Global Health Needs More than Money 14/05/2026 Anil Soni Climate change, rising food insecurity and overwhelmed health systems have created a perfect storm for child undernutrition in parts of sub-Saharan Africa. Philanthropy can help make every dollar deliver more impact. I often think about a boy I met in Kajiado County, Kenya. He was the same age as my son, but half his weight. A World Health Organization (WHO) colleague measured the circumference of his arm to confirm what was already painfully clear: he was severely malnourished and needed urgent medical care. He and his mother had walked to a clinic not far from fields of dead animals, victims of prolonged drought linked to climate change. It was one point in a chain of dominoes – failed rains, lost livestock, rising food insecurity, overwhelmed health systems – that would determine whether this child would have the chance to realize his full potential. As governments reduce aid budgets and global health institutions confront growing financial pressure, it is imperative that we ground ourselves in how our decisions affect lives such as his. Imperative to turn resources into sustained impact The current crisis in global health is often described as a crisis of insufficient funding. That is true. But it is also something deeper: a growing imperative to turn resources into sustained impact more effectively. In the past twenty-five years, global health financing has driven extraordinary progress against infectious diseases. Investments through organizations such as Gavi and the Global Fund cut child mortality in half and saved nearly 100 million lives. Those investments built systems that benefit everyone, from rapid vaccine development during COVID to catch-up immunization campaigns reaching millions of children. Testing for hypertension. The burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) is growing globally, including in low- and middle-income countries. Over that same period, the global health landscape has changed. Many countries are transitioning from low- to middle-income status and rightly want greater ownership of their own health priorities and systems. The burden of disease is increasingly shifting toward noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) and mental health conditions, whose prevention and treatment depend on strong regional and national health systems. Identifying, scaling and sustaining what works In this new environment, the WHO’s role becomes even more important. WHO’s greatest value is not that it delivers services directly. Its value lies in helping countries identify, scale, and sustain what works: setting evidence-based norms and guidelines, coordinating surveillance and emergency response, convening governments around shared priorities, and supporting countries to adapt global knowledge into effective national action. In the last year alone, the WHO helped additional countries eliminate neglected tropical diseases; prequalified the first malaria treatment for newborns and infants; and negotiated concrete global targets to control NCDs and promote mental health. In a more fragmented world, this work underscores why trusted global institutions are becoming more – not less – important. This is also where philanthropy can play a transformative role. Not because philanthropy can replace governments; it cannot. Public financing will remain the foundation of global health. But philanthropy can help improve how all financing is mobilized and used. Globally, charitable giving represents an enormous source of social investment – roughly $2 trillion annually. (For perspective, that is roughly 100 times larger than government aid for global health.) Yet only a small fraction supports global health, and an even smaller share strengthens the systems required to deliver health interventions at scale. Some of the most compelling examples of WHO’s role are not always the most visible Zambia started to roll out the malaria vaccine in December 2025. This baby is being vaccinated at the Lumezi Urban Clinic. In my experience, mobilizing philanthropic capital requires clear theories of change, measurable outcomes, accountability for results, and the ability to adapt based on evidence. It requires organizations to explain not only what they will do, but why it matters, how progress will be measured, and how local institutions and communities will ultimately sustain impact. Those disciplines improve the effectiveness not only of philanthropic dollars, but of all dollars invested in global health. In its first five years, the WHO Foundation raised $214 million from charitable sources, including support from 84 new donors to the WHO, generating $4.40 in commitments for every dollar invested in fundraising. Our experience reinforces a simple lesson: philanthropy responds not only to need, but to clarity, trusted partnerships, measurable outcomes, and the confidence that institutions can deliver meaningful impact at scale. Some of the most compelling examples are not the most visible. WHO-supported measles surveillance networks, spanning hundreds of laboratories across more than 190 nations, help countries detect outbreaks early and sustain routine immunization. WHO’s Basic Emergency Care program has trained frontline health workers in low-resource settings to reduce mortality from trauma, sepsis, and shock. WHO’s work on mental health is helping countries integrate care into primary health systems, expanding access where services have historically been absent altogether. Philanthropy can help accelerate the impact of global health investments None of these efforts depend on philanthropy alone. But philanthropy can help accelerate them, strengthen accountability around them, drive new evidence, and demonstrate models that governments and national systems can sustain and scale over time. The closing Plenary session of the 78th World Health Assembly at the Palais des Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, on 27 May 2025. As global health leaders gather in Geneva for this year’s World Health Assembly, the conversation cannot simply be about how much money has been lost. It must also be about how effectively we use the money that remains – and how we build institutions capable of turning resources into measurable, equitable, and sustainable impact. I think again of the boy and his mother in Kajiado County. They do not care whether help comes from governments or philanthropies. They care whether systems work. Whether medicines and vaccines are available. Whether a health worker shows up before it is too late. Yes, global health needs more money. But it also needs the discipline, partnerships, and institutions capable of turning resources into lives saved — consistently and at scale. In a period of shrinking aid budgets, that may matter as much as the funding itself. Anil Soni is CEO of the WHO Foundation and a global health leader and innovator with nearly 30 years of experience expanding access to healthcare across the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. Image Credits: Christine Olson/Flickr, WHO Global Report on Hypertension/Natalie Naccache, Temwanani Mtonga/ Gavi, WHO . EU Announces Bold Global Health Resilience Initiative Amidst Geopolitical Ruptures 13/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen Commissioner for International Partnerships Jozef Síkela (right) announces the EU’s new Global Health Resilience Initiative on Wednesday. The European Commission announced its long-awaited Global Health Resilience Initiative on Wednesday. While the policy roadmap aims to support partner countries’ transition toward health sovereignty amid historic aid cuts and shifting geopolitical realities, critics are concerned about its heavy reliance on private funding. As global health gains face a severe threat of reversal from stagnating health system coverage and emerging pathogens, the European Commission’s newly announced strategic guidance seeks to do more than just fill funding gaps. It outlines key priorities and flagship actions designed to fundamentally revamp the multilateral health architecture and support partner countries’ transition toward health sovereignty amid a rapidly changing funding landscape. The proposed strategy, issued in a formal communication to the EU parliament and the member states, reinforces the pivot away from fragmented development assistance. Instead of relying solely on traditional grants, European policymakers intend to use “de-risking” tools and blended finance – combining public funds with loans and guarantees – to foster investments in national health systems of partner countries. Jozef Síkela, European Commissioner for International Partnerships “Europe gains from stronger supply chains,” said European Commissioner for International Partnerships Jozef Síkela at a press conference on Wednesday. “Our partners gain from investments in local infrastructure, skills and jobs based on partnership with EU companies.” Beyond immediate crisis management, the new initiative lays down a strategic, long-term pathway for European funding. It essentially sets the broad strategic strokes that will shape the global health priorities of the European Union’s next long-term Multiannual Financial Framework, which begins in 2028. Recommitment to a leaner multilateral system The EU’s strategy reaffirms the bloc’s commitment to the WHO as centre of a streamlined multilateral architecture. Ahead of the upcoming World Health Assembly in Geneva next week, the Global Health Resilience Initiative is a recommitment to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, to overcome the deep fragmentation of the global health landscape caused by competing funds, the Commission is actively advocating for a leaner, more streamlined institutional architecture – which now includes not only WHO, but UNAIDs, UNICEF and other health-related bodies under the UN umbrella. “We need a more effective and less fragmented global health architecture. There are too many players, too many overlapping mandates,” said EU-Commissioner Síkela. To better coordinate these efforts, the strategic proposal aims to significantly step up alignment between European member states before major international replenishments and key financing milestones. This approach involves creating a comprehensive map of all European global health investments to actively eliminate redundancies and boost donor synergies. This unified diplomatic front will be supported by a novel global health and resilience tracker. Developed in collaboration with the World Bank, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and the WHO, this tool will initially focus on pandemic preparedness, prevention, and response by mapping both the domestic spending of partners and the international support they receive. Over time, this tracking will be progressively expanded to cover broader global health priorities. The tool is explicitly designed to increase the transparency and accountability of global health security financing. Upgrading detection capabilities and implementing a ‘One Health’ approach Wastewater monitoring for poliovirus in Malawi showcases the critical role of environmental surveillance. To complement these financial tracking and governance reforms, the Global Health Resilience Initiative introduces major infrastructural upgrades aimed at crisis response. The Commission wants to support the establishment of an EU Therapeutics Hub and a parallel EU Diagnostics Hub to ensure the rapid deployment of essential medical countermeasures, with a specific focus on equitable access for vulnerable and minority populations. Further details are yet to be published. Additionally, the Commission announced that early detection capabilities will receive a boost through investments in international epidemiological surveillance networks, including advanced wastewater and environmental monitoring that detects pathogens well before clinical alarms trigger. By partnering with regional public health institutes, the EU hopes to close the vast data reporting gaps that currently obscure the true scale of mortality worldwide. By formally embedding the “One Health” principle into the European external agenda and recognising the intrinsic connection between human health, animal health, and resilient natural ecosystems, the strategy shifts focus toward “deep prevention” – the ability to identify and address environmental threats before pathogens cross from animals to humans. Acknowledging that climate change, biodiversity loss, and environmental degradation drive these dangerous zoonotic spillovers, the bloc announced it would be pushing for stronger environmental safeguards within multilateral treaties. This holistic, root-cause approach also extends to combatting antimicrobial resistance through the prudent use of antimicrobials and new clinical research. Fostering private investments and EU interests The initiative’s economic engine balances partner sovereignty with EU competitiveness through controversial blended finance models. Driven by a historic collapse in Official Development Assistance (ODA), European policymakers are moving beyond traditional aid to finance this sweeping agenda of infrastructural upgrades, and environmental and health monitoring. To bridge the current massive financial shortfall, the Global Health Resilience Initiative leverages the EU’s external action tool, the Global Gateway, to mobilise up to €300 billion in investments. By shifting away from direct grants, the strategy relies on blended finance – using loans and guarantees – to de-risk and incentivise private sector involvement in emerging economies. According to Commissioner Síkela, this approach has already successfully channelled over €6 billion specifically into health projects by the end of 2025. The flagship initiative on Manufacturing and Access to Vaccines, Medicines and Health Technologies in Africa (MAV+) is part of this and exemplifies the strategy, having directed roughly €2 billion toward building pharmaceutical manufacturing capacities across the African continent, including investments in South Africa and Senegal. The communication signals the Commission’s intent to formalise this approach within the EU’s executive branch, cementing a policy shift that explicitly aligns international development with European economic security and competitiveness. In practice, this means that while partner countries receive investments to build their resilience, European pharmaceutical and biotech firms are now strategically positioned to access these expanding, rules-based markets as a complementary alternative to relying solely on exports. “Global health is not immune to the fierce competition, coercive power politics, and information manipulation that influence international relations,” warned Kaja Kallas, High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. “While some pull back from multilateral organisations that protect global health, the EU is stepping up with more support.” Critics concerned about risks of market-based health financing While the initiative rightly acknowledges the way in which institutional fragmentation can exacerbate, rather than address, global health threats, civil society critics were quick to note that the EU’s new initiative largely ignores the political drivers of health inequality. Critics warn that increasing the role of private corporations in the health systems of low-income countries could also fuel higher health care costs and inequalities – and undermine the goal of ‘health sovereignty’. Karolin Seitz, global health financing expert at Global Policy Forum Europe. “The strong focus on expertise, investments and supply chains points more towards a model in which dependencies are reorganised rather than fundamentally overcome,” explains Karolin Seitz, Program Director of the global health and human rights programme at Global Policy Forum Europe, in a statement to Health Policy Watch. She notes that while promoting “health sovereignty” is commendable, it remains unclear how much real fiscal and political policy space low- and middle-income countries will actually gain. Seitz cautions that the Commission’s reliance on market-based mechanisms, such as blended finance through the Global Gateway, frequently socialises financial risks while securing guaranteed returns for private investors using public money. Rather than offering innovative solutions, these models can impose significant long-term costs on the public budgets of vulnerable nations, she warns. Furthermore, the EU’s strategy frames global health primarily as an issue of efficient governance and capital mobilisation, neglecting root causes like debt crises, unequal patent rules, and local tax evasion. Genuine health sovereignty, Seitz argues, requires structural reforms and sufficient public fiscal space – issues the EU’s approach currently leaves largely unaddressed. Record ODA Cuts: Top Donors Slash Aid as Global Health Risks Grow Image Credits: EU/Bogdan Hoyaux, Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO , Global Policy Forum Europe.. WHA79 Must Make Universal Health Coverage the Compass for Global Health Architecture Reform 13/05/2026 Alhadi Khogali, Renee de Jong, Marionka Pohl, Rispah Walumbe & Arush Lal The World Health Assembly in Geneva. At this year’s 79th session, member states will review a proposed process for reforming the UN global health architecture. Leaders of the international NGOs, Save the Children, Seed Global Health, AMREF, and LSE Health make five asks to member states attending next week’s 79th World Health Assembly, as they take the first steps to launch a joint UN process for reforming the global health architecture. As governments prepare for the 79th World Health Assembly (WHA79), the stakes could not be higher. On the table is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reform the global health architecture (GHA) – triggered by the unprecedented cuts in foreign aid. But in the rush to redesign institutions and redirect funding flows, we risk losing the principle that should anchor every reform effort: universal health coverage (UHC), or the right of every person, everywhere, to access quality healthcare without financial hardship. At the 158th WHO Executive Board, Member States requested the WHO to convene a joint process on global health architecture reform. The World Health Assembly remains uniquely positioned to convene Member States, civil society, donors, and multilaterals around a more coherent reform agenda. The funding crisis is exposing deeper structural failures The year 2025 saw the largest annual decline in total official development assistance (ODA) on record, with a 23.1% reduction compared to 2024, bringing global aid back to levels seen in 2015, at the outset of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Preliminary data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) indicate that 2025 saw the largest annual decline in total official development assistance (ODA) on record, with a 23.1% reduction compared to 2024, bringing global aid back to levels seen in 2015 at the start of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. A further 5.8% decrease is anticipated for 2026. These cuts risk leading to an additional 22.6 million deaths by 2030, including 5.4 million children under the age of five. This downturn exposes structural weaknesses in systems that have long depended on external financing. For women, children, and adolescents, the health systems consequences are profound and immediate: disrupted maternal and newborn care, collapsing immunization and nutritional programmes, and reduced access to sexual and reproductive health services. In humanitarian settings, conflict-affected and displaced populations may soon have no safety net at all. Although it is said that “crises create opportunities,” the funding shock has exposed a long-recognized reality within global health: an architecture dependent on a small group of donors is inherently unstable and unable to deliver UHC. Preventing future crises will require new foundations: domestic financing models insulated from geopolitical shifts, institutional mandates that endure beyond individual funders, external partners aligning behind national priorities, and a global health architecture in which UHC is structurally embedded rather than dependent on external support. Central to this is a well-trained and adequately financed health workforce, without which neither health systems nor universal health coverage (UHC) can be achieved. UHC must guide global health reform Delivering Universal Healthcare requires countries to invest more in primary healthcare. The 79th World Health Assembly will discuss several major issues separately: UHC (item 12.4) and primary health care (PHC) (item 12.5), implementation of the Pandemic Accord (item 13.3), the strategy on Economics of Health for All (item 15.5), and global health architecture (GHA) reform (item 20.1). While this reflects standard WHA procedures, the risk is that these discussions proceed in parallel rather than as part of a coherent reform agenda. The appointment of Thailand and Andorra as co-facilitators for negotiations on the 2027 UN High-Level Meeting on UHC is politically significant. The 2027 UHC High Level Meeting (HLM) cannot become a separate process alongside GHA reform discussions. It should serve as one of the accountability mechanisms for reforms currently being debated in Geneva. Five priorities for WHO Member States at WHA79 A Nepali woman with her child in a sling on her back. Global funding crisis has hit women and children especially hard. For WHA79 to make a real impact, Member States must ensure their decisions translate into practical improvements for the people most affected by systemic failure. In the lead-up to the 2027 UN High Level Meeting on UHC, we call for five key changes: Anchor GHA reform in UHC and country ownership Global health reform must align existing initiatives to avoid fragmentation. The WHO-led GHA reform process can help build that cohesion and should align mandates, structures, and incentives behind country-led priorities. Reform efforts need to address power imbalances, align behind country priorities, support global public goods, and strengthen mutual accountability. Country-led governance must be the foundation of any reformed architecture. To ensure commitments translate into action, Member States should establish clear, time-bound implementation milestones and accountability mechanisms, including civil society and affected communities. The 2027 UHC HLM should explicitly