worker in the city of 12.5 million, India’s largest, the statistics reflect a deeply personal loss.

My two cousins died from cervical cancer,” she told Health Policy Watch. “What frightens me most is how silent it is. People seem completely normal for years, and then you discover they have had cancer for a long time  only when they are close to dying.

Early marriage and rising HPV exposure

india
A wedding procession in India, where early marriage remains common.

Doctors say nearly all cervical cancer cases are caused by persistent infection with high-risk types of HPV, one of the most common sexually transmitted infections worldwide.

Mumbai physician, Dr Sonali Roy told Health Policy Watch that HPV exposure in India is closely tied to early marriage, low awareness and limited access to vaccination and screening, particularly in rural areas.

“In some villages, girls are married as young as 14 or 15,” Roy said. These marriages often do not last, and women may remarry multiple times. Each marriage increases exposure to HPV, especially when condoms are rarely used and sexual health awareness is very low.

Early marriage often leads to early sexual debut, repeated pregnancies and limited agency over reproductive health decisions, experts say  all of which raise the risk of persistent HPV infection. The biological vulnerability of the cervix during adolescence further increases susceptibility to the virus.

Unlike many high-income countries, India has yet to roll out a nationwide HPV vaccination programme, despite repeated recommendations from public health experts and the World Health Organization (WHO). While some states have launched pilot projects, coverage remains patchy and largely urban, leaving millions of girls unprotected before sexual debut.

Routine cervical cancer screening also remains uneven across Indian states, with weak outreach in rural areas and among informal urban settlements, where health services are often overstretched.

Evidence from research

HPW vaccine introduction; India and South-East Asia lag behind most other regions of the world in routine HPV vaccination.

Research supports the link between early sexual debut, multiple partners and higher HPV infection risk. A 2019 study reviewing medical records of 349 women who tested positive for high-risk HPV found that women who began sexual activity at a younger age or had multiple sexual partners faced a significantly higher risk of infection with HPV types 16 and 18, the two strains responsible for the majority of cervical cancer cases globally.

The study found that about one in five women was infected with HPV 16, while nearly 9% were infected with HPV 18 – the types of HPV most likely to cause cervical cancer. Women who reported their first sexual intercourse at age 19 or younger were significantly more likely to be infected with HPV 16 than those who became sexually active later.

The risk rose sharply with multiple partners. Women who reported more than three lifetime sexual partners were four times more likely to be infected with HPV 18 than women who had fewer partners.

Public health researchers caution that these findings reflect structural conditions rather than individual behaviour. “In many cases, women do not have the power to negotiate when to marry, when to have sex or whether protection is used,  ” said a health researcher.

Men refuse to use protection

Condoms
With fewer than one in 10 Indian men using condoms, women bear the health consequences of preventable HPV infections.

Even when women understand the risks, many say they have little control over prevention. A 27-year-old woman from the East Mumbai suburb of Kurla, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Health Policy Watch that her partner refuses to use condoms.“He says it affects his pride,” said Priya (not her real name). This is common, even in cities like Mumbai, India’s modern financial center.

She said stigma is far stronger in rural areas, where access to contraception is limited and social scrutiny is intense. Many women end up with these infections simply because men refuse to use protection.

Her account echoes broader national trends. A 2021 report found that fewer than one in 10  men in India use condoms, making male sterilisation and barrier contraception among the least-used family planning methods in the country.

Female sterilisation remains the dominant form of contraception, often placing the burden of reproductive health entirely on women. By comparison, a 2025 Zipdo educational report estimated that around 45% of sexually active people worldwide used a condom during their last sexual encounter.

Priya recalled a close friend who had part of her cervix surgically removed after an early cancer diagnosis. Doctors later told her that consistent condom use would likely have prevented the HPV infection that led to the disease.

Screening gaps

Cancer
Nearly 90% of cervical cancer deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries, where routine screening programmes remain limited.

Nearly 90% of cervical cancer deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries, where routine screening programmes remain limited. In India, the absence of a structured nationwide screening system has meant that many women are diagnosed only at advanced stages of the disease when treatment is more expensive and survival rates drop sharply.

Under India’s National Programme for Prevention and Control of Non-Communicable Diseases and Ayushman Bharat, its health insurance for vulnerable families, women aged 30 to 65 are supposed to be screened for cervical cancer at primary health centres using visual inspection with acetic acid, a low-cost test known as VIA.

Coverage, however, remains extremely low. Only about 2% of eligible women are currently being screened, with wide variations across states based on education levels and rural–urban divides.

Health workers cite multiple barriers, including staff shortages, limited training, lack of privacy at health centres and social stigma around gynaecological examinations. For many women, domestic responsibilities and daily wage work also make preventive care a low priority.

Cancer means financial ruin

Health
Doctors perform a surgical procedure on a woman patient.

For some women, barriers go beyond awareness and access. A woman living on the rural outskirts of Mumbai, nearly 87 kilometres from the city centre, told Health Policy Watch that fear of financial ruin often outweighs concern about infection itself.

“May God save us from expensive diseases. Unfortunately, cancer is one,” said Afshana, not her real name. “Even though we have a five lakh cover [around $5,500 annually] under Ayushman Bharat [insurance plan], we often end up going to private hospitals because services are lacking.”

Her experience reflects broader systemic gaps. A 2024 NITI Aayog review of Health and Wellness Centres linked to Ayushman Bharat, India’s flagship government insurance scheme, found significant shortfalls in cancer screening delivery.

While most centres had initiated screening for noncommunicable diseases, fewer than 10% had completed a full annual round. Cervical cancer screening was “yet to be operationalised,” according to the report, while oral cancer screening was carried out only selectively.

The review also found that many auxiliary nurse-midwives, staff nurses and medical officers had not received adequate training to conduct screenings or manage referrals. Although most centres met basic infrastructure standards and provided essential medicines free of charge, service delivery continued to lag behind national goals for early detection and prevention.

A preventable tragedy

Cervical cancer is widely regarded as one of the most preventable forms of cancer. HPV vaccination, regular screening and timely treatment of precancerous lesions have dramatically reduced incidence and mortality in countries that have invested in these measures.

Public health experts warn that without urgent action, India risks continuing to lose tens of thousands of women each year to a disease that can largely be stopped.