track and build on GHA reform commitments made in Geneva. Invest in PHC and sustainable financing Governments should increase domestic public spending on health – including an additional 1% of GDP for primary health care – while strengthening public financial management and institutionalizing health financing coordination through country-led platforms. However, many low-income countries face severe debt distress, limiting their ability to expand fiscal space for health without broader reforms to debt architecture and progressive domestic taxation. Meeting UHC targets will require progressive financial reforms and renewed attention to the Economics of Health for All agenda. Financing must be directed toward essential services, health workers, and financial protection for vulnerable populations. Strengthen the health workforce for UHC Health workers underpin resilient health systems, pandemic preparedness, and climate adaptation. Member States should expand fiscal space for the health workforce through sustained domestic financing, while aligning donor investments behind national workforce strategies and employment plans. This includes equitable recruitment, training, fair remuneration, and protection of frontline workers, including community health workers, particularly in underserved settings. GHA reform and global financing mechanisms must support sustainable, country-led health systems rather than fragmented, short-term parallel programming. Institutionalize social participation and accountability Civil society engagement is critical to shaping policies that reflect the needs of affected populations. WHA77’s resolution on social participation should now be operationalized by embedding participation and transparency as core accountability mechanisms. WHO should establish regional and national consultative bodies bringing together Ministries of Health and Finance, donors, civil society, and affected communities to enable continuous dialogue and oversight. This should be supported by transparent reporting of health financing data, building on national health accounts and the Global Health Expenditure Database with open access to disaggregated data. Safeguard UHC in crisis and conflict settings GHA reform discussions cannot turn a blind eye to the humanitarian needs caused by conflicts and crises worldwide. Member States should mandate that GHA reform financing instruments – including the Pandemic Fund and IHR/Pandemic Agreement’s Coordinated Financing Mechanism – include ring-fenced allocations for essential health services in crisis-affected settings. In an era of rising polycrisis, protecting and advancing UHC reforms is not just morally necessary, but can also create momentum for health system reform. WHA79 is a pivotal juncture. It will be remembered either as the moment governments anchored health reforms in equity and the needs of the people they serve, or as another missed opportunity clouded by consensus language and procedural paralysis. Alhadi Khogali, is Senior Global Health Policy Advisor, Save the Children. Renee de Jong is Senior Advocacy Advisor, Save the Children. Marionka Pohl is Senior Director of Policy, Seed Global Health. Rispah Walumbe is Health of Strategy & Policy, Amref Health Africa. Arush Lal, is a Visiting Fellow at LSE Health, London School of Economics and Political Science. Image Credits: WHO, OECD, WHO, Lisa Marie Theck/Unsplash. Experts Call for Review of Global Outbreak Response as Passengers Leave Ship Hit By Hantavirus 12/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Passengers being evacuated from MV Hondius, the ship affected by a hantavirus outbreak, in Tenerife on Monday. All passengers were evacuated from the cruise ship, Hondius, by Monday night – and a Spaniard taken to a military hospital in Madrid to quarantine has become the 11th person from the ship to test positive for hantavirus. The evacuation was completed 10 days after the World Health Organization (WHO) was notified about the outbreak – and experts have called for a review of the global response to identify and fix “gaps and vulnerabilities in the system”. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), and Spanish President Pedro Sánchez, described the evacuation as a success and a show of international solidarity. Hondius captain Jan Dobrogowski, described the past few weeks as “extremely challenging”, as he and 24 crew, accompanied by a doctor and nurse, sailed on to Rotterdam. In a social media message on Monday, Dobrogowski thanked all passengers and staff for their “patience, discipline and the kindness they showed to each other” during the outbreak, particularly commending crew members for their “courage and selflessness”. The Hondius evacuation had not taken place in Cabo Verde as the island lacked the capacity to handle the operation, Tedros clarified at a media briefing on Tuesday. After docking in Cabo Verde for a couple of days, the ship sailed on to Tenerife in the Canary Islands, which is an autonomous community of Spain. Under the International Health Regulations (IHR), of which Spain is a party, “countries are required not to allow people to be stranded at sea when they have the capacity to manage the risk safely and responsibly”, said Tedros. ‘Inhumane and unnecessary’ Spanish President Pedro Sánchez addresses the media on the evacuation of passengers from the cruise ship hit by hantavirus. “There were some people around the world calling for the passengers to be contained on the ship for the full quarantine period. Our view was that would have been inhumane, and unnecessary,” he added. “We were convinced it was possible to disembark these passengers in a way that was safe for them and the people of Tenerife, and that was respectful of the human rights of the passengers and crew.” There were almost 150 people from 23 countries on the ship for weeks, “in what must have been a very frightening situation”, said Tedros, adding that “some of the passengers were facing mental breakdown” and “have the right to be treated with dignity and compassion”. Meanwhile, Sánchez told the media briefing: “This world doesn’t need more selfishness, nor more fear. What it needs is countries that show solidarity and want to move forward. He also appealed for “international cooperation and organisations like the WHO to be provided with the resources to realise their work”. More cases possible Three people travelling on the Hondius have died from hantavirus, the last of whom died on 2 May – the day that the WHO was first notified of the cluster of cases by the UK. South African scientists identified the virus in a British man flown to the country for treatment. “At the moment, there is no sign that we are seeing the start of a larger outbreak,” said Tedros. “But of course, the situation could change. And given the long incubation period of the virus, it’s possible we might see more cases in the coming weeks.” The recommended quarantine period is 42 days, which is how long the virus can take to manifest. Each country is responsible for monitoring the health of its citizens evacuated from the ship. Some, like Australia, will require them to remain in government quarantine facilities. Others, like the US, have stated that they will allow asymptomatic citizens to isolate at home. The WHO recommends that they “should be monitored actively at a specified quarantine facility or at home for 42 days from the last exposure, which is the 10 May, which takes us to the 21 June,” said Tedros. Is the system working? Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Helen Clark, co-chairs of The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, which evaluated the global response to COVID-19, said that the hantavirus outbreak has “tested the international system”, ” demonstrating its strengths and gaps. The pair, who previously described the WHO response to COVID-19 as “analogue” in a digital age, commended the international response to the hantaviris outbreak from 2 May. “The identification and communication of the hantavirus results from South Africa to the United Kingdom, its subsequent reporting to the WHO [on 2 May], and from WHO to countries worldwide demonstrated the importance of rapid application of the International Health Regulations,” they said. However, between the first death on board on 11 April and 2 May, “a series of events resulted in the growth of the hantavirus outbreak”, they noted. “There were risks to passengers onboard, to people interacting with them on remote islands, and following the 24 April disembarkation in St Helena, to those who contacted them on land, in the air, and in their next destinations,” said Sirleaf and Clark. “A review should determine whether a more precautionary approach could have been applied pursuant to the guidelines in the WHO Handbook for Managing Public Health Events on Board Ships. In a social media recording of ship’s captain Dobrogowski notifying passengers of the first death, he assures them that it was due to the man’s underlying conditions and posed no risk to other passengers. “While sadly deaths on ships do occur, as more people embark on adventure travel to remote locations, the need to protect travellers and those in contact with them from potential exposure to pathogens will increase,” they said. Review of outbreak planning The co-chairs appealed to governments to “review outbreak and pandemic planning to address vulnerabilities in the system, including in shipping, marine health and death-related protocols, port management, and protection of populations in remote locations”. They also appealed to leaders to follow “all relevant protocols for contact tracing, infection control, reporting, isolation and supportive care” to break the chain of hantavirus transmission. Despite negotiating a Pandemic Agreement since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO member states have been unable to agree on a Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) annex to set out how information about dangerous pathogens should be shared. A few weeks back, at the conclusion of the last round of PABS negotiations, Tedros called for urgency, “because the next pandemic is a matter of when, not if”. In September, the United Nations will convene a High-Level Meeting (HLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response (PPPR). Member states need to “ensure that the Political Declaration [adopted by the HLM] includes measurable commitments to close the gaps in PPPR, including in One Health, in financing – including for surge financing, equity, monitoring, and accountability”, said Sirleaf and Clark. Image Credits: BBC. Nurses Are Not a Cost to Health Systems. They Are the Power Holding Them Together. 12/05/2026 Howard Catton Fatmata Bamorie Turay (far left) and Elizabeth Tumoe, registered nurses look after newborns at the Princess Christian Maternity Hospital, in Freetown Sierra Leone Recently, I met with African nursing leaders who told me stories of nurses in countries such as Ghana and Nigeria earning the equivalent of only a few hundred US dollars a month – sometimes less than $300 – while being offered opportunities abroad with salaries many times higher. They described a growing crisis, where nurses are now leaving not yearly or monthly, but almost weekly. In some hospitals, managers only discover a nurse has accepted a post overseas when a resignation letter is pushed under the door. One nurse leader told me: “We are training nurses for export.” Migration itself is not the problem. Like anyone else, all nurses have the right to migrate and pursue opportunities. But many have been put in an impossible position, where they are also leaving behind families, colleagues and communities they care deeply about. And the countries they leave behind are losing the experienced nurses they have trained, often with little evidence of any meaningful reinvestment in return. This story is now being repeated across the world at an alarming scale. This is why, ahead of this month’s World Health Assembly (WHA), the International Council of Nurses (ICN) has written to WHO Member States recommending concrete actions to address the escalating international recruitment that is deepening workforce shortages in lower-income countries and threatening global health system sustainability. We are calling for coordinated co-investment by recruiting countries into nurse education, retention, and workforce and leadership development. But this is not just a story about migration and workforce shortages. This situation speaks to the profound global failure to understand the true power of nursing and the enormous cost of not investing in it. No nurses, no care A registered nurse vaccinates a child for polio in Beirut, Lebanon. The world faces a global shortage of 11 million health workers. More than half, 5.8 million, are nurses. That fact alone should be setting off alarm bells everywhere. No nurses means no healthcare. Nurses are the backbone of health systems. But right now, that backbone is showing signs of spinal instability. We are asking nurses to carry more and more: ageing populations, rising chronic disease, pandemics, conflict, climate-related crises, mental health pressures, and widening inequalities. Yet too often we continue to treat nursing as a cost to be contained instead of one of the smartest investments societies can make. That is why this year’s International Nurses Day report from ICN, Our Nurses. Our Future. Empowered Nurses Save Lives is so important. The report moves beyond outdated, one-dimensional images of nursing to show how nurses both save and improve lives at scale. For too long, nursing has too often been portrayed only through the language of compassion and sacrifice. Compassion matters enormously. But nursing is also power: economic power, clinical power, leadership power, workforce power, and social power. Our report sets out seven key nursing powers that are transforming health systems around the world. There is the Power of Trust: year after year nurses remain the most trusted profession globally, a foundation that becomes critical during health emergencies, public health crises, and vaccination campaigns. There is the Power of Practice: advanced nurse practitioners and specialist nurses are delivering high-quality care, reducing waiting times, improving outcomes, and expanding access, particularly in underserved communities. There is the Power of Numbers: nearly 30 million nurses worldwide represent the single largest health workforce on earth. Another of the most important powers is what we call the Power of Proximity. Nurses are where people are. In hospitals, clinics, schools, refugee camps, conflict zones, remote villages, and people’s homes. Nurses are often the first health professional a person sees and the last one they remember. They understand communities because they are part of those communities. That proximity saves lives. And when nurses are empowered to work to their full potential, the evidence is overwhelming. Expanding primary healthcare, where nurses are central, could save 60 million lives by 2030. Closing global health workforce gaps could prevent 189 million years of life lost and add US$1.1 trillion to the global economy. We can’t see these as “soft skills”. These are hard powers delivering hard outcomes. Investing for impact This year’s report builds on ICN’s wider work, including our 2024 report, Our Nurses. Our Future. The economic power of care. This has consistently shown that investing in nursing is not a cost to health systems and economies; it is one of the highest-return investments societies can make. Investing in health brings a $2–4 return per $1, while poor health reduces GDP by 15%. Yet despite all this evidence, many countries continue to underinvest in nursing. Exacerbating inequalities, high-income countries continue to underinvest in educating enough nurses domestically while increasingly relying on international recruitment to fill workforce gaps. This means many lower-income countries are effectively financing the health systems of wealthier nations through the loss of their trained nurses. Countries already facing severe shortages are losing experienced clinicians, educators, and leaders faster than they can replace them. At the same time, destination countries are making substantial savings. Training costs are being avoided. Workforce gaps are being filled quickly. Tax revenues are being generated by internationally educated nurses working in destination countries. But where is the reinvestment? Recent evidence submitted by ICN to a UK All-Party Parliamentary Group inquiry highlighted the enormous financial benefit that recruiting countries derive from this model. By recruiting abroad, data shows that the UK has saved £14 billion in health workforce training costs. Canada has saved an estimated C$1 billion. In effect, lower-income countries are subsidising the workforce costs of richer nations. Some high-income countries are effectively outsourcing responsibility for nurse education internationally while failing to adequately reinvest in the systems they depend upon. That is neither sustainable nor equitable. It risks creating exactly the perceptions many countries are now voicing openly: neo-colonialism, exploitation, and a growing erosion of global solidarity. Nurse Everlyne Esige examines an expectant mother at Vihiga County Referral Hospital in Kisumu, Kenya. WHA as a turning point This is why ICN has urged WHO Member States to use this year’s World Health Assembly as a turning point. In our letter, we call for practical and collective action to strengthen the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel. That includes coordinated co-investment by major recruiting countries into nurse education, employment, retention, leadership development, and workforce planning in source countries. We are proposing practical mechanisms: proportionate reinvestment linked to recruitment, directing a share of education savings and tax revenues into source-country health systems, debt relief linked to workforce investment, and even a global fund to strengthen fragile health workforces. Imagine the impact if high-income countries pooled resources and coordinated action instead of acting individually and reactively. The sums involved would not be insignificant. But neither are the savings currently being made. And the return on investment would be enormous: stronger health systems, greater global health security, reduced inequalities, and a more sustainable global workforce for everyone. Strengthen support for nursing At the same time, we are increasingly concerned that the global focus on nursing and the health workforce risks being diluted precisely when it should be intensifying. Last year, WHO Member States agreed to extend the Strategic Directions for Nursing and Midwifery and to accelerate progress. That word matters: accelerate. Yet we are still hearing concerns about cuts and reduced capacity at exactly the institutions and programmes designed to support the global health workforce. We understand the financial pressures that the WHO and many governments face. These are difficult decisions. But support for the very people who deliver healthcare, the foundations upon which health systems are built, must be the very last place to cut. Because ultimately, this conversation is about far more than staffing numbers. Nursing is also one of the largest majority-women workforces in the world. Investing in nursing means investing in women, in economic participation, in education, in families, and in reducing inequality. This International Nurses’ Day, we should celebrate nurses. But celebration alone is not enough. We must also recognise nurses’ power to change lives, strengthen economies, and transform societies and finally invest in that power for the sake of all our health. Howard Catton is CEO of the International Council of Nurses. Image Credits: World Bank/Flickr, Flickr – World Bank, International Council for Nurses, Brian Otieno /Global Fund, Studioregard.ch. WHO Sets Out Timetable and Ethical Guardrails for Election of New Director-General; but Loopholes Remain 11/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The proposed WHO Director-General election cycle for 2026–2027 lays out the path from the initial call for nominations in April 2026 to the final appointment in May 2027. As the campaign to elect a new World Health Organization Director-General officially opens, a timeline and guidelines for the process have been published by outgoing DG Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus for consideration by member states at next week’s World Health Assembly and the upcoming Executive Board. While these aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. With the call for nominations for the next World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General officially underway, the global health community is bracing for an intense, year-long campaign season. The upcoming 2026/2027 WHO DG election cycle marks a definitive departure from the previous race in 2021, which unfolded amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, featured an incumbent, and relied heavily on remote adaptations. The current contest expects a full return to “normal” physical in-person campaigning at regional committee sessions. However, a “new normal” is also unfolding under complex conditions, as the WHO grapples with a sharply polarized body of member states and a drastically reduced budget following the United States’ withdrawal last year, forcing it to implement massive, ongoing workforce reductions. To maintain fairness in this highly pressured, post-pandemic landscape, WHO has published a draft set of guidelines that would help create a firewall between candidates’ campaign activities and official organisation business – rules that will be particularly important for candidates that emerge from within WHO’s ranks. The Director-General’s recommendations on the election process, to be reviewed by Member States at the upcoming World Health Assembly and Executive Board, aim to reinforce established parameters from the previous election cycle. But enforcement still relies mostly on ‘good faith’ as compared to legally binding measures. WHO staff members who join the race will have to go on leave – but Regional Directors may be exempt Current WHO staff members entering the competition face the election’s strictest internal guardrails, according to the newly published guidelines. To prevent conflicts of interest between campaigning and official business, they will be immediately placed on annual leave. Once their annual leave allowance is exhausted, they would be placed on mandatory special leave with half pay leading up to the January 2027 Executive Board nominations. If they survive this initial selection process and make the final shortlist, their full salary would be restored for the remainder of the race. Yet, past precedent has explicitly exempted WHO Regional Directors from this rule – due to their status as WHO officials elected by member states. This means that potential candidates such as Hanan Balkhy, Regional Director of WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Region, or Hans Kluge, European Regional Director, could theoretically campaign while remaining in their positions – while other potential candidates such as Assistant Director-General Jeremy Farrar, would have to spend months on leave in order to compete, at a sharp inherent professional and financial disadvantage. Prospective candidates also must not conduct campaign activities as part of WHO regional committees’ official programmes. Reaffirming the standing rules, candidates will not be given speaking time during official meetings to promote their campaigns, and must instead restrict their promotional events strictly to the margins of these meetings. The guidelines also set forth a proposed timeline – following the Director-General’s invitation to member states to nominate candidates, which was delivered by letter to Geneva’s UN missions on 24 April. After nominations close on 24 September, contenders would participate in a live candidates’ forum, with a proposed date of November 18. The field would then be narrowed to up to three finalists during the 160th Executive Board session, preliminarily set for 25 January-2 February 2027. After a second interactive forum, tentatively set for 15 March 2027, member states will vote at the May 2027 World Health Assembly, with the winner taking office in August 2027. A gauntlet of public appearances Economy-class travel remains the standard for WHO candidates, underscoring the organisation’s push for financial equity. The framework further aims to create a gauntlet of public scrutiny for the election process. During the first live candidates’ forum, contenders will face structured 60-minute interviews. To ensure the question and answer process is not rigged, member states will drop colour-coded tokens into receptacles, which the Chair of the Executive Board will draw by lot to determine exactly who gets the opportunity to ask the candidates a question. To curb the potential for opaque backroom deals, the WHO relies on a Code of Conduct to oversee activities on the physical campaign trail. Originally adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2013 and most recently amended in November 2020, this framework was specifically designed to promote an open, fair, equitable, and transparent election process. Additionally, previous World Health Assembly decisions and WHO Secretariat practices guarantee financial travel support. Specifically, this involves provision of an economy-class airline ticket and a daily per diem for every candidate participating in both of the two live public forums that will be sponsored by WHO, and, upon request, for their interviews at the 160th session of the Executive Board. This logistical support aims to ensure prospective leaders from lower-income regions receive a genuinely fair opportunity without relying entirely on massive domestic or private funding. Guardrails built on ‘good faith’ – no binding enforcement Outgoing Director-General Tedros’s 2022 pandemic-era election gives way to a high-stakes, in-person 2026 WHO DG election cycle. While these guidelines aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. A closer reading of the WHO’s rulebook reveals that the Code of Conduct is not legally binding. The framework openly acknowledges it is merely a “political understanding” that recommends “desirable behaviour”, relying on the good faith of candidates and member states to honour its contents. This lack of binding enforcement mechanisms leaves critical transparency measures vulnerable. For instance, candidates and member states are instructed to promptly disclose all campaign activities and funding sources to the Secretariat for public posting. But this system relies on self-reporting without independent audits. Furthermore, while the regulations state that campaign-related travel should be “limited” to prevent financial inequality, and that using official technical meetings as a guise for electoral promotion “should be avoided”, these vague parameters leave vast room for interpretation. Ultimately, as the mandate of Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus approaches its expiration after the end of the upcoming election cycle, the focus will inevitably shift from the rules of the campaign trail to the monumental task awaiting his successor. Whoever emerges victorious from this highly scrutinised election must not only navigate deep geopolitical divides and restore internal trust, but also prepare the global health body for future crises. Want to Become the Next WHO Director-General? Get in Line Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, Alexander Schimmeck via unsplash. Hantavirus: Experts Question Claim that Only ‘Symptomatic’ People are Infectious 11/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Evacuation of passengers from MV Hondius, the ship hit by hantavirus, continue. Hantavirus has been confirmed in a French citizen evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship on Sunday, while two tests on a US citizen turned up one “weakly positive” and one negative result – but it is still unclear how the virus is being transmitted. The evacuation of passengers from the ship, now docked in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, continued on Monday under the supervision of health officials from Spain, assisted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and several other European countries. Passengers were only allowed to disembark to board chartered flights arranged by their countries. However, countries differ on how they plan to treat citizens who do not test positive for the virus right away, given that it can take up to 42 days before symptoms appear. Quarantine Spain, the UK, and Australia will require citizens to quarantine in designated government facilities for varying periods. The six Australians will spend up to 42 days in a government quarantine facility while undergoing PCR testing, according to Health Minister Mark Butler. US health officials – many vehemently against lockdown measures to contain COVID-19 – have suggested that asymptomatic citizens will be allowed to return home. Sixteen of the 18 US evacuated passengers are currently being assessed in a regional emerging special pathogen (RESPTC) treatment centre in Omaha, Nebraska. Two others, including the person with the weakly positive test, are being assessed in Atlanta. John Knox, deputy secretary for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), told a media briefing on Monday afternoon that asymptomatic passengers may be able to complete 42 days of isolation at home if they remain without symptoms and have the necessary support. On Sunday, Dr Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told CNN that asymptomatic passengers could not spread the virus. However, Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen told Monday’s media briefing that “no one who poses a risk to public health is walking out the front door”. How close is ‘close contact’? Although most transmission is from rats, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus, the hantavirus species affecting the ship, has previously been documented in Argentina in 2018. Genome sequencing of the current outbreak has shown it to be 99% similar to that outbreak, where the index patient attended a concert, subsequently infecting 34 people. BREAKING: First sequencing of the Hantavirus from the outbreak. -99% identical to a June 2018 case from a patient in Argentina -10.4 SNV/year mutation rate – The Andes genome is about 12 kb across three RNA segments. At 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻³ substitutions/site/year, that translates… pic.twitter.com/FleaIMmORV — Dr Steven Quay (@quay_dr) May 11, 2026 Human-to-human transmission is possible with “close contact”, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, there is some debate about the nature of this “close contact”. Professor Joseph Allen from Harvard’s Department of Exposure Assessment Science, said in a weekend TV interview that a doctor on board the ship had told him that some infected passengers had little interaction with the first three patients identified with the virus. These are a Dutch couple (now deceased), and a British man, currently making a slow recovery in South Africa. The International Hantavirus Society and members of the international hantavirus research and clinical community have also warned against various “simplified conclusions”, including that the Andes virus (ANDV) has “minimal or negligible human-to-human transmission potential” and that only symptomatic patients are infectious. Are asymptomatic people infectious? The experts warned in a statement last week that “the precise timing of infectiousness remains incompletely defined”. “While symptomatic patients are likely to represent the highest-risk group, available outbreak reconstructions do not support overly categorical statements that transmission can occur only after clear symptom onset,” they said. “Transmission potential during prodromal, early symptomatic or minimally symptomatic phases, should be considered when designing contact tracing, testing and quarantine strategies.” They stated that this is “particularly relevant in closed settings such as a cruise vessel where ANDV-exposed individuals may still be within the incubation period”. Infectious disease specialist Dr Jeremy Faust, writing in his substack, on Monday said that “it remains possible that an animal on the ship spread [Andes virus] to multiple people, or that the infected people visited the same place on land where the virus was waiting for them”. But, Faustus added, “given that human-to-human superspreader events of the Andes hantavirus have been documented, I’d bet that human-to-human transmission did occur here”, adding that the ship’s doctor also got infected. WHO Gender Parity Dips Amidst Staff Cuts, but Women Advance Slightly in Professional Ranks 10/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen WHO professional gender parity has risen as more men depart, even as overall staff representation slightly declines. A dramatically shrinking World Health Organization (WHO) has seen a slight decline in gender parity amidst restructuring. Strict recruitment policies and targeted job cuts have actively boosted female representation within the organisation’s professional ranks. But deep regional disparities in gender representation remain unresolved, with men holding the overwhelming majority of staff posts in the African, South-East Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Amid sweeping job cuts triggered by the US withdrawal and a massive budget crisis, the World Health Organization (WHO) claims that “gender parity has been achieved” among its remaining 8,569 staff members in the Director General’s annual report, for WHO member states at next week’s World Health Assembly. However, WHO human resources data for 2025, released on 1 May, reveals this to be slightly misleading: women actually lost their 50.1% majority from 2024, dropping slightly to 49.7% by the end of 2025. Despite this broader decline, progress was made within the professional and higher categories, where female representation successfully rose from 47.9% in December 2024 to 48.5% by December 2025. While the absolute numbers for both genders shrank during the restructuring phase, a larger number of male professionals left the organisation than women (105 men compared to 67 women). This progress is not solely the result of the ongoing downsizing but reflects an intentional, long-term policy shift: targeted recruitment measures introduced in 2023 to achieve the gender parity mandate that job openings must be reopened if the applicant pool is less than 30% female or if shortlists lack at least two women. These strict policies, which remain in place until parity is reached in under-represented grades, helped drive the percentage of female applicants up from 31.4% to 32.1% over the past four years. Gender parity by region: a tale of two organisations WHO regional gender disparities persist. While the WHO’s official designation points to overall gender parity on a global scale, examining the workforce data for 2025 reveals a starkly divided WHO. True gender balance remains elusive, with distinct female-majority and male-majority regions painting a complex picture of international representation. The Western Pacific Region currently boasts the highest overall female representation at 65.2%, followed closely by headquarters and global shared services at 63.5%, and the European Region at 59.2%. Conversely, male staff retain a dominant majority in the African Region (65.5% male), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (59.2% male), and the South-East Asia Region (57.4% male). However, a more in-depth look at the data reveals that majorities are characterised by a concentration of women in administrative and clerical roles. In both headquarters and the Western Pacific, the high overall female representation is heavily driven by the ‘general service’ category, where women make up 79.5% and 74.3% of the staff, respectively. In contrast, the male-dominated regions exhibit male majorities across nearly all job categories: in the African Region, for example, men hold 67.8% of the general service roles and dominate the professional ranks. Data on the WHO Region of the Americas, which has its own governing body, budget and HR processes, is not included in the global HR report. Uneven gains in field and senior leadership WHO’s glass ceiling remains intact as female representation thins significantly at the highest director levels. These regional disparities become even more pronounced when examining crucial leadership roles. While women are increasingly securing top diplomatic and operational roles, these leadership gains remain highly uneven across the globe. The South-East Asia Region leads the agency in field leadership, successfully achieving exact gender parity, with 50% of its country offices now headed by women. In stark contrast, female leadership in the field lags severely in other regions. In the African Region, only 25.5% of country offices are headed by women, and the Eastern Mediterranean Region reports a similarly low 26.3%. A similar divide exists within the highest echelons of senior management at the D1 and D2 grades – the WHO’s top director-level roles. The European Region has the highest percentage of women in these senior leadership positions at 40%, followed by Headquarters at 36%. Meanwhile, the lowest senior female representation is found in the South-East Asia Region (23.1%) and the African Region (24.1%). In the DG’s annual human resources report, the organisation openly acknowledges that the greatest remaining gaps in global gender parity exist exactly at this glass ceiling: the uppermost D2 (director) level is only 24.5% female, and the P6/D1 (senior leadership) levels stand at 37.3% female. Staff decline tracks toward June projections WHO aims to slash nearly 25% of its workforce by June 2026, shifting the focus to country offices. The DG’s human resources report also confirms the scale of the ongoing departures. By December 2025, the WHO counted a steep 9.4% decrease in regular staff members, down to 8,569 from the 9,463 staff recorded at the end of 2024, or the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. The data on end-of-year departures indicate that the health agency is well on its way to reaching its previously announced target of slashing nearly 25% of its global workforce by mid-2026. According to the latest projections before WHA, only 7,283 regular WHO staff will remain by 30 June, about 23% less than the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. By 30 June 2026, WHO’s global staff count is projected to decline to 7283 ‒ roughly 23% less than 1 January 2025 (9401). Meanwhile, the number of non-staff affiliates decreased by 23% in 2025, down to 5,844 full-time equivalent positions across three non-staff categories as compared to 7,582 in 2024. These categories include professionals and general service staff working under “Agreement for Performance of Work” contracts for specific, time-limited tasks, “Consultants” for more ongoing roles, and Special Service Agreements (SSAs), a type of non-staff category common in Africa and South-East Asia. Non-staff ‘affiliates’ in 2025 as compared to 2024 in terms of numbers of contracts and full-time equivalent posts. SSA positions are typically full-time. Headquarters is bearing the heaviest burden of the realignment. Official projections indicate that Geneva and Global Shared Services will shrink by 29% by June 2026, losing over 800 staff members. Meanwhile, the proportion of personnel based in country offices has increased to nearly 46% of the remaining global workforce. This deliberate geographic shift reflects a strategic institutional goal to build a significantly leaner administrative headquarters while vigorously protecting country-level health delivery. “The development aid era is over. WHO Geneva needs to be much smaller,” as diplomatic sources who spoke to Health Policy Watch framed it. Financing the restructuring The missing US flag at WHO headquarters – Washington’s departure triggered a deep budget crisis and workforce restructuring, which is still ongoing. The WHO currently faces a funding gap of approximately $630 million, representing roughly 15% of its $4.2 billion base budget for the upcoming 2026-2027 biennium. Officials have managed to shrink this deficit through aggressive reprioritisation, extensive staff cuts, and a 50% reduction in travel costs. This represents a massive reduction from the initial projected deficit of $1.7 billion, which was catalysed by the geopolitical earthquake of the US withdrawal from the global health agency, announced in January 2025 when President Donald Trump took office. To finance the sweeping realignment, the 78th World Health Assembly in 2025 authorised the temporary use of up to $410 million from Programme Support Costs reserve funds to cover unavoidable indemnities and salary gaps. Yet, the organisation has successfully minimised its reliance on these reserves. To date, the projected utilisation of the reserve funds stands at $206.2 million, roughly half of the authorised amount, according to the Human Resources report focusing on “WHO’s prioritisation and realignment process.” Senior management says they achieved this by prioritising “preventive measures” to manage the downsizing. Approximately 51% of all global separations were managed through natural attrition, the expiration of fixed-term contracts, and a voluntary early retirement package, completely sparing the agency from paying out costly forced termination indemnities for those individuals. As attention turns to the next WHA and the election process for a new Director-General, the incoming leader will inherit a downsized organisation that has stronger female representation in its professional ranks in some regions, with more work to achieve parity in others, but that remains fundamentally fractured by severe budget constraints and glaring regional disparities. EXCLUSIVE: WHO Opens Nominations for Next Director General; Germany May Advance Former Merkel Aide, Helge Braun Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO/Human Resources – Prioritization and Realignment Process , WHO Human Resources Update, 31 December 2025. More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