“Cervical cancer is not just a medical issue,” Roy said. “It is a reflection of gender inequality, weak health systems and the failure to prioritise women’s health.”For women like Neha, the cost of that failure is already painfully clear. 

“If they had found it earlier, my cousins might still be alive,” she said. “No one should die from something that can be prevented.”

Image Credits: Saiyan Mondal/Pexels, Gurpreet Singh/ Unsplash, Han J et al, eClinicalMedicine, Vol. 84June 2025, Deon Black/ Unsplash, Bermix Studio/Unsplash, Richard Catabay/Unsplash.

Image Credits: Fatsani Gunya/ The New Humanitarian.

WHO Director General’s former Senior Leadership Team – which he slashed from 11 to six positions as part of a major reshuffle in May 2025.

Two more senior WHO officials, Bruce Aylward and Ailan Li, who were among those dropped from WHO’s Senior Leadership Team during the first phase of an Agency shake-up, have now been appointed to leading roles elsewhere in the organisation, according to a memo from Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.   

Li, a Chinese national and former assistant director-general for UHC/Healthier Populations at WHO Headquarters in Geneva, has been appointed as WHO Representative to the Kingdom of Thailand, Tedros announced, in a message seen by Health Policy Watch.  

Aylward, formerly assistant director-general for the Division of Universal Health Coverage/Life Course, was appointed director of the WHO-World Bank Global Preparedness Monitoring Board in August, and will now also be coordinating the work on the UN80 Initiative, Tedros confirmed in the message, emailed to all staff on Friday. 

The new appointments complete the sweep of WHO’s 17 former senior management officials, now reduced to 12 as part of major cost-cutting moves triggered by the withdrawal of the United States from the organisation in January. The US retreat left a gaping $1.7 billion budget gap for the upcoming 2026-27 budget period. That has now been reduced to $1.05 billion due to a projected 25% reduction in WHO’s workforce next year

Three of six ADGs cut from senior leadership ranks actually left WHO 

Dr Mike Ryan addresses a meeting of WHO pandemic negotiators in one of his last public appearances before retiring.

The new senior leadership team includes four assistant director generals at headquarters, a Chef de Cabinet and Chief Scientist, as well as Tedros himself. The directors of five WHO Regional Offices (not including the head of the Pan American Health Organisation, counted separately) also hold an equivalent ranking, for total of 12 such posts.

Of the six ADGs who were cut from team in May, three have actually left the organisation, including Samira Asma, formerly ADG for Data, Analytics and Delivery, now with the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation; Jérome Salomon, ADG for Universal Health Coverage who left WHO in September; and Health Emergencies Executive Director Mike Ryan, who retired in September.      

The recent appointments mean that three others, including Li, Aylward and former ADG for External Relations Catherine Boehme have now moved into other roles, with Boehme serving as “Officer in Charge” of WHO’s South-East Asia Regional Office (SEARO).  Tedros placed SEARO’s Regional Director, Saima Wazed on leave on 11 July, after the Bangladeshi government filed two cases against her for alleged fraud, forgery and misuse of power, also issuing a warrant for her arrest. No return date has so far been announced.

See related story: 

Controversial WHO Regional Director Placed on Leave

Former HQ Directors also named to lead WHO country offices 

In his message Friday, Tedros also named a number of other former department directors and team heads at headquarters to head country offices in the global organisation, including:  

  • Indrajit Hazarika, formerly Senior Public Health Officer, of Country Strategy and Support at HQ,  as WHO Representative to the Republic of Angola.  
  • Ann Maria Lindstrand, formerly Unit Head, Essential Programme on Immunisation in the Health Emergencies Division, as  WHO Representative to the Republic of Cabo Verde.  
  • Dr Pavel Ursu,  formerly Director of the Department of Delivery for Impact at headquarters in Geneva, as WHO Representative to the Federal Republic of Nigeria. 
  • Dr Michel Yao, formerly the Director of the Department of Strategic Health Operations, will become the WHO Representative to the Republic of Senegal.

In 2021, Yao as well as another senior WHO official, were named in an alleged cover-up of allegations of sexual abuse brought against WHO field staff and consultants responding to an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo. They were later cleared by an UN investigations panel.  

Nedret Emiroglu, a former Director for Country Readiness Strengthening in the Health Emergencies Division, was meanwhile named to head the WHO Secretariat for the Intergovernmental Working Group (IGWG), which is negotiating further provisions of the WHO Pandemic Agreement approved in May – most notably a proposed system for Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS).

Staff Reductions to date 

WHO workforce, headquarters, country offices and regions, in 3rd Quarter 2025, a reduction of over 500 staff in comparison with December 2024.

In a press briefing last week, Tedros publicly acknowledged that the organisation plans to reduce WHO staff worldwide by an estimated 2371 positions by mid-2026, shedding about 25% of the workforce, which numbered 9,466 at the end of December 2024, and just under that as of 1 January.  

Around 1,089 staff are being shed through what WHO described as “natural attrition.” This includes  retirements, early retirement, and the non-renewal of short-term staff contracts that expire. In addition, another 1,282 long and short-term posts have been abolished outright, according to statements at the presser and the earlier briefing to WHO member states.  That should bring WHO’s global staff headcount down to about 7,360 professional and administrative positions by mid-2026. 

In terms of sheer numbers, professional staff at low and mid-level are among those hit hardest by the staff cuts..

Of those cuts, some 505 staff had left WHO by end September, WHO human resource records show; that count was confirmed by a WHO spokesperson.

“A large number of staff are exiting at the end of December, three-months notice while notified in September,” the spokesperson told Health Policy Watch. “And another large number will leave in June 2026, i.e.  the ones with reassignment rights.”

In terms of D1 and D2 directors, whose numbers nearly doubled in the first six years of Tedros’ administration, costing the organisation nearly $100 million annually, some 21 Directors’ positions had been eliminated as of 30 September. That brings the number of directors worldwide down from a peak of 188 at end 2024 to 167 in Q3 2025.  

WHO Directors – 3rd Quarter 2025 – versus December 2024.

That still leaves another 30 D1 and D2 posts to be eliminated by June 2026, mostly at headquarters. The massive reorganisation announced in April and May, slashed the number of departments and directors at headquarters by more than half – from 76 to 34 positions)

The reason those reductions haven’t yet been reflected in the HR records is simple, WHO says.