EU Announces Bold Global Health Resilience Initiative Amidst Geopolitical Ruptures 13/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen Commissioner for International Partnerships Jozef Síkela (right) announces the EU’s new Global Health Resilience Initiative on Wednesday. The European Commission announced its long-awaited Global Health Resilience Initiative on Wednesday. While the policy roadmap aims to support partner countries’ transition toward health sovereignty amid historic aid cuts and shifting geopolitical realities, critics are concerned about its heavy reliance on private funding. As global health gains face a severe threat of reversal from stagnating health system coverage and emerging pathogens, the European Commission’s newly announced strategic guidance seeks to do more than just fill funding gaps. It outlines key priorities and flagship actions designed to fundamentally revamp the multilateral health architecture and support partner countries’ transition toward health sovereignty amid a rapidly changing funding landscape. The proposed strategy, issued in a formal communication to the EU parliament and the member states, reinforces the pivot away from fragmented development assistance. Instead of relying solely on traditional grants, European policymakers intend to use “de-risking” tools and blended finance – combining public funds with loans and guarantees – to foster investments in national health systems of partner countries. Jozef Síkela, European Commissioner for International Partnerships “Europe gains from stronger supply chains,” said European Commissioner for International Partnerships Jozef Síkela at a press conference on Wednesday. “Our partners gain from investments in local infrastructure, skills and jobs based on partnership with EU companies.” Beyond immediate crisis management, the new initiative lays down a strategic, long-term pathway for European funding. It essentially sets the broad strategic strokes that will shape the global health priorities of the European Union’s next long-term Multiannual Financial Framework, which begins in 2028. Recommitment to a leaner multilateral system The EU’s strategy reaffirms the bloc’s commitment to the WHO as centre of a streamlined multilateral architecture. Ahead of the upcoming World Health Assembly in Geneva next week, the Global Health Resilience Initiative is a recommitment to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, to overcome the deep fragmentation of the global health landscape caused by competing funds, the Commission is actively advocating for a leaner, more streamlined institutional architecture – which now includes not only WHO, but UNAIDs, UNICEF and other health-related bodies under the UN umbrella. “We need a more effective and less fragmented global health architecture. There are too many players, too many overlapping mandates,” said EU-Commissioner Síkela. To better coordinate these efforts, the strategic proposal aims to significantly step up alignment between European member states before major international replenishments and key financing milestones. This approach involves creating a comprehensive map of all European global health investments to actively eliminate redundancies and boost donor synergies. This unified diplomatic front will be supported by a novel global health and resilience tracker. Developed in collaboration with the World Bank, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and the WHO, this tool will initially focus on pandemic preparedness, prevention, and response by mapping both the domestic spending of partners and the international support they receive. Over time, this tracking will be progressively expanded to cover broader global health priorities. The tool is explicitly designed to increase the transparency and accountability of global health security financing. Upgrading detection capabilities and implementing a ‘One Health’ approach Wastewater monitoring for poliovirus in Malawi showcases the critical role of environmental surveillance. To complement these financial tracking and governance reforms, the Global Health Resilience Initiative introduces major infrastructural upgrades aimed at crisis response. The Commission wants to support the establishment of an EU Therapeutics Hub and a parallel EU Diagnostics Hub to ensure the rapid deployment of essential medical countermeasures, with a specific focus on equitable access for vulnerable and minority populations. Further details are yet to be published. Additionally, the Commission announced that early detection capabilities will receive a boost through investments in international epidemiological surveillance networks, including advanced wastewater and environmental monitoring that detects pathogens well before clinical alarms trigger. By partnering with regional public health institutes, the EU hopes to close the vast data reporting gaps that currently obscure the true scale of mortality worldwide. By formally embedding the “One Health” principle into the European external agenda and recognising the intrinsic connection between human health, animal health, and resilient natural ecosystems, the strategy shifts focus toward “deep prevention” – the ability to identify and address environmental threats before pathogens cross from animals to humans. Acknowledging that climate change, biodiversity loss, and environmental degradation drive these dangerous zoonotic spillovers, the bloc announced it would be pushing for stronger environmental safeguards within multilateral treaties. This holistic, root-cause approach also extends to combatting antimicrobial resistance through the prudent use of antimicrobials and new clinical research. Fostering private investments and EU interests The initiative’s economic engine balances partner sovereignty with EU competitiveness through controversial blended finance models. Driven by a historic collapse in Official Development Assistance (ODA), European policymakers are moving beyond traditional aid to finance this sweeping agenda of infrastructural upgrades, and environmental and health monitoring. To bridge the current massive financial shortfall, the Global Health Resilience Initiative leverages the EU’s external action tool, the Global Gateway, to mobilise up to €300 billion in investments. By shifting away from direct grants, the strategy relies on blended finance – using loans and guarantees – to de-risk and incentivise private sector involvement in emerging economies. According to Commissioner Síkela, this approach has already successfully channelled over €6 billion specifically into health projects by the end of 2025. The flagship initiative on Manufacturing and Access to Vaccines, Medicines and Health Technologies in Africa (MAV+) is part of this and exemplifies the strategy, having directed roughly €2 billion toward building pharmaceutical manufacturing capacities across the African continent, including investments in South Africa and Senegal. The communication signals the Commission’s intent to formalise this approach within the EU’s executive branch, cementing a policy shift that explicitly aligns international development with European economic security and competitiveness. In practice, this means that while partner countries receive investments to build their resilience, European pharmaceutical and biotech firms are now strategically positioned to access these expanding, rules-based markets as a complementary alternative to relying solely on exports. “Global health is not immune to the fierce competition, coercive power politics, and information manipulation that influence international relations,” warned Kaja Kallas, High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. “While some pull back from multilateral organisations that protect global health, the EU is stepping up with more support.” Critics concerned about risks of market-based health financing While the initiative rightly acknowledges the way in which institutional fragmentation can exacerbate, rather than address, global health threats, civil society critics were quick to note that the EU’s new initiative largely ignores the political drivers of health inequality. Critics warn that increasing the role of private corporations in the health systems of low-income countries could also fuel higher health care costs and inequalities – and undermine the goal of ‘health sovereignty’. Karolin Seitz, global health financing expert at Global Policy Forum Europe. “The strong focus on expertise, investments and supply chains points more towards a model in which dependencies are reorganised rather than fundamentally overcome,” explains Karolin Seitz, Program Director of the global health and human rights programme at Global Policy Forum Europe, in a statement to Health Policy Watch. She notes that while promoting “health sovereignty” is commendable, it remains unclear how much real fiscal and political policy space low- and middle-income countries will actually gain. Seitz cautions that the Commission’s reliance on market-based mechanisms, such as blended finance through the Global Gateway, frequently socialises financial risks while securing guaranteed returns for private investors using public money. Rather than offering innovative solutions, these models can impose significant long-term costs on the public budgets of vulnerable nations, she warns. Furthermore, the EU’s strategy frames global health primarily as an issue of efficient governance and capital mobilisation, neglecting root causes like debt crises, unequal patent rules, and local tax evasion. Genuine health sovereignty, Seitz argues, requires structural reforms and sufficient public fiscal space – issues the EU’s approach currently leaves largely unaddressed. Record ODA Cuts: Top Donors Slash Aid as Global Health Risks Grow Image Credits: EU/Bogdan Hoyaux, Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO , Global Policy Forum Europe.. WHA79 Must Make Universal Health Coverage the Compass for Global Health Architecture Reform 13/05/2026 Alhadi Khogali, Renee de Jong, Marionka Pohl, Rispah Walumbe & Arush Lal The World Health Assembly in Geneva. At this year’s 79th session, member states will review a proposed process for reforming the UN global health architecture. Leaders of the international NGOs, Save the Children, Seed Global Health, AMREF, and LSE Health make five asks to member states attending next week’s 79th World Health Assembly, as they take the first steps to launch a joint UN process for reforming the global health architecture. As governments prepare for the 79th World Health Assembly (WHA79), the stakes could not be higher. On the table is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reform the global health architecture (GHA) – triggered by the unprecedented cuts in foreign aid. But in the rush to redesign institutions and redirect funding flows, we risk losing the principle that should anchor every reform effort: universal health coverage (UHC), or the right of every person, everywhere, to access quality healthcare without financial hardship. At the 158th WHO Executive Board, Member States requested the WHO to convene a joint process on global health architecture reform. The World Health Assembly remains uniquely positioned to convene Member States, civil society, donors, and multilaterals around a more coherent reform agenda. The funding crisis is exposing deeper structural failures The year 2025 saw the largest annual decline in total official development assistance (ODA) on record, with a 23.1% reduction compared to 2024, bringing global aid back to levels seen in 2015, at the outset of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Preliminary data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) indicate that 2025 saw the largest annual decline in total official development assistance (ODA) on record, with a 23.1% reduction compared to 2024, bringing global aid back to levels seen in 2015 at the start of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. A further 5.8% decrease is anticipated for 2026. These cuts risk leading to an additional 22.6 million deaths by 2030, including 5.4 million children under the age of five. This downturn exposes structural weaknesses in systems that have long depended on external financing. For women, children, and adolescents, the health systems consequences are profound and immediate: disrupted maternal and newborn care, collapsing immunization and nutritional programmes, and reduced access to sexual and reproductive health services. In humanitarian settings, conflict-affected and displaced populations may soon have no safety net at all. Although it is said that “crises create opportunities,” the funding shock has exposed a long-recognized reality within global health: an architecture dependent on a small group of donors is inherently unstable and unable to deliver UHC. Preventing future crises will require new foundations: domestic financing models insulated from geopolitical shifts, institutional mandates that endure beyond individual funders, external partners aligning behind national priorities, and a global health architecture in which UHC is structurally embedded rather than dependent on external support. Central to this is a well-trained and adequately financed health workforce, without which neither health systems nor universal health coverage (UHC) can be achieved. UHC must guide global health reform Delivering Universal Healthcare requires countries to invest more in primary healthcare. The 79th World Health Assembly will discuss several major issues separately: UHC (item 12.4) and primary health care (PHC) (item 12.5), implementation of the Pandemic Accord (item 13.3), the strategy on Economics of Health for All (item 15.5), and global health architecture (GHA) reform (item 20.1). While this reflects standard WHA procedures, the risk is that these discussions proceed in parallel rather than as part of a coherent reform agenda. The appointment of Thailand and Andorra as co-facilitators for negotiations on the 2027 UN High-Level Meeting on UHC is politically significant. The 2027 UHC High Level Meeting (HLM) cannot become a separate process alongside GHA reform discussions. It should serve as one of the accountability mechanisms for reforms currently being debated in Geneva. Five priorities for WHO Member States at WHA79 A Nepali woman with her child in a sling on her back. Global funding crisis has hit women and children especially hard. For WHA79 to make a real impact, Member States must ensure their decisions translate into practical improvements for the people most affected by systemic failure. In the lead-up to the 2027 UN High Level Meeting on UHC, we call for five key changes: Anchor GHA reform in UHC and country ownership Global health reform must align existing initiatives to avoid fragmentation. The WHO-led GHA reform process can help build that cohesion and should align mandates, structures, and incentives behind country-led priorities. Reform efforts need to address power imbalances, align behind country priorities, support global public goods, and strengthen mutual accountability. Country-led governance must be the foundation of any reformed architecture. To ensure commitments translate into action, Member States should establish clear, time-bound implementation milestones and accountability mechanisms, including civil society and affected communities. The 2027 UHC HLM should explicitly track and build on GHA reform commitments made in Geneva. Invest in PHC and sustainable financing Governments should increase domestic public spending on health – including an additional 1% of GDP for primary health care – while strengthening public financial management and institutionalizing health financing coordination through country-led platforms. However, many low-income countries face severe debt distress, limiting their ability to expand fiscal space for health without broader reforms to debt architecture and progressive domestic taxation. Meeting UHC targets will require progressive financial reforms and renewed attention to the Economics of Health for All agenda. Financing must be directed toward essential services, health workers, and financial protection for vulnerable populations. Strengthen the health workforce for UHC Health workers underpin resilient health systems, pandemic preparedness, and climate adaptation. Member States should expand fiscal space for the health workforce through sustained domestic financing, while aligning donor investments behind national workforce strategies and employment plans. This includes equitable recruitment, training, fair remuneration, and protection of frontline workers, including community health workers, particularly in underserved settings. GHA reform and global financing mechanisms must support sustainable, country-led health systems rather than fragmented, short-term parallel programming. Institutionalize social participation and accountability Civil society engagement is critical to shaping policies that reflect the needs of affected populations. WHA77’s resolution on social participation should now be operationalized by embedding participation and transparency as core accountability mechanisms. WHO should establish regional and national consultative bodies bringing together Ministries of Health and Finance, donors, civil society, and affected communities to enable continuous dialogue and oversight. This should be supported by transparent reporting of health financing data, building on national health accounts and the Global Health Expenditure Database with open access to disaggregated data. Safeguard UHC in crisis and conflict settings GHA reform discussions cannot turn a blind eye to the humanitarian needs caused by conflicts and crises worldwide. Member States should mandate that GHA reform financing instruments – including the Pandemic Fund and IHR/Pandemic Agreement’s Coordinated Financing Mechanism – include ring-fenced allocations for essential health services in crisis-affected settings. In an era of rising polycrisis, protecting and advancing UHC reforms is not just morally necessary, but can also create momentum for health system reform. WHA79 is a pivotal juncture. It will be remembered either as the moment governments anchored health reforms in equity and the needs of the people they serve, or as another missed opportunity clouded by consensus language and procedural paralysis. Alhadi Khogali, is Senior Global Health Policy Advisor, Save the Children. Renee de Jong is Senior Advocacy Advisor, Save the Children. Marionka Pohl is Senior Director of Policy, Seed Global Health. Rispah Walumbe is Health of Strategy & Policy, Amref Health Africa. Arush Lal, is a Visiting Fellow at LSE Health, London School of Economics and Political Science. Image Credits: WHO, OECD, WHO, Lisa Marie Theck/Unsplash. Experts Call for Review of Global Outbreak Response as Passengers Leave Ship Hit By Hantavirus 12/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Passengers being evacuated from MV Hondius, the ship affected by a hantavirus outbreak, in Tenerife on Monday. All passengers were evacuated from the cruise ship, Hondius, by Monday night – and a Spaniard taken to a military hospital in Madrid to quarantine has become the 11th person from the ship to test positive for hantavirus. The evacuation was completed 10 days after the World Health Organization (WHO) was notified about the outbreak – and experts have called for a review of the global response to identify and fix “gaps and vulnerabilities in the system”. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), and Spanish President Pedro Sánchez, described the evacuation as a success and a show of international solidarity. Hondius captain Jan Dobrogowski, described the past few weeks as “extremely challenging”, as he and 24 crew, accompanied by a doctor and nurse, sailed on to Rotterdam. In a social media message on Monday, Dobrogowski thanked all passengers and staff for their “patience, discipline and the kindness they showed to each other” during the outbreak, particularly commending crew members for their “courage and selflessness”. The Hondius evacuation had not taken place in Cabo Verde as the island lacked the capacity to handle the operation, Tedros clarified at a media briefing on Tuesday. After docking in Cabo Verde for a couple of days, the ship sailed on to Tenerife in the Canary Islands, which is an autonomous community of Spain. Under the International Health Regulations (IHR), of which Spain is a party, “countries are required not to allow people to be stranded at sea when they have the capacity to manage the risk safely and responsibly”, said Tedros. ‘Inhumane and unnecessary’ Spanish President Pedro Sánchez addresses the media on the evacuation of passengers from the cruise ship hit by hantavirus. “There were some people around the world calling for the passengers to be contained on the ship for the full quarantine period. Our view was that would have been inhumane, and unnecessary,” he added. “We were convinced it was possible to disembark these passengers in a way that was safe for them and the people of Tenerife, and that was respectful of the human rights of the passengers and crew.” There were almost 150 people from 23 countries on the ship for weeks, “in what must have been a very frightening situation”, said Tedros, adding that “some of the passengers were facing mental breakdown” and “have the right to be treated with dignity and compassion”. Meanwhile, Sánchez told the media briefing: “This world doesn’t need more selfishness, nor more fear. What it needs is countries that show solidarity and want to move forward. He also appealed for “international cooperation and organisations like the WHO to be provided with the resources to realise their work”. More cases possible Three people travelling on the Hondius have died from hantavirus, the last of whom died on 2 May – the day that the WHO was first notified of the cluster of cases by the UK. South African scientists identified the virus in a British man flown to the country for treatment. “At the moment, there is no sign that we are seeing the start of a larger outbreak,” said Tedros. “But of course, the situation could change. And given the long incubation period of the virus, it’s possible we might see more cases in the coming weeks.” The recommended quarantine period is 42 days, which is how long the virus can take to manifest. Each country is responsible for monitoring the health of its citizens evacuated from the ship. Some, like Australia, will require them to remain in government quarantine facilities. Others, like the US, have stated that they will allow asymptomatic citizens to isolate at home. The WHO recommends that they “should be monitored actively at a specified quarantine facility or at home for 42 days from the last exposure, which is the 10 May, which takes us to the 21 June,” said Tedros. Is the system working? Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Helen Clark, co-chairs of The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, which evaluated the global response to COVID-19, said that the hantavirus outbreak has “tested the international system”, ” demonstrating its strengths and gaps. The pair, who previously described the WHO response to COVID-19 as “analogue” in a digital age, commended the international response to the hantaviris outbreak from 2 May. “The identification and communication of the hantavirus results from South Africa to the United Kingdom, its subsequent reporting to the WHO [on 2 May], and from WHO to countries worldwide demonstrated the importance of rapid application of the International Health Regulations,” they said. However, between the first death on board on 11 April and 2 May, “a series of events resulted in the growth of the hantavirus outbreak”, they noted. “There were risks to passengers onboard, to people interacting with them on remote islands, and following the 24 April disembarkation in St Helena, to those who contacted them on land, in the air, and in their next destinations,” said Sirleaf and Clark. “A review should determine whether a more precautionary approach could have been applied pursuant to the guidelines in the WHO Handbook for Managing Public Health Events on Board Ships. In a social media recording of ship’s captain Dobrogowski notifying passengers of the first death, he assures them that it was due to the man’s underlying conditions and posed no risk to other passengers. “While sadly deaths on ships do occur, as more people embark on adventure travel to remote locations, the need to protect travellers and those in contact with them from potential exposure to pathogens will increase,” they said. Review of outbreak planning The co-chairs appealed to governments to “review outbreak and pandemic planning to address vulnerabilities in the system, including in shipping, marine health and death-related protocols, port management, and protection of populations in remote locations”. They also appealed to leaders to follow “all relevant protocols for contact tracing, infection control, reporting, isolation and supportive care” to break the chain of hantavirus transmission. Despite negotiating a Pandemic Agreement since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO member states have been unable to agree on a Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) annex to set out how information about dangerous pathogens should be shared. A few weeks back, at the conclusion of the last round of PABS negotiations, Tedros called for urgency, “because the next pandemic is a matter of when, not if”. In September, the United Nations will convene a High-Level Meeting (HLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response (PPPR). Member states need to “ensure that the Political Declaration [adopted by the HLM] includes measurable commitments to close the gaps in PPPR, including in One Health, in financing – including for surge financing, equity, monitoring, and accountability”, said Sirleaf and Clark. Image Credits: BBC. Nurses Are Not a Cost to Health Systems. They Are the Power Holding Them Together. 12/05/2026 Howard Catton Fatmata Bamorie Turay (far left) and Elizabeth Tumoe, registered nurses look after newborns at the Princess Christian Maternity Hospital, in Freetown Sierra Leone Recently, I met with African nursing leaders who told me stories of nurses in countries such as Ghana and Nigeria earning the equivalent of only a few hundred US dollars a month – sometimes less than $300 – while being offered opportunities abroad with salaries many times higher. They described a growing crisis, where nurses are now leaving not yearly or monthly, but almost weekly. In some hospitals, managers only discover a nurse has accepted a post overseas when a resignation letter is pushed under the door. One nurse leader told me: “We are training nurses for export.” Migration itself is not the problem. Like anyone else, all nurses have the right to migrate and pursue opportunities. But many have been put in an impossible position, where they are also leaving behind families, colleagues and communities they care deeply about. And the countries they leave behind are losing the experienced nurses they have trained, often with little evidence of any meaningful reinvestment in return. This story is now being repeated across the world at an alarming scale. This is why, ahead of this month’s World Health Assembly (WHA), the International Council of Nurses (ICN) has written to WHO Member States recommending concrete actions to address the escalating international recruitment that is deepening workforce shortages in lower-income countries and threatening global health system sustainability. We are calling for coordinated co-investment by recruiting countries into nurse education, retention, and workforce and leadership development. But this is not just a story about migration and workforce shortages. This situation speaks to the profound global failure to understand the true power of nursing and the enormous cost of not investing in it. No nurses, no care A registered nurse vaccinates a child for polio in Beirut, Lebanon. The world faces a global shortage of 11 million health workers. More than half, 5.8 million, are nurses. That fact alone should be setting off alarm bells everywhere. No nurses means no healthcare. Nurses are the backbone of health systems. But right now, that backbone is showing signs of spinal instability. We are asking nurses to carry more and more: ageing populations, rising chronic disease, pandemics, conflict, climate-related crises, mental health pressures, and widening inequalities. Yet too often we continue to treat nursing as a cost to be contained instead of one of the smartest investments societies can make. That is why this year’s International Nurses Day report from ICN, Our Nurses. Our Future. Empowered Nurses Save Lives is so important. The report moves beyond outdated, one-dimensional images of nursing to show how nurses both save and improve lives at scale. For too long, nursing has too often been portrayed only through the language of compassion and sacrifice. Compassion matters enormously. But nursing is also power: economic power, clinical power, leadership power, workforce power, and social power. Our report sets out seven key nursing powers that are transforming health systems around the world. There is the Power of Trust: year after year nurses remain the most trusted profession globally, a foundation that becomes critical during health emergencies, public health crises, and vaccination campaigns. There is the Power of Practice: advanced nurse practitioners and specialist nurses are delivering high-quality care, reducing waiting times, improving outcomes, and expanding access, particularly in underserved communities. There is the Power of Numbers: nearly 30 million nurses worldwide represent the single largest health workforce on earth. Another of the most important powers is what we call the Power of Proximity. Nurses are where people are. In hospitals, clinics, schools, refugee camps, conflict zones, remote villages, and people’s homes. Nurses are often the first health professional a person sees and the last one they remember. They understand communities because they are part of those communities. That proximity saves lives. And when nurses are empowered to work to their full potential, the evidence is overwhelming. Expanding primary healthcare, where nurses are central, could save 60 million lives by 2030. Closing global health workforce gaps could prevent 189 million years of life lost and add US$1.1 trillion to the global economy. We can’t see these as “soft skills”. These are hard powers delivering hard outcomes. Investing for impact This year’s report builds on ICN’s wider work, including our 2024 report, Our Nurses. Our Future. The economic power of care. This has consistently shown that investing in nursing is not a cost to health systems and economies; it is one of the highest-return investments societies can make. Investing in health brings a $2–4 return per $1, while poor health reduces GDP by 15%. Yet despite all this evidence, many countries continue to underinvest in nursing. Exacerbating inequalities, high-income countries continue to underinvest in educating enough nurses domestically while increasingly relying on international recruitment to fill workforce gaps. This means many lower-income countries are effectively financing the health systems of wealthier nations through the loss of their trained nurses. Countries already facing severe shortages are losing experienced clinicians, educators, and leaders faster than they can replace them. At the same time, destination countries are making substantial savings. Training costs are being avoided. Workforce gaps are being filled quickly. Tax revenues are being generated by internationally educated nurses working in destination countries. But where is the reinvestment? Recent evidence submitted by ICN to a UK All-Party Parliamentary Group inquiry highlighted the enormous financial benefit that recruiting countries derive from this model. By recruiting abroad, data shows that the UK has saved £14 billion in health workforce training costs. Canada has saved an estimated C$1 billion. In effect, lower-income countries are subsidising the workforce costs of richer nations. Some high-income countries are effectively outsourcing responsibility for nurse education internationally while failing to adequately reinvest in the systems they depend upon. That is neither sustainable nor equitable. It risks creating exactly the perceptions many countries are now voicing openly: neo-colonialism, exploitation, and a growing erosion of global solidarity. Nurse Everlyne Esige examines an expectant mother at Vihiga County Referral Hospital in Kisumu, Kenya. WHA as a turning point This is why ICN has urged WHO Member States to use this year’s World Health Assembly as a turning point. In our letter, we call for practical and collective action to strengthen the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel. That includes coordinated co-investment by major recruiting countries into nurse education, employment, retention, leadership development, and workforce planning in source countries. We are proposing practical mechanisms: proportionate reinvestment linked to recruitment, directing a share of education savings and tax revenues into source-country health systems, debt relief linked to workforce investment, and even a global fund to strengthen fragile health workforces. Imagine the impact if high-income countries pooled resources and coordinated action instead of acting individually and reactively. The sums involved would not be insignificant. But neither are the savings currently being made. And the return on investment would be enormous: stronger health systems, greater global health security, reduced inequalities, and a more sustainable global workforce for everyone. Strengthen support for nursing At the same time, we are increasingly concerned that the global focus on nursing and the health workforce risks being diluted precisely when it should be intensifying. Last year, WHO Member States agreed to extend the Strategic Directions for Nursing and Midwifery and to accelerate progress. That word matters: accelerate. Yet we are still hearing concerns about cuts and reduced capacity at exactly the institutions and programmes designed to support the global health workforce. We understand the financial pressures that the WHO and many governments face. These are difficult decisions. But support for the very people who deliver healthcare, the foundations upon which health systems are built, must be the very last place to cut. Because ultimately, this conversation is about far more than staffing numbers. Nursing is also one of the largest majority-women workforces in the world. Investing in nursing means investing in women, in economic participation, in education, in families, and in reducing inequality. This International Nurses’ Day, we should celebrate nurses. But celebration alone is not enough. We must also recognise nurses’ power to change lives, strengthen economies, and transform societies and finally invest in that power for the sake of all our health. Howard Catton is CEO of the International Council of Nurses. Image Credits: World Bank/Flickr, Flickr – World Bank, International Council for Nurses, Brian Otieno /Global Fund, Studioregard.ch. WHO Sets Out Timetable and Ethical Guardrails for Election of New Director-General; but Loopholes Remain 11/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The proposed WHO Director-General election cycle for 2026–2027 lays out the path from the initial call for nominations in April 2026 to the final appointment in May 2027. As the campaign to elect a new World Health Organization Director-General officially opens, a timeline and guidelines for the process have been published by outgoing DG Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus for consideration by member states at next week’s World Health Assembly and the upcoming Executive Board. While these aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. With the call for nominations for the next World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General officially underway, the global health community is bracing for an intense, year-long campaign season. The upcoming 2026/2027 WHO DG election cycle marks a definitive departure from the previous race in 2021, which unfolded amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, featured an incumbent, and relied heavily on remote adaptations. The current contest expects a full return to “normal” physical in-person campaigning at regional committee sessions. However, a “new normal” is also unfolding under complex conditions, as the WHO grapples with a sharply polarized body of member states and a drastically reduced budget following the United States’ withdrawal last year, forcing it to implement massive, ongoing workforce reductions. To maintain fairness in this highly pressured, post-pandemic landscape, WHO has published a draft set of guidelines that would help create a firewall between candidates’ campaign activities and official organisation business – rules that will be particularly important for candidates that emerge from within WHO’s ranks. The Director-General’s recommendations on the election process, to be reviewed by Member States at the upcoming World Health Assembly and Executive Board, aim to reinforce established parameters from the previous election cycle. But enforcement still relies mostly on ‘good faith’ as compared to legally binding measures. WHO staff members who join the race will have to go on leave – but Regional Directors may be exempt Current WHO staff members entering the competition face the election’s strictest internal guardrails, according to the newly published guidelines. To prevent conflicts of interest between campaigning and official business, they will be immediately placed on annual leave. Once their annual leave allowance is exhausted, they would be placed on mandatory special leave with half pay leading up to the January 2027 Executive Board nominations. If they survive this initial selection process and make the final shortlist, their full salary would be restored for the remainder of the race. Yet, past precedent has explicitly exempted WHO Regional Directors from this rule – due to their status as WHO officials elected by member states. This means that potential candidates such as Hanan Balkhy, Regional Director of WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Region, or Hans Kluge, European Regional Director, could theoretically campaign while remaining in their positions – while other potential candidates such as Assistant Director-General Jeremy Farrar, would have to spend months on leave in order to compete, at a sharp inherent professional and financial disadvantage. Prospective candidates also must not conduct campaign activities as part of WHO regional committees’ official programmes. Reaffirming the standing rules, candidates will not be given speaking time during official meetings to promote their campaigns, and must instead restrict their promotional events strictly to the margins of these meetings. The guidelines also set forth a proposed timeline – following the Director-General’s invitation to member states to nominate candidates, which was delivered by letter to Geneva’s UN missions on 24 April. After nominations close on 24 September, contenders would participate in a live candidates’ forum, with a proposed date of November 18. The field would then be narrowed to up to three finalists during the 160th Executive Board session, preliminarily set for 25 January-2 February 2027. After a second interactive forum, tentatively set for 15 March 2027, member states will vote at the May 2027 World Health Assembly, with the winner taking office in August 2027. A gauntlet of public appearances Economy-class travel remains the standard for WHO candidates, underscoring the organisation’s push for financial equity. The framework further aims to create a gauntlet of public scrutiny for the election process. During the first live candidates’ forum, contenders will face structured 60-minute interviews. To ensure the question and answer process is not rigged, member states will drop colour-coded tokens into receptacles, which the Chair of the Executive Board will draw by lot to determine exactly who gets the opportunity to ask the candidates a question. To curb the potential for opaque backroom deals, the WHO relies on a Code of Conduct to oversee activities on the physical campaign trail. Originally adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2013 and most recently amended in November 2020, this framework was specifically designed to promote an open, fair, equitable, and transparent election process. Additionally, previous World Health Assembly decisions and WHO Secretariat practices guarantee financial travel support. Specifically, this involves provision of an economy-class airline ticket and a daily per diem for every candidate participating in both of the two live public forums that will be sponsored by WHO, and, upon request, for their interviews at the 160th session of the Executive Board. This logistical support aims to ensure prospective leaders from lower-income regions receive a genuinely fair opportunity without relying entirely on massive domestic or private funding. Guardrails built on ‘good faith’ – no binding enforcement Outgoing Director-General Tedros’s 2022 pandemic-era election gives way to a high-stakes, in-person 2026 WHO DG election cycle. While these guidelines aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. A closer reading of the WHO’s rulebook reveals that the Code of Conduct is not legally binding. The framework openly acknowledges it is merely a “political understanding” that recommends “desirable behaviour”, relying on the good faith of candidates and member states to honour its contents. This lack of binding enforcement mechanisms leaves critical transparency measures vulnerable. For instance, candidates and member states are instructed to promptly disclose all campaign activities and funding sources to the Secretariat for public posting. But this system relies on self-reporting without independent audits. Furthermore, while the regulations state that campaign-related travel should be “limited” to prevent financial inequality, and that using official technical meetings as a guise for electoral promotion “should be avoided”, these vague parameters leave vast room for interpretation. Ultimately, as the mandate of Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus approaches its expiration after the end of the upcoming election cycle, the focus will inevitably shift from the rules of the campaign trail to the monumental task awaiting his successor. Whoever emerges victorious from this highly scrutinised election must not only navigate deep geopolitical divides and restore internal trust, but also prepare the global health body for future crises. Want to Become the Next WHO Director-General? Get in Line Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, Alexander Schimmeck via unsplash. Hantavirus: Experts Question Claim that Only ‘Symptomatic’ People are Infectious 11/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Evacuation of passengers from MV Hondius, the ship hit by hantavirus, continue. Hantavirus has been confirmed in a French citizen evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship on Sunday, while two tests on a US citizen turned up one “weakly positive” and one negative result – but it is still unclear how the virus is being transmitted. The evacuation of passengers from the ship, now docked in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, continued on Monday under the supervision of health officials from Spain, assisted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and several other European countries. Passengers were only allowed to disembark to board chartered flights arranged by their countries. However, countries differ on how they plan to treat citizens who do not test positive for the virus right away, given that it can take up to 42 days before symptoms appear. Quarantine Spain, the UK, and Australia will require citizens to quarantine in designated government facilities for varying periods. The six Australians will spend up to 42 days in a government quarantine facility while undergoing PCR testing, according to Health Minister Mark Butler. US health officials – many vehemently against lockdown measures to contain COVID-19 – have suggested that asymptomatic citizens will be allowed to return home. Sixteen of the 18 US evacuated passengers are currently being assessed in a regional emerging special pathogen (RESPTC) treatment centre in Omaha, Nebraska. Two others, including the person with the weakly positive test, are being assessed in Atlanta. John Knox, deputy secretary for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), told a media briefing on Monday afternoon that asymptomatic passengers may be able to complete 42 days of isolation at home if they remain without symptoms and have the necessary support. On Sunday, Dr Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told CNN that asymptomatic passengers could not spread the virus. However, Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen told Monday’s media briefing that “no one who poses a risk to public health is walking out the front door”. How close is ‘close contact’? Although most transmission is from rats, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus, the hantavirus species affecting the ship, has previously been documented in Argentina in 2018. Genome sequencing of the current outbreak has shown it to be 99% similar to that outbreak, where the index patient attended a concert, subsequently infecting 34 people. BREAKING: First sequencing of the Hantavirus from the outbreak. -99% identical to a June 2018 case from a patient in Argentina -10.4 SNV/year mutation rate – The Andes genome is about 12 kb across three RNA segments. At 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻³ substitutions/site/year, that translates… pic.twitter.com/FleaIMmORV — Dr Steven Quay (@quay_dr) May 11, 2026 Human-to-human transmission is possible with “close contact”, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, there is some debate about the nature of this “close contact”. Professor Joseph Allen from Harvard’s Department of Exposure Assessment Science, said in a weekend TV interview that a doctor on board the ship had told him that some infected passengers had little interaction with the first three patients identified with the virus. These are a Dutch couple (now deceased), and a British man, currently making a slow recovery in South Africa. The International Hantavirus Society and members of the international hantavirus research and clinical community have also warned against various “simplified conclusions”, including that the Andes virus (ANDV) has “minimal or negligible human-to-human transmission potential” and that only symptomatic patients are infectious. Are asymptomatic people infectious? The experts warned in a statement last week that “the precise timing of infectiousness remains incompletely defined”. “While symptomatic patients are likely to represent the highest-risk group, available outbreak reconstructions do not support overly categorical statements that transmission can occur only after clear symptom onset,” they said. “Transmission potential during prodromal, early symptomatic or minimally symptomatic phases, should be considered when designing contact tracing, testing and