“Some directors who are sitting on positions that have been abolished have up to 6 months reassignment [rights] plus a 3-month notice period,” a WHO spokesperson said, “hence they still appear in the Q3 report. The target remains for June 30, 2026.” 

How will cuts translate into budget savings?

Despite the painful plans to cut more 2,371 staff worldwide by June 2026, a projected funding gap remains of $1.05 billion, according to the director general’s last report to member states in November.

The $1.7 billion funding gap for 2026-27 has been reduced to $1.05 billion, according to current projections.

And the degree to which cuts in rank-and-file, as well as high level positions, will lead to actual savings remains to be seen. 

WHO’s November reports to member state did not offer any detailed analysis of projected savings that would be gained through the reductions by staff grade or office location. Even less detail provided on the status, conditions and costs of non-staff contract holders – about which there is no reporting even of pay grades or geographic base, let alone gender and age. That’s despite the fact that WHO’s non-staff’s headcount of  7582 (full-time equivalents) in 2024 was approaching that of actual staff numbers (9466) for that year.  WHO officials say that the lack of more detailed reporting on non-staff contracts,  is linked to legal and ethical issues.

“WHO does not systematically capture, aggregate or publish individual-level information (such as grade equivalence, age, gender or demographic background) for non-staff contractual arrangements,” a WHO spokesperson told Health Policy Watch. “Doing so would raise legal, ethical and data-protection concerns, as WHO is not the employer of these individuals and does not have a mandate to collect or process such personal data beyond what is strictly required for contractual and financial compliance.”

This table in WHO’s bi-annual HR report is the sole data available on non-staff contracts. It notes full-time equivalents for part-time engagements (consultants and APWs). Presuming that most Special Service Agreements (SSAs) are full-time, total estimated full time equivalent contracts numbered nearly 7600 in 2024.

At the highest levels of WHO staff, meanwhile, some directors whose departments at headquarters were abolished remained in the organisation as a heads of unit, which typically carries a top-level professional grade of P6.  

In the UN grading system, the salaries of D1 directors and P6 professionals are virtually identical. 

And some former department heads now running units have even clung to their old titles, regardless of the formalities. 

Signature of a former director – (phone number and email have been erased to protect privacy).

In an email invitation to colleagues for a late November reception at the WHO canteen, the former Director of the Department of Public Health and Migration (PHM), who is now technically a unit head, couldn’t resist signing the invite with his old title as well: “Head of Special Initiative on Health and Migration (Director). Division of Universal Health Coverage and Healthier Populations.” 

Observed one WHO staff member: “This kind of thing is all over the place.  As for cost reduction, NADA!”

Image Credits: WHO HR database , WHO , WHO Workforce Data, December 13 2024, WHO .

The UN General Assembly preparing to vote on the declaration on 15 December 2025

The United Nations (UN) General Assembly voted overwhelmingly in favour of a political declaration to combat non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and promote mental health on Monday, with 175 member states voting in favour, only the United States and Argentina voting against, and Paraguay as the only abstention.

The declaration was due to have been adopted by consensus at the UN High-Level Meeting (HLM) on NCDs on 25 September, but the US baulked at the last minute, which meant that the declaration had to be referred to the UN General Assembly for a vote.

Voting on the UN political declaration on NCDs at the General Assembly on 15 December shows that the US and Argentina were isolated.

Welcoming the adoption, the World Health Organization (WHO) said in a statement that this is the  “first such declaration addressing NCDs and mental health together, and marks a unique opportunity to accelerate global progress with a set of specific global targets for 2030”.

For the first time, three global targets have been set for 2030: 150 million fewer tobacco users; 150 million more people with hypertension under control; and 150 million more people with access to mental health care.

The declaration also sets “ambitious, measurable process targets” for national systems to implement by 2030, the WHO added. These include at least 80% of countries with policy, legislative, regulatory and fiscal measures in place; at least 80% of primary health care facilities stocked essential medicines and basic technologies for NCDs and mental health; and at least 60% of countries with measures to cover or limit the cost of essential NCD and mental health services.

‘Preventable risk factors’

NCDs claim 18 million lives prematurely each year, while mental health conditions affect over a billion people globally. 

“NCDs are often driven by preventable risk factors such as unhealthy diets, tobacco use, alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, and air pollution – many of which also negatively impact mental health,” said the WHO.

“NCDs and mental health conditions are increasing in every country, affecting every community. That makes them urgent issues not only for public health, but also for productivity and sustainable economic growth.”

The NCD Alliance described the declaration as “a significant milestone for the global NCD agenda” that “introduces new, action-oriented targets to accelerate progress on prevention, care, and investment”.

However, the alliance also expressed regret that the “procedural objections of a small number of member states have delayed the adoption of the declaration”.

“Implementation must now be swift, sustained and matched with the necessary resources,” said NCDA director of policy and advocacy Alison Cox.

US opposition

Addressing the HLM in September, US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr claimed that the declaration went too far in recommending measures like taxes on unhealthy products.

However, the declaration simply suggests that countries “consider introducing or increasing taxes on tobacco and alcohol to support health objectives, in line with national circumstances”.

Bizarrely, Kennedy also claimed that the US “cannot accept language that pushes destructive gender ideology” or “accept claims of a constitutional or international right to abortion”. 

The declaration does not mention abortion, and simply states that NCDs need to be mainstreamed into “sexual and reproductive health programmes” – a move aimed at the integration of health services, particularly as cervical cancer is a substantial risk factor for women that can be treated easily if diagnosed early.

The declaration’s only reference to gender calls for “mainstreaming a gender perspective”, describing this as “crucial to understanding and addressing health risks and needs of women and men of all ages”. Women are far more likely than men to be obese, while men are more prone to NCDs such as liver and lung cancer.

Access to medicines

A patient has his blood pressure tested. The integration of care is important for patients’ wellbeing.

Dr Maria Guevara, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) international medical secretary, commended the declaration for including “access to affordable health products as a key part of responding to diabetes, mental health conditions, and cervical cancer”.

However, MSF added, “meaningfully addressing the disproportionate effect of NCDs and mental health conditions on people living in low- and middle-income countries requires tangible action to improve access to medical tools” – including those that enable them to manage their conditions on their own.