quarantine strategies.” They stated that this is “particularly relevant in closed settings such as a cruise vessel where ANDV-exposed individuals may still be within the incubation period”. Infectious disease specialist Dr Jeremy Faust, writing in his substack, on Monday said that “it remains possible that an animal on the ship spread [Andes virus] to multiple people, or that the infected people visited the same place on land where the virus was waiting for them”. But, Faustus added, “given that human-to-human superspreader events of the Andes hantavirus have been documented, I’d bet that human-to-human transmission did occur here”, adding that the ship’s doctor also got infected. WHO Gender Parity Dips Amidst Staff Cuts, but Women Advance Slightly in Professional Ranks 10/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen WHO professional gender parity has risen as more men depart, even as overall staff representation slightly declines. A dramatically shrinking World Health Organization (WHO) has seen a slight decline in gender parity amidst restructuring. Strict recruitment policies and targeted job cuts have actively boosted female representation within the organisation’s professional ranks. But deep regional disparities in gender representation remain unresolved, with men holding the overwhelming majority of staff posts in the African, South-East Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Amid sweeping job cuts triggered by the US withdrawal and a massive budget crisis, the World Health Organization (WHO) claims that “gender parity has been achieved” among its remaining 8,569 staff members in the Director General’s annual report, for WHO member states at next week’s World Health Assembly. However, WHO human resources data for 2025, released on 1 May, reveals this to be slightly misleading: women actually lost their 50.1% majority from 2024, dropping slightly to 49.7% by the end of 2025. Despite this broader decline, progress was made within the professional and higher categories, where female representation successfully rose from 47.9% in December 2024 to 48.5% by December 2025. While the absolute numbers for both genders shrank during the restructuring phase, a larger number of male professionals left the organisation than women (105 men compared to 67 women). This progress is not solely the result of the ongoing downsizing but reflects an intentional, long-term policy shift: targeted recruitment measures introduced in 2023 to achieve the gender parity mandate that job openings must be reopened if the applicant pool is less than 30% female or if shortlists lack at least two women. These strict policies, which remain in place until parity is reached in under-represented grades, helped drive the percentage of female applicants up from 31.4% to 32.1% over the past four years. Gender parity by region: a tale of two organisations WHO regional gender disparities persist. While the WHO’s official designation points to overall gender parity on a global scale, examining the workforce data for 2025 reveals a starkly divided WHO. True gender balance remains elusive, with distinct female-majority and male-majority regions painting a complex picture of international representation. The Western Pacific Region currently boasts the highest overall female representation at 65.2%, followed closely by headquarters and global shared services at 63.5%, and the European Region at 59.2%. Conversely, male staff retain a dominant majority in the African Region (65.5% male), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (59.2% male), and the South-East Asia Region (57.4% male). However, a more in-depth look at the data reveals that majorities are characterised by a concentration of women in administrative and clerical roles. In both headquarters and the Western Pacific, the high overall female representation is heavily driven by the ‘general service’ category, where women make up 79.5% and 74.3% of the staff, respectively. In contrast, the male-dominated regions exhibit male majorities across nearly all job categories: in the African Region, for example, men hold 67.8% of the general service roles and dominate the professional ranks. Data on the WHO Region of the Americas, which has its own governing body, budget and HR processes, is not included in the global HR report. Uneven gains in field and senior leadership WHO’s glass ceiling remains intact as female representation thins significantly at the highest director levels. These regional disparities become even more pronounced when examining crucial leadership roles. While women are increasingly securing top diplomatic and operational roles, these leadership gains remain highly uneven across the globe. The South-East Asia Region leads the agency in field leadership, successfully achieving exact gender parity, with 50% of its country offices now headed by women. In stark contrast, female leadership in the field lags severely in other regions. In the African Region, only 25.5% of country offices are headed by women, and the Eastern Mediterranean Region reports a similarly low 26.3%. A similar divide exists within the highest echelons of senior management at the D1 and D2 grades – the WHO’s top director-level roles. The European Region has the highest percentage of women in these senior leadership positions at 40%, followed by Headquarters at 36%. Meanwhile, the lowest senior female representation is found in the South-East Asia Region (23.1%) and the African Region (24.1%). In the DG’s annual human resources report, the organisation openly acknowledges that the greatest remaining gaps in global gender parity exist exactly at this glass ceiling: the uppermost D2 (director) level is only 24.5% female, and the P6/D1 (senior leadership) levels stand at 37.3% female. Staff decline tracks toward June projections WHO aims to slash nearly 25% of its workforce by June 2026, shifting the focus to country offices. The DG’s human resources report also confirms the scale of the ongoing departures. By December 2025, the WHO counted a steep 9.4% decrease in regular staff members, down to 8,569 from the 9,463 staff recorded at the end of 2024, or the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. The data on end-of-year departures indicate that the health agency is well on its way to reaching its previously announced target of slashing nearly 25% of its global workforce by mid-2026. According to the latest projections before WHA, only 7,283 regular WHO staff will remain by 30 June, about 23% less than the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. By 30 June 2026, WHO’s global staff count is projected to decline to 7283 ‒ roughly 23% less than 1 January 2025 (9401). Meanwhile, the number of non-staff affiliates decreased by 23% in 2025, down to 5,844 full-time equivalent positions across three non-staff categories as compared to 7,582 in 2024. These categories include professionals and general service staff working under “Agreement for Performance of Work” contracts for specific, time-limited tasks, “Consultants” for more ongoing roles, and Special Service Agreements (SSAs), a type of non-staff category common in Africa and South-East Asia. Non-staff ‘affiliates’ in 2025 as compared to 2024 in terms of numbers of contracts and full-time equivalent posts. SSA positions are typically full-time. Headquarters is bearing the heaviest burden of the realignment. Official projections indicate that Geneva and Global Shared Services will shrink by 29% by June 2026, losing over 800 staff members. Meanwhile, the proportion of personnel based in country offices has increased to nearly 46% of the remaining global workforce. This deliberate geographic shift reflects a strategic institutional goal to build a significantly leaner administrative headquarters while vigorously protecting country-level health delivery. “The development aid era is over. WHO Geneva needs to be much smaller,” as diplomatic sources who spoke to Health Policy Watch framed it. Financing the restructuring The missing US flag at WHO headquarters – Washington’s departure triggered a deep budget crisis and workforce restructuring, which is still ongoing. The WHO currently faces a funding gap of approximately $630 million, representing roughly 15% of its $4.2 billion base budget for the upcoming 2026-2027 biennium. Officials have managed to shrink this deficit through aggressive reprioritisation, extensive staff cuts, and a 50% reduction in travel costs. This represents a massive reduction from the initial projected deficit of $1.7 billion, which was catalysed by the geopolitical earthquake of the US withdrawal from the global health agency, announced in January 2025 when President Donald Trump took office. To finance the sweeping realignment, the 78th World Health Assembly in 2025 authorised the temporary use of up to $410 million from Programme Support Costs reserve funds to cover unavoidable indemnities and salary gaps. Yet, the organisation has successfully minimised its reliance on these reserves. To date, the projected utilisation of the reserve funds stands at $206.2 million, roughly half of the authorised amount, according to the Human Resources report focusing on “WHO’s prioritisation and realignment process.” Senior management says they achieved this by prioritising “preventive measures” to manage the downsizing. Approximately 51% of all global separations were managed through natural attrition, the expiration of fixed-term contracts, and a voluntary early retirement package, completely sparing the agency from paying out costly forced termination indemnities for those individuals. As attention turns to the next WHA and the election process for a new Director-General, the incoming leader will inherit a downsized organisation that has stronger female representation in its professional ranks in some regions, with more work to achieve parity in others, but that remains fundamentally fractured by severe budget constraints and glaring regional disparities. EXCLUSIVE: WHO Opens Nominations for Next Director General; Germany May Advance Former Merkel Aide, Helge Braun Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO/Human Resources – Prioritization and Realignment Process , WHO Human Resources Update, 31 December 2025. More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
WHA79 Must Make Universal Health Coverage the Compass for Global Health Architecture Reform 13/05/2026 Alhadi Khogali, Renee de Jong, Marionka Pohl, Rispah Walumbe & Arush Lal The World Health Assembly in Geneva. At this year’s 79th session, member states will review a proposed process for reforming the UN global health architecture. Leaders of the international NGOs, Save the Children, Seed Global Health, AMREF, and LSE Health make five asks to member states attending next week’s 79th World Health Assembly, as they take the first steps to launch a joint UN process for reforming the global health architecture. As governments prepare for the 79th World Health Assembly (WHA79), the stakes could not be higher. On the table is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reform the global health architecture (GHA) – triggered by the unprecedented cuts in foreign aid. But in the rush to redesign institutions and redirect funding flows, we risk losing the principle that should anchor every reform effort: universal health coverage (UHC), or the right of every person, everywhere, to access quality healthcare without financial hardship. At the 158th WHO Executive Board, Member States requested the WHO to convene a joint process on global health architecture reform. The World Health Assembly remains uniquely positioned to convene Member States, civil society, donors, and multilaterals around a more coherent reform agenda. The funding crisis is exposing deeper structural failures The year 2025 saw the largest annual decline in total official development assistance (ODA) on record, with a 23.1% reduction compared to 2024, bringing global aid back to levels seen in 2015, at the outset of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Preliminary data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) indicate that 2025 saw the largest annual decline in total official development assistance (ODA) on record, with a 23.1% reduction compared to 2024, bringing global aid back to levels seen in 2015 at the start of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. A further 5.8% decrease is anticipated for 2026. These cuts risk leading to an additional 22.6 million deaths by 2030, including 5.4 million children under the age of five. This downturn exposes structural weaknesses in systems that have long depended on external financing. For women, children, and adolescents, the health systems consequences are profound and immediate: disrupted maternal and newborn care, collapsing immunization and nutritional programmes, and reduced access to sexual and reproductive health services. In humanitarian settings, conflict-affected and displaced populations may soon have no safety net at all. Although it is said that “crises create opportunities,” the funding shock has exposed a long-recognized reality within global health: an architecture dependent on a small group of donors is inherently unstable and unable to deliver UHC. Preventing future crises will require new foundations: domestic financing models insulated from geopolitical shifts, institutional mandates that endure beyond individual funders, external partners aligning behind national priorities, and a global health architecture in which UHC is structurally embedded rather than dependent on external support. Central to this is a well-trained and adequately financed health workforce, without which neither health systems nor universal health coverage (UHC) can be achieved. UHC must guide global health reform Delivering Universal Healthcare requires countries to invest more in primary healthcare. The 79th World Health Assembly will discuss several major issues separately: UHC (item 12.4) and primary health care (PHC) (item 12.5), implementation of the Pandemic Accord (item 13.3), the strategy on Economics of Health for All (item 15.5), and global health architecture (GHA) reform (item 20.1). While this reflects standard WHA procedures, the risk is that these discussions proceed in parallel rather than as part of a coherent reform agenda. The appointment of Thailand and Andorra as co-facilitators for negotiations on the 2027 UN High-Level Meeting on UHC is politically significant. The 2027 UHC High Level Meeting (HLM) cannot become a separate process alongside GHA reform discussions. It should serve as one of the accountability mechanisms for reforms currently being debated in Geneva. Five priorities for WHO Member States at WHA79 A Nepali woman with her child in a sling on her back. Global funding crisis has hit women and children especially hard. For WHA79 to make a real impact, Member States must ensure their decisions translate into practical improvements for the people most affected by systemic failure. In the lead-up to the 2027 UN High Level Meeting on UHC, we call for five key changes: Anchor GHA reform in UHC and country ownership Global health reform must align existing initiatives to avoid fragmentation. The WHO-led GHA reform process can help build that cohesion and should align mandates, structures, and incentives behind country-led priorities. Reform efforts need to address power imbalances, align behind country priorities, support global public goods, and strengthen mutual accountability. Country-led governance must be the foundation of any reformed architecture. To ensure commitments translate into action, Member States should establish clear, time-bound implementation milestones and accountability mechanisms, including civil society and affected communities. The 2027 UHC HLM should explicitly track and build on GHA reform commitments made in Geneva. Invest in PHC and sustainable financing Governments should increase domestic public spending on health – including an additional 1% of GDP for primary health care – while strengthening public financial management and institutionalizing health financing coordination through country-led platforms. However, many low-income countries face severe debt distress, limiting their ability to expand fiscal space for health without broader reforms to debt architecture and progressive domestic taxation. Meeting UHC targets will require progressive financial reforms and renewed attention to the Economics of Health for All agenda. Financing must be directed toward essential services, health workers, and financial protection for vulnerable populations. Strengthen the health workforce for UHC Health workers underpin resilient health systems, pandemic preparedness, and climate adaptation. Member States should expand fiscal space for the health workforce through sustained domestic financing, while aligning donor investments behind national workforce strategies and employment plans. This includes equitable recruitment, training, fair remuneration, and protection of frontline workers, including community health workers, particularly in underserved settings. GHA reform and global financing mechanisms must support sustainable, country-led health systems rather than fragmented, short-term parallel programming. Institutionalize social participation and accountability Civil society engagement is critical to shaping policies that reflect the needs of affected populations. WHA77’s resolution on social participation should now be operationalized by embedding participation and transparency as core accountability mechanisms. WHO should establish regional and national consultative bodies bringing together Ministries of Health and Finance, donors, civil society, and affected communities to enable continuous dialogue and oversight. This should be supported by transparent reporting of health financing data, building on national health accounts and the Global Health Expenditure Database with open access to disaggregated data. Safeguard UHC in crisis and conflict settings GHA reform discussions cannot turn a blind eye to the humanitarian needs caused by conflicts and crises worldwide. Member States should mandate that GHA reform financing instruments – including the Pandemic Fund and IHR/Pandemic Agreement’s Coordinated Financing Mechanism – include ring-fenced allocations for essential health services in crisis-affected settings. In an era of rising polycrisis, protecting and advancing UHC reforms is not just morally necessary, but can also create momentum for health system reform. WHA79 is a pivotal juncture. It will be remembered either as the moment governments anchored health reforms in equity and the needs of the people they serve, or as another missed opportunity clouded by consensus language and procedural paralysis. Alhadi Khogali, is Senior Global Health Policy Advisor, Save the Children. Renee de Jong is Senior Advocacy Advisor, Save the Children. Marionka Pohl is Senior Director of Policy, Seed Global Health. Rispah Walumbe is Health of Strategy & Policy, Amref Health Africa. Arush Lal, is a Visiting Fellow at LSE Health, London School of Economics and Political Science. Image Credits: WHO, OECD, WHO, Lisa Marie Theck/Unsplash. Experts Call for Review of Global Outbreak Response as Passengers Leave Ship Hit By Hantavirus 12/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Passengers being evacuated from MV Hondius, the ship affected by a hantavirus outbreak, in Tenerife on Monday. All passengers were evacuated from the cruise ship, Hondius, by Monday night – and a Spaniard taken to a military hospital in Madrid to quarantine has become the 11th person from the ship to test positive for hantavirus. The evacuation was completed 10 days after the World Health Organization (WHO) was notified about the outbreak – and experts have called for a review of the global response to identify and fix “gaps and vulnerabilities in the system”. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), and Spanish President Pedro Sánchez, described the evacuation as a success and a show of international solidarity. Hondius captain Jan Dobrogowski, described the past few weeks as “extremely challenging”, as he and 24 crew, accompanied by a doctor and nurse, sailed on to Rotterdam. In a social media message on Monday, Dobrogowski thanked all passengers and staff for their “patience, discipline and the kindness they showed to each other” during the outbreak, particularly commending crew members for their “courage and selflessness”. The Hondius evacuation had not taken place in Cabo Verde as the island lacked the capacity to handle the operation, Tedros clarified at a media briefing on Tuesday. After docking in Cabo Verde for a couple of days, the ship sailed on to Tenerife in the Canary Islands, which is an autonomous community of Spain. Under the International Health Regulations (IHR), of which Spain is a party, “countries are required not to allow people to be stranded at sea when they have the capacity to manage the risk safely and responsibly”, said Tedros. ‘Inhumane and unnecessary’ Spanish President Pedro Sánchez addresses the media on the evacuation of passengers from the cruise ship hit by hantavirus. “There were some people around the world calling for the passengers to be contained on the ship for the full quarantine period. Our view was that would have been inhumane, and unnecessary,” he added. “We were convinced it was possible to disembark these passengers in a way that was safe for them and the people of Tenerife, and that was respectful of the human rights of the passengers and crew.” There were almost 150 people from 23 countries on the ship for weeks, “in what must have been a very frightening situation”, said Tedros, adding that “some of the passengers were facing mental breakdown” and “have the right to be treated with dignity and compassion”. Meanwhile, Sánchez told the media briefing: “This world doesn’t need more selfishness, nor more fear. What it needs is countries that show solidarity and want to move forward. He also appealed for “international cooperation and organisations like the WHO to be provided with the resources to realise their work”. More cases possible Three people travelling on the Hondius have died from hantavirus, the last of whom died on 2 May – the day that the WHO was first notified of the cluster of cases by the UK. South African scientists identified the virus in a British man flown to the country for treatment. “At the moment, there is no sign that we are seeing the start of a larger outbreak,” said Tedros. “But of course, the situation could change. And given the long incubation period of the virus, it’s possible we might see more cases in the coming weeks.” The recommended quarantine period is 42 days, which is how long the virus can take to manifest. Each country is responsible for monitoring the health of its citizens evacuated from the ship. Some, like Australia, will require them to remain in government quarantine facilities. Others, like the US, have stated that they will allow asymptomatic citizens to isolate at home. The WHO recommends that they “should be monitored actively at a specified quarantine facility or at home for 42 days from the last exposure, which is the 10 May, which takes us to the 21 June,” said Tedros. Is the system working? Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Helen Clark, co-chairs of The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, which evaluated the global response to COVID-19, said that the hantavirus outbreak has “tested the international system”, ” demonstrating its strengths and gaps. The pair, who previously described the WHO response to COVID-19 as “analogue” in a digital age, commended the international response to the hantaviris outbreak from 2 May. “The identification and communication of the hantavirus results from South Africa to the United Kingdom, its subsequent reporting to the WHO [on 2 May], and from WHO to countries worldwide demonstrated the importance of rapid application of the International Health Regulations,” they said. However, between the first death on board on 11 April and 2 May, “a series of events resulted in the growth of the hantavirus outbreak”, they noted. “There were risks to passengers onboard, to people interacting with them on remote islands, and following the 24 April disembarkation in St Helena, to those who contacted them on land, in the air, and in their next destinations,” said Sirleaf and Clark. “A review should determine whether a more precautionary approach could have been applied pursuant to the guidelines in the WHO Handbook for Managing Public Health Events on Board Ships. In a social media recording of ship’s captain Dobrogowski notifying passengers of the first death, he assures them that it was due to the man’s underlying conditions and posed no risk to other passengers. “While sadly deaths on ships do occur, as more people embark on adventure travel to remote locations, the need to protect travellers and those in contact with them from potential exposure to pathogens will increase,” they said. Review of outbreak planning The co-chairs appealed to governments to “review outbreak and pandemic planning to address vulnerabilities in the system, including in shipping, marine health and death-related protocols, port management, and protection of populations in remote locations”. They also appealed to leaders to follow “all relevant protocols for contact tracing, infection control, reporting, isolation and supportive care” to break the chain of hantavirus transmission. Despite negotiating a Pandemic Agreement since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO member states have been unable to agree on a Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) annex to set out how information about dangerous pathogens should be shared. A few weeks back, at the conclusion of the last round of PABS negotiations, Tedros called for urgency, “because the next pandemic is a matter of when, not if”. In September, the United Nations will convene a High-Level Meeting (HLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response (PPPR). Member states need to “ensure that the Political Declaration [adopted by the HLM] includes measurable commitments to close the gaps in PPPR, including in One Health, in financing – including for surge financing, equity, monitoring, and accountability”, said Sirleaf and Clark. Image Credits: BBC. Nurses Are Not a Cost to Health Systems. They Are the Power Holding Them Together. 12/05/2026 Howard Catton Fatmata Bamorie Turay (far left) and Elizabeth Tumoe, registered nurses look after newborns at the Princess Christian Maternity Hospital, in Freetown Sierra Leone Recently, I met with African nursing leaders who told me stories of nurses in countries such as Ghana and Nigeria earning the equivalent of only a few hundred US dollars a month – sometimes less than $300 – while being offered opportunities abroad with salaries many times higher. They described a growing crisis, where nurses are now leaving not yearly or monthly, but almost weekly. In some hospitals, managers only discover a nurse has accepted a post overseas when a resignation letter is pushed under the door. One nurse leader told me: “We are training nurses for export.” Migration itself is not the problem. Like anyone else, all nurses have the right to migrate and pursue opportunities. But many have been put in an impossible position, where they are also leaving behind families, colleagues and communities they care deeply about. And the countries they leave behind are losing the experienced nurses they have trained, often with little evidence of any meaningful reinvestment in return. This story is now being repeated across the world at an alarming scale. This is why, ahead of this month’s World Health Assembly (WHA), the International Council of Nurses (ICN) has written to WHO Member States recommending concrete actions to address the escalating international recruitment that is deepening workforce shortages in lower-income countries and threatening global health system sustainability. We are calling for coordinated co-investment by recruiting countries into nurse education, retention, and workforce and leadership development. But this is not just a story about migration and workforce shortages. This situation speaks to the profound global failure to understand the true power of nursing and the enormous cost of not investing in it. No nurses, no care A registered nurse vaccinates a child for polio in Beirut, Lebanon. The world faces a global shortage of 11 million health workers. More than half, 5.8 million, are nurses. That fact alone should be setting off alarm bells everywhere. No nurses means no healthcare. Nurses are the backbone of health systems. But right now, that backbone is showing signs of spinal instability. We are asking nurses to carry more and more: ageing populations, rising chronic disease, pandemics, conflict, climate-related crises, mental health pressures, and widening inequalities. Yet too often we continue to treat nursing as a cost to be contained instead of one of the smartest investments societies can make. That is why this year’s International Nurses Day report from ICN, Our Nurses. Our Future. Empowered Nurses Save Lives is so important. The report moves beyond outdated, one-dimensional images of nursing to show how nurses both save and improve lives at scale. For too long, nursing has too often been portrayed only through the language of compassion and sacrifice. Compassion matters enormously. But nursing is also power: economic power, clinical power, leadership power, workforce power, and social power. Our report sets out seven key nursing powers that are transforming health systems around the world. There is the Power of Trust: year after year nurses remain the most trusted profession globally, a foundation that becomes critical during health emergencies, public health crises, and vaccination campaigns. There is the Power of Practice: advanced nurse practitioners and specialist nurses are delivering high-quality care, reducing waiting times, improving outcomes, and expanding access, particularly in underserved communities. There is the Power of Numbers: nearly 30 million nurses worldwide represent the single largest health workforce on earth. Another of the most important powers is what we call the Power of Proximity. Nurses are where people are. In hospitals, clinics, schools, refugee camps, conflict zones, remote villages, and people’s homes. Nurses are often the first health professional a person sees and the last one they remember. They understand communities because they are part of those communities. That proximity saves lives. And when nurses are empowered to work to their full potential, the evidence is overwhelming. Expanding primary healthcare, where nurses are central, could save 60 million lives by 2030. Closing global health workforce gaps could prevent 189 million years of life lost and add US$1.1 trillion to the global economy. We can’t see these as “soft skills”. These are hard powers delivering hard outcomes. Investing for impact This year’s report builds on ICN’s wider work, including our 2024 report, Our Nurses. Our Future. The economic power of care. This has consistently shown that investing in nursing is not a cost to health systems and economies; it is one of the highest-return investments societies can make. Investing in health brings a $2–4 return per $1, while poor health reduces GDP by 15%. Yet despite all this evidence, many countries continue to underinvest in nursing. Exacerbating inequalities, high-income countries continue to underinvest in educating enough nurses domestically while increasingly relying on international recruitment to fill workforce gaps. This means many lower-income countries are effectively financing the health systems of wealthier nations through the loss of their trained nurses. Countries already facing severe shortages are losing experienced clinicians, educators, and leaders faster than they can replace them. At the same time, destination countries are making substantial savings. Training costs are being avoided. Workforce gaps are being filled quickly. Tax revenues are being generated by internationally educated nurses working in destination countries. But where is the reinvestment? Recent evidence submitted by ICN to a UK All-Party Parliamentary Group inquiry highlighted the enormous financial benefit that recruiting countries derive from this model. By recruiting abroad, data shows that the UK has saved £14 billion in health workforce training costs. Canada has saved an estimated C$1 billion. In effect, lower-income countries are subsidising the workforce costs of richer nations. Some high-income countries are effectively outsourcing responsibility for nurse education internationally while failing to adequately reinvest in the systems they depend upon. That is neither sustainable nor equitable. It risks creating exactly the perceptions many countries are now voicing openly: neo-colonialism, exploitation, and a growing erosion of global solidarity. Nurse Everlyne Esige examines an expectant mother at Vihiga County Referral Hospital in Kisumu, Kenya. WHA as a turning point This is why ICN has urged WHO Member States to use this year’s World Health Assembly as a turning point. In our letter, we call for practical and collective action to strengthen the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel. That includes coordinated co-investment by major recruiting countries into nurse education, employment, retention, leadership development, and workforce planning in source countries. We are proposing practical mechanisms: proportionate reinvestment linked to recruitment, directing a share of education savings and tax revenues into source-country health systems, debt relief linked to workforce investment, and even a global fund to strengthen fragile health workforces. Imagine the impact if high-income countries pooled resources and coordinated action instead of acting individually and reactively. The sums involved would not be insignificant. But neither are the savings currently being made. And the return on investment would be enormous: stronger health systems, greater global health security, reduced inequalities, and a more sustainable global workforce for everyone. Strengthen support for nursing At the same time, we are increasingly concerned that the global focus on nursing and the health workforce risks being diluted precisely when it should be intensifying. Last year, WHO Member States agreed to extend the Strategic Directions for Nursing and Midwifery and to accelerate progress. That word matters: accelerate. Yet we are still hearing concerns about cuts and reduced capacity at exactly the institutions and programmes designed to support the global health workforce. We understand the financial pressures that the WHO and many governments face. These are difficult decisions. But support for the very people who deliver healthcare, the foundations upon which health systems are built, must be the very last place to cut. Because ultimately, this conversation is about far more than staffing numbers. Nursing is also one of the largest majority-women workforces in the world. Investing in nursing means investing in women, in economic participation, in education, in families, and in reducing inequality. This International Nurses’ Day, we should celebrate nurses. But celebration alone is not enough. We must also recognise nurses’ power to change lives, strengthen economies, and transform societies and finally invest in that power for the sake of all our health. Howard Catton is CEO of the International Council of Nurses. Image Credits: World Bank/Flickr, Flickr – World Bank, International Council for Nurses, Brian Otieno /Global Fund, Studioregard.ch. WHO Sets Out Timetable and Ethical Guardrails for Election of New Director-General; but Loopholes Remain 11/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The proposed WHO Director-General election cycle for 2026–2027 lays out the path from the initial call for nominations in April 2026 to the final appointment in May 2027. As the campaign to elect a new World Health Organization Director-General officially opens, a timeline and guidelines for the process have been published by outgoing DG Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus for consideration by member states at next week’s World Health Assembly and the upcoming Executive Board. While these aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. With the call for nominations for the next World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General officially underway, the global health community is bracing for an intense, year-long campaign season. The upcoming 2026/2027 WHO DG election cycle marks a definitive departure from the previous race in 2021, which unfolded amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, featured an incumbent, and relied heavily on remote adaptations. The current contest expects a full return to “normal” physical in-person campaigning at regional committee sessions. However, a “new normal” is also unfolding under complex conditions, as the WHO grapples with a sharply polarized body of member states and a drastically reduced budget following the United States’ withdrawal last year, forcing it to implement massive, ongoing workforce reductions. To maintain fairness in this highly pressured, post-pandemic landscape, WHO has published a draft set of guidelines that would help create a firewall between candidates’ campaign activities and official organisation business – rules that will be particularly important for candidates that emerge from within WHO’s ranks. The Director-General’s recommendations on the election process, to be reviewed by Member States at the upcoming World Health Assembly and Executive Board, aim to reinforce established parameters from the previous election cycle. But enforcement still relies mostly on ‘good faith’ as compared to legally binding measures. WHO staff members who join the race will have to go on leave – but Regional Directors may be exempt Current WHO staff members entering the competition face the election’s strictest internal guardrails, according to the newly published guidelines. To prevent conflicts of interest between campaigning and official business, they will be immediately placed on annual leave. Once their annual leave allowance is exhausted, they would be placed on mandatory special leave with half pay leading up to the January 2027 Executive Board nominations. If they survive this initial selection process and make the final shortlist, their full salary would be restored for the remainder of the race. Yet, past precedent has explicitly exempted WHO Regional Directors from this rule – due to their status as WHO officials elected by member states. This means that potential candidates such as Hanan Balkhy, Regional Director of WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Region, or Hans Kluge, European Regional Director, could theoretically campaign while remaining in their positions – while other potential candidates such as Assistant Director-General Jeremy Farrar, would have to spend months on leave in order to compete, at a sharp inherent professional and financial disadvantage. Prospective candidates also must not conduct campaign activities as part of WHO regional committees’ official programmes. Reaffirming the standing rules, candidates will not be given speaking time during official meetings to promote their campaigns, and must instead restrict their promotional events strictly to the margins of these meetings. The guidelines also set forth a proposed timeline – following the Director-General’s invitation to member states to nominate candidates, which was delivered by letter to Geneva’s UN missions on 24 April. After nominations close on 24 September, contenders would participate in a live candidates’ forum, with a proposed date of November 18. The field would then be narrowed to up to three finalists during the 160th Executive Board session, preliminarily set for 25 January-2 February 2027. After a second interactive forum, tentatively set for 15 March 2027, member states will vote at the May 2027 World Health Assembly, with the winner taking office in August 2027. A gauntlet of public appearances Economy-class travel remains the standard for WHO candidates, underscoring the organisation’s push for financial equity. The framework further aims to create a gauntlet of public scrutiny for the election process. During the first live candidates’ forum, contenders will face structured 60-minute interviews. To ensure the question and answer process is not rigged, member states will drop colour-coded tokens into receptacles, which the Chair of the Executive Board will draw by lot to determine exactly who gets the opportunity to ask the candidates a question. To curb the potential for opaque backroom deals, the WHO relies on a Code of Conduct to oversee activities on the physical campaign trail. Originally adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2013 and most recently amended in November 2020, this framework was specifically designed to promote an open, fair, equitable, and transparent election process. Additionally, previous World Health Assembly decisions and WHO Secretariat practices guarantee financial travel support. Specifically, this involves provision of an economy-class airline ticket and a daily per diem for every candidate participating in both of the two live public forums that will be sponsored by WHO, and, upon request, for their interviews at the 160th session of the Executive Board. This logistical support aims to ensure prospective leaders from lower-income regions receive a genuinely fair opportunity without relying entirely on massive domestic or private funding. Guardrails built on ‘good faith’ – no binding enforcement Outgoing Director-General Tedros’s 2022 pandemic-era election gives way to a high-stakes, in-person 2026 WHO DG election cycle. While these guidelines aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. A closer reading of the WHO’s rulebook reveals that the Code of Conduct is not legally binding. The framework openly acknowledges it is merely a “political understanding” that recommends “desirable behaviour”, relying on the good faith of candidates and member states to honour its contents. This lack of binding enforcement mechanisms leaves critical transparency measures vulnerable. For instance, candidates and member states are instructed to promptly disclose all campaign activities and funding sources to the Secretariat for public posting. But this system relies on self-reporting without independent audits. Furthermore, while the regulations state that campaign-related travel should be “limited” to prevent financial inequality, and that using official technical meetings as a guise for electoral promotion “should be avoided”, these vague parameters leave vast room for interpretation. Ultimately, as the mandate of Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus approaches its expiration after the end of the upcoming election cycle, the focus will inevitably shift from the rules of the campaign trail to the monumental task awaiting his successor. Whoever emerges victorious from this highly scrutinised election must not only navigate deep geopolitical divides and restore internal trust, but also prepare the global health body for future crises. Want to Become the Next WHO Director-General? Get in Line Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, Alexander Schimmeck via unsplash. Hantavirus: Experts Question Claim that Only ‘Symptomatic’ People are Infectious 11/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Evacuation of passengers from MV Hondius, the ship hit by hantavirus, continue. Hantavirus has been confirmed in a French citizen evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship on Sunday, while two tests on a US citizen turned up one “weakly positive” and one negative result – but it is still unclear how the virus is being transmitted. The evacuation of passengers from the ship, now docked in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, continued on Monday under the supervision of health officials from Spain, assisted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and several other European countries. Passengers were only allowed to disembark to board chartered flights arranged by their countries. However, countries differ on how they plan to treat citizens who do not test positive for the virus right away, given that it can take up to 42 days before symptoms appear. Quarantine Spain, the UK, and Australia will require citizens to quarantine in designated government facilities for varying periods. The six Australians will spend up to 42 days in a government quarantine facility while undergoing PCR testing, according to Health Minister Mark Butler. US health officials – many vehemently against lockdown measures to contain COVID-19 – have suggested that asymptomatic citizens will be allowed to return home. Sixteen of the 18 US evacuated passengers are currently