“Concretely, this means that people managing diabetes must have access to affordable and sustainable supplies of insulin pens and glucose monitoring tools; people managing chronic mental health conditions must have access to affordable and sustainable supplies of long-acting antipsychotic formulations and other pharmaceuticals for anxiety, depression, psychosis and other mental health conditions,” said MSF

“Access to human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination and cervical cancer screening as an essential prevention tool is key, and people living with cervical cancer must have access to quality chemotherapy as well as other treatment modalities”.

Borjana Pervan, the World Heart Federation’s Chief Operating Officer, urged member states to commit to a target of 50% global hypertension control by scaling up access to affordable hypertension medications to 500 million more people globally by 2030.

“This would prevent at least 75 million deaths by 2050 and deliver net economic gains of $212 billion annually. It is also crucial that member states prepare to take greater action regarding the consumption of alcohol, tobacco and sugar-sweetened beverages, especially through fiscal policies,” said Pervan.

Air pollution

The Clean Air Fund (CAF) noted that while the declaration highlights air pollution as a major driver of NCDs and calls for action across highly-polluting sectors, it “fails to endorse the existing WHO target to halve air pollution-related deaths, despite evidence that clean air action is affordable and achievable”.

“The political declaration sets a laudable goal of 150 million fewer people using tobacco by 2030. But it fails to recognise that bad air quality is now a bigger driver of premature death and disease than tobacco, with around 8 million deaths per year attributed to air pollution,” said Nina Renshaw, CAF’s head of health.

The target endorsed by Ministers of Health at the World Health Assembly in May 2025 requires governments to halve the health impacts and deaths related to human-made air pollution by 2040 (relative to 2015), prevent ing 3-4 million deaths per year worldwide.

Image Credits: WHO/A. Loke.

WHO is organizing a traditional medicine summit in New Delhi, India, in partnership with the Indian government.

The World Health Organization’s (WHO) summit on traditional medicine (TM), which starts in  India’s New Delhi on Wednesday (17 December), will push for more funding for research on traditional medicine. 

WHO wants to create a stronger evidence base for TM that will help to integrate it with health systems. Around 40% of today’s pharmaceutical products are based on natural products, and several breakthrough drugs, including aspirin, derive from traditional medicine.

Meanwhile, traditional, complementary and integrative medicine (TCIM) is used in 170 countries, according to a 2019 WHO report.

“Despite its widespread use and demand, less than 1% of global health research funding currently supports traditional medicine, and summit participants will discuss opportunities for stronger investment, stronger implementation and stronger impact,” said Dr Shyama Kuruvilla, Director a.i. of the Global Traditional Medicine Centre in Jamnagar, India.

WHO’s summit is being organized in collaboration with the Indian government, and will be attended by policy makers, scientists, practitioners and indigenous leaders from over 100 countries in attendance. They will discuss ways to integrate safe and evidence-based traditional medicine (TM) into health systems in line with WHO’s Global TM strategy for 2025-2034

Focus on generating evidence

Dr Sylvie Briand, WHO Chief Scientist

In most countries, between 40% and 90% of the population already uses some form of TM, according to the WHO. To bring traditional medicine into the fold of health systems, WHO has continuously reiterated that it will rely on evidence. This evidence currently exists only for some systems. 

Some Chinese medicines, for example, are approved for use in segments of the European markets as well as the US, said Dr Sung Chol Kim, WHO’s TMC Unit Head for Standards, Regulation and Integration. 

“I think this is one of the good examples that some countries are quite advanced in certain area of the traditional medicine. I think the role of the WHO should be that we encourage knowledge exchange among member countries,” he said.

Generating evidence for TM is complicated as it offers a wide range of treatments and approaches, depending on the patient and their circumstances, said Dr Sylvie Briand, WHO Chief Scientist. 

“Many traditional practices are transmitted orally rather than taught in formal schools, leading to personalized approaches that vary by healer,” she added. 

WHO’s TM roadmap for 2025-34 is a response to this challenge, she said. “It (the agenda) will guide investment, prioritize research and ensure ethical principles and human rights are respected.”

Some systems that focus on meditation and movement to improve health like India’s yoga and China’s Tai Chi have also found massive acceptance globally as complementary systems to improve health and quality of life. 

WHO experts reinforced that this is one of the other goals – to not just cure diseases but help people improve their quality of life

Facilitating understanding

Dr Sung Chol Kim, WHO’s TMC Unit Head for Standards, Regulation and Integration.

India and other countries have tried to mainstream TM and its practitioners over the years, but it has not been without its challenges and tensions. 

Some practitioners of modern medicine have been bitterly opposed to the integration, and some have even gone on strike.

“Education is our top priority in order to achieve mutual understanding and mutual respect between the traditional and biomedical practice. So I think that without knowing and understanding other systems of medicine, we actually hardly achieve that mutual respect,” said Kim. 

“[For the] first time, we have a clearly defined divide between the traditional medicine, complementary medicine and integrated medicine. So it means that we are covering all those codified, uncodified systems of traditional medicine,” Kim added. 

But dubious products being sold as traditional medicine is a challenge, WHO experts acknowledged, and said that it is also on the agenda for discussion. 

A way to make healthcare holistic and affordable

WHO is urging countries to work to create a framework to regulate and standardize traditional medicine products.

WHO’s push has also sparked a discussion on TM globally. It first gained momentum earlier this year at WHO’s World Health Assembly, where the strategy on TM was approved, despite reservations from the European Union. 

At the recent World Conference of Science Journalists in South Africa’s Pretoria, a session dedicated to TM saw heated discussion. Luisa Massarani, a Brazilian science journalist, said in her country there are over 300 types of traditional medicine but they might not be codified in a way that modern medicine is. At the same time, not all the 300 types are equally effective and efficient, she said.

The WHO is attempting to begin to bridge the divide between traditional and modern medicine.

During the summit WHO is also set to launch a global library of traditional medicine. The digital library is touted to be the first such repository of 1.6 million scientific records to strengthen evidence and knowledge sharing.

“WHO is not trying to develop or evolve traditional medicine as an alternative, but as an evidence-informed contributor to universal health coverage. Our aim is to bring stronger safety, stronger science and stronger equity for traditional medicine,” said Dr Geetha Krishnan, WHO TMC Unit Head for TM Research, Data and Innovation.

Image Credits: WHO/Kalkidan Tsegaye , WHO.

Gonorrhoea bacteria

A new treatment has been approved for gonorrhoea, a sexually transmitted infection (STI) that is increasingly developing resistance to all current antibiotics. 

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the use of zoliflodacin to treat uncomplicated gonorrhoea on Friday, following the publication in The Lancet of the results of a phase 3 trial of the new drug, which found that one dose of it was as effective as the current standard treatment.

Uncomplicated urogenital gonorrhea refers to a localised infection of the urethra or cervix that has not spread to other areas of the body.

Each year, over 82 million people are infected with Neisseria gonorrhoeae, but this bacterium has developed resistance to almost all antibiotics, with only one last remaining recommended antibiotic treatment, ceftriaxone. 

But there has been a six-fold increase in resistant infections to ceftriaxone in some countries – particularly Cambodia and Viet Nam – and gonorrhoea was in danger of becoming one of the first diseases to become untreatable due to antimicrobial resistance. 

“This is the first new treatment solely for gonorrhoea in decades and the first to be developed using a novel not-for-profit approach to antibiotic research and development (R&D) aimed at tackling the rise and spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR),” according to the Global Antibiotic Research & Development Partnership (GARDP).

GARP sponsored the trial of zoliflodacin, which involved 930 participants in five countries – Belgium, the Netherlands, South Africa, Thailand, and the US. 

“This approval marks a huge turning point in the treatment of multidrug-resistant gonorrhoea, which until now has been outpacing antibiotic development,” said GARP executive director Dr Manica Balasegaram. 

“Zoliflodacin shows that a different public-private partnership approach to antibiotic development is possible — one that prioritizes global health needs, strengthens access where the burden is highest, and protects the effectiveness of new drugs for the long-term.” 

Game-changer

“As clinicians, we see the devastating impact drug-resistant gonorrhoea can have on people’s lives in Thailand,” said Dr Rossaphorn Kittiyaowamarn, principal investigator for the trial site in Thailand. 

“Having a single-dose, oral treatment like this will be a game changer for gonorrhoea control. This is essential to reduce the burden of disease for individuals and to prevent the spread of highly drug-resistant gonorrhoea globally.”  

Sinead Delany-Moretlwe, principal investigator for the trial in South Africa, said that gonorrhoea can have a “devastating impact on women in particular”, which, if untreated, “can lead to infertility, life-threatening ectopic pregnancies and chronic pelvic pain”. 

“Babies born to mothers with untreated gonorrhoea may be born prematurely and can develop serious eye infections that can lead to blindness. With the number of gonorrhoea cases on the rise, there is great value in carrying out trials to bring about effective new treatment options,” she added.

Zoliflodacin belongs to a new class of antibiotics, called spiropyrimidinetriones, which has a unique mechanism of action in the way that it inhibits a crucial bacterial enzyme called type II topoisomerase, which is essential for bacterial function and reproduction. 

It is being developed exclusively for the treatment of gonorrhoea, with the hope that this will minimise the likelihood of excessive use, which could contribute to the development of resistance.  

GARDP has the right to register and sell zoliflodacin in more than three-quarters of the world’s countries, including all low-income countries, most middle-income countries, and several high-income countries. 

Entasis Therapeutics,, the original license holder and an affiliate of Innoviva Specialty Therapeutics, retains the commercial rights for zoliflodacin in the major markets in North America, EU, and Asia-Pacific. 

Innoviva Specialty Therapeutics will continue to collaborate with GARDP to advance regulatory filings with the European Medicines Agency.

GARDP is also taking steps to obtain market authorisation in Thailand and South Africa as both countries played a key role in the phase 3 trial. 

Zoliflodacin was submitted for priority review in Thailand last month, and a submission in South Africa is planned for early 2026.  

GARDP’s work on zoliflodacin was funded by the governments of Germany, UK, Japan, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Luxembourg, the Canton of Geneva, the South African Medical Research Council (SAMRC), and the Leo Model Foundation.

We’ve built a cultural norm around the flu jab – but not around pneumococcal protection.’

In Spain last winter, something remarkable happened: paediatric wards fell silent. “Hospitals were empty, and nobody could believe it,” said Dr Javier Díez-Domingo, director of the Vaccine Research Centre in Valencia.

 After the country introduced monoclonal antibodies against Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) for every infant, RSV-related hospitalisations dropped by 83%. Thousands of healthy babies stayed at home, and thousands of parents remained at work. “The investment was good for the babies,” Díez-Domingo said, “but also for the families and the economy.”

The rising burden of RSV amongst infants, as well as pneumococcal disease in older adults, is an unseen crisis in Europe. Across the continent, implementation needs to catch up with innovation, to achieve the level of success already witnessed in Spain. Just how to do that was the focus of the panel at the World Health Summit on 13 October, organised by MSD.

Moreover, prevention must be addressed not only among infants but as a continuum across all population groups. The question is no longer whether Europe can afford immunisation across the life course. It is whether it can afford not to.

Left to right: Prof Javier Díez-Domingo, Susan Hepworth, Prof Walter Ricciardi, Patrick Swain, Dr Sandra Zimmermann, and Mark Chataway discussing infant RSV and adult pneumococcal prevention at a recent panel at the World Health Summit

Political test of will

Across the continent, infectious-disease specialists, economists and public-health advocates describe the same paradox: vaccines can be victims of their own success. When prevention does work, nothing happens – until a crisis erupts that fills hospitals and adds to costs. 

Professor Walter Ricciardi, chair of the Mission Board for Vaccination in Europe, calls this a fundamental policy blind spot, adding: “Current health-care systems are not fiscally sustainable. Prevention is the only major possibility to grant sustainability.”

Ricciardi argues for a “mission-oriented” model, echoing the Moonshot approach that mobilised all of society toward a single goal. For immunisation, that means uniting ministries of health and finance, researchers, advocates and citizens behind a shared understanding that every dose administered is a down payment on social and economic stability – and prosperity. 

Political leaders, he warns, must look beyond the electoral cycle. “We have to make them see it as an investment with short as well as long-term returns,” he noted. 

That shift is slowly taking shape. The International Longevity Centre UK’s Pneumococcal Vaccination Atlas shows that 89% of European children are covered for pneumococcal disease, yet only 37% of older adults are. 

“We’ve built a cultural norm around the flu jab,” said Patrick Swain of the ILC, “but not around pneumococcal protection.” 

This proves what is possible when prevention is politically prioritised. The challenge now is to extend that same commitment to those at the greatest risk of severe disease, including older adults.

Panellists discussing how the prevention of respiratory infections in infants and adults has long-term positive economic and societal impact.

Financing the future, not the fiscal year

Too often, health policies are guided by short-term fiscal thinking or election cycles. Yet, immunisation programs demand sustained funding and multi-year planning to deliver their full public health impact and generate economic returns. 

Dr Sandra Zimmermann of Germany’s WifOR Institute calls this short-term political prioritisation one of Europe’s costliest mistakes: “When we invest in health, we invest in growth,” she said. 

“With infant RSV prevention, you see immediate returns – fewer hospitalisations in the next season, more parents able to work – and long-term effects as well: healthier adults, higher productivity, lower social-security costs.”

Analysis by the Office of Health Economics (OHE) shows that every Euro spent on adult immunisation can yield up to 19 times in wider economic benefits, and the adult pneumococcal vaccination has a 33 times return on investment (RoI). Yet immunisation budgets remain among the first to be trimmed in austerity drives. 

Ricciardi and colleagues have proposed removing immunisation spending from deficit rules altogether, classifying it as a capital investment, similar to infrastructure. 

“It’s the same logic; turning health from a cost centre into a wealth engine. You borrow to build something that lasts,” he said.

That logic is not theoretical. Germany’s nationwide rollout of RSV monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) last year halved the number of cases in a single winter. Each spared hospital bed represented money not spent on critical-care staffing, oxygen, and parental leave – funds that could be reinvested elsewhere in the health system. The returns are visible within months, not decades.

Zimmermann calls this the “triple dividend” of immunisation: economic growth, social equity and labour-market stability. The most significant gains often accrue to women. “When children are not hospitalised or sick, mothers can stay in paid work,” she explained. “Unpaid care decreases, workforce participation increases. The result is not just fairness, but fiscal efficiency.”

Dr Sandra Zimmermann and Mark Chataway discuss how investments in health make citizens healthier and more productive.

Toll on families

That connection between prevention and prosperity is rarely captured in policy spreadsheets. Susan Hepworth, from the National Coalition for Infant Health, described the personal toll of RSV on families. “Sixty-eight percent of parents said watching their child suffer affected their mental health. A third said it strained their relationship; nearly one in five either quit or lost their jobs,” she said. “Two-thirds faced a financial crisis.”

Multiply those stories by tens of thousands of infections each year, and the human and economic losses become inseparable. The ILC estimates that increasing prevention spending by just 0.1% of GDP could unlock 9% more economic contribution from Europeans over 50 through extended work and volunteering.

“We need a life-course approach,” the Pneumococcal Vaccination Atlas urges, recommending that all national health systems fund pneumococcal protection for every age group.

Innovation without inequality

We are at a juncture where immunisation policies need to keep pace with innovation. New RSV monoclonal antibodies can protect every infant and updated pneumococcal conjugate vaccines cover a broader range of strains. 

The danger lies in uneven funding, inequitable access and adoption. However, competing public-health priorities and limited awareness among policymakers hinder integration of these innovations into national programmes.

Díez-Domingo sees the risk firsthand. “RSV affects both extremes of life,” he said. “We have monoclonal antibodies for children, but we need equal focus on adults with pneumococcal disease. Immunisation must not stop at childhood; it has to become a lifelong system of care.”

Even within Europe’s wealthiest states, equity gaps persist. Only fifteen countries reimburse pneumococcal vaccination for children, at-risk groups and older adults alike. In others, seniors pay out of pocket or rely on fragmented local schemes. 

“When immunisation depends on postcode,” Swain observed, “we create two-tier immunity.”

Communication as currency

If financing is the fuel of immunisation, communication is its ignition. Hepworth admitted that health advocates often lose policymakers by using jargon. 

“When someone comes into an office and starts with scientific words they’ve never heard of, their eyes glaze over,” she said. “What’s missing is the compelling economic data and the human impact.”

The antidote is storytelling grounded in evidence. ILC’s European Pneumococcal Vaccination Atlas turns vaccine coverage data into visual league tables that spur political pride and competition. 

Regions like Galicia have already turned that pride into policy, celebrating their early adoption of RSV antibodies as a marker of civic leadership. “Policymakers love to see their region climb the rankings,” Swain noted.

But Ricciardi warned that effective communication also means confronting organised misinformation. 

“Disinformation about vaccines is disseminated in a structured way and is well-funded,” he said. “Governments must treat information integrity as part of national health security.” 

Hepworth agreed, arguing that public memory of disease has faded. “People have forgotten what vaccine-preventable disease looks like. Storytelling restores that memory.”

Left to right: Prof Javier Díez-Domingo, Susan Hepworth, Prof Walter Ricciardi, Patrick Swain, Dr Sandra Zimmermann, and Mark Chataway discussing how effective communication around immunisation is key to policy shaping.

Prevention, prosperity and political will

The link between prevention and national wealth is no longer speculative. In Germany, the health sector now contributes €490 billion to the country’s GDP and employs 7.7 million people, surpassing the automotive industry. 

Yet, as Zimmermann pointed out, health still struggles to be seen as an economic driver. “We need the positive feedback loop,” she said. “Investments in health make citizens healthier and more productive, which enables them to generate wealth that funds further innovation. That is how prosperity sustains itself.”

Demographics make the case unavoidable. Europe’s over-65 population has tripled since 1960, while its working-age population has remained relatively stable. 

“If we want to keep economies functioning,” Swain said, “we have to keep people healthy longer.” Immunisation, he added, is the simplest and most immediate way to do it.

But sustaining that progress will depend on the political will to budget for tomorrow, ensuring equitable access rather than the next headline. 

Ricciardi advocates for classifying expenditure on immunisation outside the fiscal-deficit cap. Hepworth insists on constant advocacy to keep immunisation visible long after innovations arrive. Each, in their way, is arguing for permanence—for a Europe that budgets for immunity the way it budgets for infrastructure.

Health systems that learn to prevent

Immunisation, once viewed as a cornerstone of child health, has become a barometer of how seriously societies value prevention—and how willing they are to fund it for everyone. Strong pediatric immunisation programs lay the foundation for lifelong systems of care, extending the benefits of prevention to older adults. 

Europe has the knowledge, the technology, and—after years of pandemic fatigue—the public awareness. What it needs now is the political will to treat immunisation as both a right and a responsibility shared across generations. As Chataway concluded to the conference audience: “Empty hospital beds—that’s what success looks like.”

The return on RSV and pneumococcal immunisation is measured not only in lives saved, but in the societies that thrive when prevention is valued, funded, and equally accessible.

Christopher Nial is senior partner and co-lead of EMEA Global Public Health, FINN Partners.

The World Health Summit panel was supported by MSD. 

Image Credits: Unsplash, FINN Partners.

The Indian government monitors the burning of crop stubble by farmers in Punjab using satellites that capture a snapshot of the farms only at 1:30pm daily, but farmers are evading detection by burning at different times, as these satellite images show (above).

The Indian government claims that farm fires in Punjab, which contribute significantly to air pollution, were reduced by 90% during the autumn season of harvest and crop-waste disposal – historically a factor in sending heavy clouds of air pollution drifting around northern India in late October and November.

But in this Earth Chakra podcast, Health Policy Watch senior correspondent Chetan Bhattacharji debunks that claim. Bhattacharji interviewed Dr Hiren Jethva, an scientist specializing in remote sensing of aerosols at Morgan State University and NASA Goddard Space Flight Centre. Jethva exposes how Punjab farmers are, in fact, evading satellite monitoring.

According to Jethva, the true number of stubble burning incidents in Punjab could be 10 to 11 times higher than the official government count of about 5,000 for the harvest and crop-burning season, which ended in late-November. In the podcast, he teases apart the data to explain the reasons why the numbers are so misleading. ⬇️

Significantly, the Indian government’s space agency, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), has, in a recent paper, reached a similar finding to Jethva’s, effectively endorsing what he has been saying for the past two years.

Growing public anger over pollution levels

The government claims of progress have appeared all the more specious as Delhi’s skyline once again become buried in a smoky haze over the past week, with fine particulate pollution levels (PM2.5) 35-40 times above WHO safe limits. On Sunday, 14 December, Delhi’s Air Quality Index, which reflects a combined score of the most dangerous pollutants, hit a season’s high of 461.

The crisis came against a backdrop of social media outrage and building public pressure – including protests that spilt over Monday to a football stadium event hosting the legendary Argentinian player Lionel Messi. The debate over the data comes as the effects of the burning fires on pollution levels appear undeniable. 

On Monday, Messi found himself in the middle of an unprecedented protest against Delhi’s air pollution while on a four-city tour to India. As the city’s Chief Minister, Rekha Gupta walked towards the footballer in the middle of a stadium full of ticket-paying visitors, the slogan “AQI, AQI,” decrying her handling of the air pollution crisis reverberated throughout the crowd. Videos quickly went viral The event was held amidst a thick haze – a palpable sign of the toxic air quality. 

On Tuesday, Delhi’s Environment Minister, Manjinder Singh Sirsa, apologised to the people of Delhi. He also announced fresh curbs on vehicle emissions, including an order that fuel not be sold to the drivers of vehicles lacking a a valid Pollution Under Control (PUC) certificate. That, despite the fact that the PUC testing system is outdated and does not screen for key pollutants like particulate matter (PM) and nitrogen oxides (NOx). 

While in November, the drift of smoke neighbouring agricultural states like Punjab and Haryana, which are burning crop waste, is a major factor in Delhi’s pollution, by December, conditions change. This month, weather conditions, including lower temperatures and low winds, are among the culprits. This traps more pollution at ground level. Simultaneously, there is a big increase in fires for household heating. Vehicular emissions are estimated to contribute some 27-51% of ambient air pollution levels in winter-time. 

Schools in hybrid mode

Along with the fuel sales restrictions, schools have been shifted to a hybrid mode. However, a government clampdown on coal and wood-fired tandoors also triggered protests and digs at the government. 

In another unprecedented move, the Singapore High Commission (embassy) in Delhi tweeted a note asking its citizens to heed the health, work and travel advisory of Indian pollution control officials. The UK and Canada reportedly put out advisories as well.

Gupta, a member of the governing BJP part of Nahrenda Modi, has been under attack for a series of decisions and comments by her administration, which took over the reins of Delhi government in February for the first time in 27 years, following elections. Those decisions range from allowing firecrackers in the recent Diwali festival, a move that ushered in the worst post-Diwali air pollution in five years, to defending videos which showed water being sprayed on and around the government’s air quality monitors.  She also has been quoted recently saying ‘AQI is like temperature.’

While Sirsa was quick to blame Delhi’s previous AAP and Congress governments of the last two and a half decades for the air pollution crisis, those opposition parties have called for the Chief Minister’s resignation

On Tuesday, India’s Environment Minister, Bhupender Yadav, also held a meeting on Delhi’s air pollution crisis. However, the capital’s daily PM2.5 levels have remained over 120 micrograms per cubic metre (μg/m3)  for weeks on end, with some neighbourhoods recording far higher levels. In contrast, the WHO 24-hour air quality guideline for PM2.5 is 15 μg/m3 with a recommendation of no more than 3-4 excedences per year. 

Children from El Fasher refugee families at village school in Tawila, North Darfur. The desert town’s population has swelled to 650,000 due to the war.

The World Food Programme (WFP) is warning of a rapidly deteriorating humanitarian emergency in Sudan on Friday, with conditions in the besieged city of El Fasher in Sudan’s Darfour region described as “beyond horrific.” 

Speaking at a briefing to UN reporters in Geneva, Ross Smith, WFP’s Director of Emergency Preparedness, said “anywhere between 70 and 100,000 people” are believed to be trapped inside the city,  amid “network blackouts” and “mass killings.”

The Rapid Support Forces (RSF, overran the city, the strategic capital of North Darfur, in October 2024 with little or no access by outside groups in recent months. 

Satellite images and survivor accounts, portray “the city as a crime scene with the mass killings, with burned bodies, with abandoned markets,” and WFP has “no partners left on the ground,” Smith added, saying that he had “no verified reports… that any of the community kitchens are operating.”

World Food Programme’s Ross Smith, speaking at a UN press briefing Friday in Geneva.

Attempting to flee is also extremely dangerous. “The city and its surrounding roads are littered with mines [and] unexploded ordnance,” he said. Those who escape face “robbery, looting and gender-based violence,” and must often pay “extraordinary amounts for transport.” Many arrive in surrounding areas “under the open sky without medicine and shelter.”

Smith said WFP continues to call for “unimpeded access into El Fasher,” noting that the agency now has “agreement in principle with the Rapid Support Forces that control the area for a set of minimum conditions to enter the city.” 

But after more than a year and a half under siege, he said, “the essentials for survival have been completely obliterated.” WFP has food and trucks ready to move “once that safe passage is secured.”

A massive displacement crisis in Tawila

Red dotted line denotes the Tawila district near North Darfur’s strategic capital of El Fasher, the latter beseiged by the RSF for over a year.

Sudan is the world’s largest displacement crisis with more than 12 million people uprooted inside and outside the country.

In the Darfur region, one of the worst affected, Smith highlighted the extreme strain on Tawila, once a small desert town which has now swelled into a massive IDP holding more than 650,000 people. Families fleeing famine, atrocities, and recent fighting in El Fasher and Zamzam camp are now living in “very negative structures, grass, straw structures, etc.” He warned that “cholera and disease outbreak is widespread,” and that while WFP can deliver food to Tawila, “there’s very limited health care, sanitation, clean water and other… support.”

Across Sudan, WFP is reaching “over 4 million people per month,” and “half a million people in and around Tawila” were assisted in November. But escalating violence against aid workers—including an incident in which “one of our trucks was hit… and [a] driver is seriously injured”—continues to disrupt operations.

Smith warned that shifting battle lines are putting new communities at “grave risk,” including in nearby Kordofan, where the UN Refugee Agency, UNHCR reported on further deterioration over  the past two weeks. After a week of heavy fighting, the RSF reportedly seized control of a Sudanese Armed Forces base in Babanusa, West Kordofan.

In South Kordofan, “civilians remain trapped in besieged cities such as Kadugli and Dilling, and as women, children, and the elderly find ways to escape, men and youth are often left behind due to specific high risks they face along flight routes such as detention by armed groups for perceived affiliation with parties to the conflict,” UNHCR said.

Preventing the devastation seen in El Fasher from being repeated “must be a top priority for all of us,” said Smith.  

He added that WFP faces imminent funding shortfalls, Smith also said: “Pipeline breaks are right in front of us,” and assistance will require “almost $ 700 million” over the next six months.

Gaza: Winter storm deepens suffering 

As thousands of displaced Gazans’ tents were flooded by Storm Byron, mounds of debris and waste were the only stormwalls.

Meanwhile, in Gaza, humanitarian and health conditions remain dire – with a massive storm Byron leaving thousands of tents flooded, increasing disease risks and leaving families homeless once again. 

Speaking to reporters from Gaza, WHO representative Rick Peeperkorn to the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), described the widespread infrastructure destruction he had witnessed and the growing public-health crisis aggravated by Storm Byron, the massive winter storm that swept through the region this week. 

“The storm environment struck Gaza with force,” Peeperkorn said. “The deplorable conditions, especially shelter conditions, are deepening the suffering of already displaced families. 

He described how high ocean waves had hit particularly hard at the thousands of families sheltering in “low lying and debris-studded coastal areas with no drainage or protective barriers, simply the heaps of garbage everywhere along the roads. 

“And we’ve seen, of course, winter conditions, combined with poor water and sanitation causing a surge in acute respiratory infections, including influenza –  as well as hepatitis, diarrhoeal diseases, etc,” Peeperkorn said.

Hospitals only partly functional 

WHO’s early warning system has recorded 1.47 million acute respiratory infections and over 670,000 acute diarrheal cases since being established in January 2024. But that’s only partial data insofar as diagnosis and testing are severely constrained by a shortage of clinics, laboratories and diagnostic equipment, Peeperkorn added. 

Only about half of Gaza’s 36 hospitals are functioning, along with 46 primary health care centers, while another 84 clinics out of a total of 195 are partly functional. 

Rik Peeperkorn, WHO Representative to the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) speaking with reporters Friday from Gaza.

North Gaza remains the most severely underserved, with tens of thousands of displaced people and almost no functioning medical facilities within the “Yellow Line” that demarcates Israeli-controlled areas from areas controlled by Palestinians – where the militant Hamas group has largely reasserted itself. 

Among the roughly 650 essential medicines on WHO’s list, “50% of them are zero, or close to zero, stock.” Peeperkorn said the Shifa Hospital director “was almost crying,” as major hospitals operate “without CT, without MRI, without proper X-ray, without proper ultrasound equipment.”

Despite immense shortages, he observed creative reconstruction efforts, where clinic and hospital reconstruction teams are managing to rebuild using repurposed materials salvaged from destroyed buildings.

Critical need for medical evacuations

Peeperkorn called on Israel again to reopen the traditional medical evacuation route from Gaza to West Bank and East Jerusalem Palestinian hospitals, saying: There’s no reason why this… cannot be reopened.” WHO is prepared to facilitate daily evacuations once access resumes, he said.  

While WHO and partners have managed to evacuate some 10,645 people since the war began in October 2023 to third countries in Europe, the Middle East or elsewhere, there are still some 18,500 patients awaiting medical evacuation, including 4096 children. And over 1000 patients have died while waiting. 

Call for sustained ceasefire and rehabilitation 

Peeperkorn meanwhile warned that makeshift shelters, widespread debris, and deteriorating sanitation pose long-term threats,  especially for children and the elderly. 

“There’s an enormous amount of garbage and debris everywhere, it’s an environmental health disaster,” he said. 

And while formal reconstruction processes remain on hold, pending further negotiations between Israel and Hamas, mediated by the US and Arab brokers, the situation on the ground is not static, Peeperkorn warned. 

“The 2.2 million people of Gaza cannot wait before we renegotiate again, those materials need to get in now.”

Image Credits: UNICEF/Mohammed Jamal, Google Maps , IOM .