being assessed in a regional emerging special pathogen (RESPTC) treatment centre in Omaha, Nebraska. Two others, including the person with the weakly positive test, are being assessed in Atlanta. John Knox, deputy secretary for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), told a media briefing on Monday afternoon that asymptomatic passengers may be able to complete 42 days of isolation at home if they remain without symptoms and have the necessary support. On Sunday, Dr Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told CNN that asymptomatic passengers could not spread the virus. However, Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen told Monday’s media briefing that “no one who poses a risk to public health is walking out the front door”. How close is ‘close contact’? Although most transmission is from rats, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus, the hantavirus species affecting the ship, has previously been documented in Argentina in 2018. Genome sequencing of the current outbreak has shown it to be 99% similar to that outbreak, where the index patient attended a concert, subsequently infecting 34 people. BREAKING: First sequencing of the Hantavirus from the outbreak. -99% identical to a June 2018 case from a patient in Argentina -10.4 SNV/year mutation rate – The Andes genome is about 12 kb across three RNA segments. At 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻³ substitutions/site/year, that translates… pic.twitter.com/FleaIMmORV — Dr Steven Quay (@quay_dr) May 11, 2026 Human-to-human transmission is possible with “close contact”, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, there is some debate about the nature of this “close contact”. Professor Joseph Allen from Harvard’s Department of Exposure Assessment Science, said in a weekend TV interview that a doctor on board the ship had told him that some infected passengers had little interaction with the first three patients identified with the virus. These are a Dutch couple (now deceased), and a British man, currently making a slow recovery in South Africa. The International Hantavirus Society and members of the international hantavirus research and clinical community have also warned against various “simplified conclusions”, including that the Andes virus (ANDV) has “minimal or negligible human-to-human transmission potential” and that only symptomatic patients are infectious. Are asymptomatic people infectious? The experts warned in a statement last week that “the precise timing of infectiousness remains incompletely defined”. “While symptomatic patients are likely to represent the highest-risk group, available outbreak reconstructions do not support overly categorical statements that transmission can occur only after clear symptom onset,” they said. “Transmission potential during prodromal, early symptomatic or minimally symptomatic phases, should be considered when designing contact tracing, testing and quarantine strategies.” They stated that this is “particularly relevant in closed settings such as a cruise vessel where ANDV-exposed individuals may still be within the incubation period”. Infectious disease specialist Dr Jeremy Faust, writing in his substack, on Monday said that “it remains possible that an animal on the ship spread [Andes virus] to multiple people, or that the infected people visited the same place on land where the virus was waiting for them”. But, Faustus added, “given that human-to-human superspreader events of the Andes hantavirus have been documented, I’d bet that human-to-human transmission did occur here”, adding that the ship’s doctor also got infected. WHO Gender Parity Dips Amidst Staff Cuts, but Women Advance Slightly in Professional Ranks 10/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen WHO professional gender parity has risen as more men depart, even as overall staff representation slightly declines. A dramatically shrinking World Health Organization (WHO) has seen a slight decline in gender parity amidst restructuring. Strict recruitment policies and targeted job cuts have actively boosted female representation within the organisation’s professional ranks. But deep regional disparities in gender representation remain unresolved, with men holding the overwhelming majority of staff posts in the African, South-East Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Amid sweeping job cuts triggered by the US withdrawal and a massive budget crisis, the World Health Organization (WHO) claims that “gender parity has been achieved” among its remaining 8,569 staff members in the Director General’s annual report, for WHO member states at next week’s World Health Assembly. However, WHO human resources data for 2025, released on 1 May, reveals this to be slightly misleading: women actually lost their 50.1% majority from 2024, dropping slightly to 49.7% by the end of 2025. Despite this broader decline, progress was made within the professional and higher categories, where female representation successfully rose from 47.9% in December 2024 to 48.5% by December 2025. While the absolute numbers for both genders shrank during the restructuring phase, a larger number of male professionals left the organisation than women (105 men compared to 67 women). This progress is not solely the result of the ongoing downsizing but reflects an intentional, long-term policy shift: targeted recruitment measures introduced in 2023 to achieve the gender parity mandate that job openings must be reopened if the applicant pool is less than 30% female or if shortlists lack at least two women. These strict policies, which remain in place until parity is reached in under-represented grades, helped drive the percentage of female applicants up from 31.4% to 32.1% over the past four years. Gender parity by region: a tale of two organisations WHO regional gender disparities persist. While the WHO’s official designation points to overall gender parity on a global scale, examining the workforce data for 2025 reveals a starkly divided WHO. True gender balance remains elusive, with distinct female-majority and male-majority regions painting a complex picture of international representation. The Western Pacific Region currently boasts the highest overall female representation at 65.2%, followed closely by headquarters and global shared services at 63.5%, and the European Region at 59.2%. Conversely, male staff retain a dominant majority in the African Region (65.5% male), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (59.2% male), and the South-East Asia Region (57.4% male). However, a more in-depth look at the data reveals that majorities are characterised by a concentration of women in administrative and clerical roles. In both headquarters and the Western Pacific, the high overall female representation is heavily driven by the ‘general service’ category, where women make up 79.5% and 74.3% of the staff, respectively. In contrast, the male-dominated regions exhibit male majorities across nearly all job categories: in the African Region, for example, men hold 67.8% of the general service roles and dominate the professional ranks. Data on the WHO Region of the Americas, which has its own governing body, budget and HR processes, is not included in the global HR report. Uneven gains in field and senior leadership WHO’s glass ceiling remains intact as female representation thins significantly at the highest director levels. These regional disparities become even more pronounced when examining crucial leadership roles. While women are increasingly securing top diplomatic and operational roles, these leadership gains remain highly uneven across the globe. The South-East Asia Region leads the agency in field leadership, successfully achieving exact gender parity, with 50% of its country offices now headed by women. In stark contrast, female leadership in the field lags severely in other regions. In the African Region, only 25.5% of country offices are headed by women, and the Eastern Mediterranean Region reports a similarly low 26.3%. A similar divide exists within the highest echelons of senior management at the D1 and D2 grades – the WHO’s top director-level roles. The European Region has the highest percentage of women in these senior leadership positions at 40%, followed by Headquarters at 36%. Meanwhile, the lowest senior female representation is found in the South-East Asia Region (23.1%) and the African Region (24.1%). In the DG’s annual human resources report, the organisation openly acknowledges that the greatest remaining gaps in global gender parity exist exactly at this glass ceiling: the uppermost D2 (director) level is only 24.5% female, and the P6/D1 (senior leadership) levels stand at 37.3% female. Staff decline tracks toward June projections WHO aims to slash nearly 25% of its workforce by June 2026, shifting the focus to country offices. The DG’s human resources report also confirms the scale of the ongoing departures. By December 2025, the WHO counted a steep 9.4% decrease in regular staff members, down to 8,569 from the 9,463 staff recorded at the end of 2024, or the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. The data on end-of-year departures indicate that the health agency is well on its way to reaching its previously announced target of slashing nearly 25% of its global workforce by mid-2026. According to the latest projections before WHA, only 7,283 regular WHO staff will remain by 30 June, about 23% less than the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. By 30 June 2026, WHO’s global staff count is projected to decline to 7283 ‒ roughly 23% less than 1 January 2025 (9401). Meanwhile, the number of non-staff affiliates decreased by 23% in 2025, down to 5,844 full-time equivalent positions across three non-staff categories as compared to 7,582 in 2024. These categories include professionals and general service staff working under “Agreement for Performance of Work” contracts for specific, time-limited tasks, “Consultants” for more ongoing roles, and Special Service Agreements (SSAs), a type of non-staff category common in Africa and South-East Asia. Non-staff ‘affiliates’ in 2025 as compared to 2024 in terms of numbers of contracts and full-time equivalent posts. SSA positions are typically full-time. Headquarters is bearing the heaviest burden of the realignment. Official projections indicate that Geneva and Global Shared Services will shrink by 29% by June 2026, losing over 800 staff members. Meanwhile, the proportion of personnel based in country offices has increased to nearly 46% of the remaining global workforce. This deliberate geographic shift reflects a strategic institutional goal to build a significantly leaner administrative headquarters while vigorously protecting country-level health delivery. “The development aid era is over. WHO Geneva needs to be much smaller,” as diplomatic sources who spoke to Health Policy Watch framed it. Financing the restructuring The missing US flag at WHO headquarters – Washington’s departure triggered a deep budget crisis and workforce restructuring, which is still ongoing. The WHO currently faces a funding gap of approximately $630 million, representing roughly 15% of its $4.2 billion base budget for the upcoming 2026-2027 biennium. Officials have managed to shrink this deficit through aggressive reprioritisation, extensive staff cuts, and a 50% reduction in travel costs. This represents a massive reduction from the initial projected deficit of $1.7 billion, which was catalysed by the geopolitical earthquake of the US withdrawal from the global health agency, announced in January 2025 when President Donald Trump took office. To finance the sweeping realignment, the 78th World Health Assembly in 2025 authorised the temporary use of up to $410 million from Programme Support Costs reserve funds to cover unavoidable indemnities and salary gaps. Yet, the organisation has successfully minimised its reliance on these reserves. To date, the projected utilisation of the reserve funds stands at $206.2 million, roughly half of the authorised amount, according to the Human Resources report focusing on “WHO’s prioritisation and realignment process.” Senior management says they achieved this by prioritising “preventive measures” to manage the downsizing. Approximately 51% of all global separations were managed through natural attrition, the expiration of fixed-term contracts, and a voluntary early retirement package, completely sparing the agency from paying out costly forced termination indemnities for those individuals. As attention turns to the next WHA and the election process for a new Director-General, the incoming leader will inherit a downsized organisation that has stronger female representation in its professional ranks in some regions, with more work to achieve parity in others, but that remains fundamentally fractured by severe budget constraints and glaring regional disparities. EXCLUSIVE: WHO Opens Nominations for Next Director General; Germany May Advance Former Merkel Aide, Helge Braun Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO/Human Resources – Prioritization and Realignment Process , WHO Human Resources Update, 31 December 2025. More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Experts Call for Review of Global Outbreak Response as Passengers Leave Ship Hit By Hantavirus 12/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Passengers being evacuated from MV Hondius, the ship affected by a hantavirus outbreak, in Tenerife on Monday. All passengers were evacuated from the cruise ship, Hondius, by Monday night – and a Spaniard taken to a military hospital in Madrid to quarantine has become the 11th person from the ship to test positive for hantavirus. The evacuation was completed 10 days after the World Health Organization (WHO) was notified about the outbreak – and experts have called for a review of the global response to identify and fix “gaps and vulnerabilities in the system”. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), and Spanish President Pedro Sánchez, described the evacuation as a success and a show of international solidarity. Hondius captain Jan Dobrogowski, described the past few weeks as “extremely challenging”, as he and 24 crew, accompanied by a doctor and nurse, sailed on to Rotterdam. In a social media message on Monday, Dobrogowski thanked all passengers and staff for their “patience, discipline and the kindness they showed to each other” during the outbreak, particularly commending crew members for their “courage and selflessness”. The Hondius evacuation had not taken place in Cabo Verde as the island lacked the capacity to handle the operation, Tedros clarified at a media briefing on Tuesday. After docking in Cabo Verde for a couple of days, the ship sailed on to Tenerife in the Canary Islands, which is an autonomous community of Spain. Under the International Health Regulations (IHR), of which Spain is a party, “countries are required not to allow people to be stranded at sea when they have the capacity to manage the risk safely and responsibly”, said Tedros. ‘Inhumane and unnecessary’ Spanish President Pedro Sánchez addresses the media on the evacuation of passengers from the cruise ship hit by hantavirus. “There were some people around the world calling for the passengers to be contained on the ship for the full quarantine period. Our view was that would have been inhumane, and unnecessary,” he added. “We were convinced it was possible to disembark these passengers in a way that was safe for them and the people of Tenerife, and that was respectful of the human rights of the passengers and crew.” There were almost 150 people from 23 countries on the ship for weeks, “in what must have been a very frightening situation”, said Tedros, adding that “some of the passengers were facing mental breakdown” and “have the right to be treated with dignity and compassion”. Meanwhile, Sánchez told the media briefing: “This world doesn’t need more selfishness, nor more fear. What it needs is countries that show solidarity and want to move forward. He also appealed for “international cooperation and organisations like the WHO to be provided with the resources to realise their work”. More cases possible Three people travelling on the Hondius have died from hantavirus, the last of whom died on 2 May – the day that the WHO was first notified of the cluster of cases by the UK. South African scientists identified the virus in a British man flown to the country for treatment. “At the moment, there is no sign that we are seeing the start of a larger outbreak,” said Tedros. “But of course, the situation could change. And given the long incubation period of the virus, it’s possible we might see more cases in the coming weeks.” The recommended quarantine period is 42 days, which is how long the virus can take to manifest. Each country is responsible for monitoring the health of its citizens evacuated from the ship. Some, like Australia, will require them to remain in government quarantine facilities. Others, like the US, have stated that they will allow asymptomatic citizens to isolate at home. The WHO recommends that they “should be monitored actively at a specified quarantine facility or at home for 42 days from the last exposure, which is the 10 May, which takes us to the 21 June,” said Tedros. Is the system working? Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Helen Clark, co-chairs of The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, which evaluated the global response to COVID-19, said that the hantavirus outbreak has “tested the international system”, ” demonstrating its strengths and gaps. The pair, who previously described the WHO response to COVID-19 as “analogue” in a digital age, commended the international response to the hantaviris outbreak from 2 May. “The identification and communication of the hantavirus results from South Africa to the United Kingdom, its subsequent reporting to the WHO [on 2 May], and from WHO to countries worldwide demonstrated the importance of rapid application of the International Health Regulations,” they said. However, between the first death on board on 11 April and 2 May, “a series of events resulted in the growth of the hantavirus outbreak”, they noted. “There were risks to passengers onboard, to people interacting with them on remote islands, and following the 24 April disembarkation in St Helena, to those who contacted them on land, in the air, and in their next destinations,” said Sirleaf and Clark. “A review should determine whether a more precautionary approach could have been applied pursuant to the guidelines in the WHO Handbook for Managing Public Health Events on Board Ships. In a social media recording of ship’s captain Dobrogowski notifying passengers of the first death, he assures them that it was due to the man’s underlying conditions and posed no risk to other passengers. “While sadly deaths on ships do occur, as more people embark on adventure travel to remote locations, the need to protect travellers and those in contact with them from potential exposure to pathogens will increase,” they said. Review of outbreak planning The co-chairs appealed to governments to “review outbreak and pandemic planning to address vulnerabilities in the system, including in shipping, marine health and death-related protocols, port management, and protection of populations in remote locations”. They also appealed to leaders to follow “all relevant protocols for contact tracing, infection control, reporting, isolation and supportive care” to break the chain of hantavirus transmission. Despite negotiating a Pandemic Agreement since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO member states have been unable to agree on a Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) annex to set out how information about dangerous pathogens should be shared. A few weeks back, at the conclusion of the last round of PABS negotiations, Tedros called for urgency, “because the next pandemic is a matter of when, not if”. In September, the United Nations will convene a High-Level Meeting (HLM) on Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response (PPPR). Member states need to “ensure that the Political Declaration [adopted by the HLM] includes measurable commitments to close the gaps in PPPR, including in One Health, in financing – including for surge financing, equity, monitoring, and accountability”, said Sirleaf and Clark. Image Credits: BBC. Nurses Are Not a Cost to Health Systems. They Are the Power Holding Them Together. 12/05/2026 Howard Catton Fatmata Bamorie Turay (far left) and Elizabeth Tumoe, registered nurses look after newborns at the Princess Christian Maternity Hospital, in Freetown Sierra Leone Recently, I met with African nursing leaders who told me stories of nurses in countries such as Ghana and Nigeria earning the equivalent of only a few hundred US dollars a month – sometimes less than $300 – while being offered opportunities abroad with salaries many times higher. They described a growing crisis, where nurses are now leaving not yearly or monthly, but almost weekly. In some hospitals, managers only discover a nurse has accepted a post overseas when a resignation letter is pushed under the door. One nurse leader told me: “We are training nurses for export.” Migration itself is not the problem. Like anyone else, all nurses have the right to migrate and pursue opportunities. But many have been put in an impossible position, where they are also leaving behind families, colleagues and communities they care deeply about. And the countries they leave behind are losing the experienced nurses they have trained, often with little evidence of any meaningful reinvestment in return. This story is now being repeated across the world at an alarming scale. This is why, ahead of this month’s World Health Assembly (WHA), the International Council of Nurses (ICN) has written to WHO Member States recommending concrete actions to address the escalating international recruitment that is deepening workforce shortages in lower-income countries and threatening global health system sustainability. We are calling for coordinated co-investment by recruiting countries into nurse education, retention, and workforce and leadership development. But this is not just a story about migration and workforce shortages. This situation speaks to the profound global failure to understand the true power of nursing and the enormous cost of not investing in it. No nurses, no care A registered nurse vaccinates a child for polio in Beirut, Lebanon. The world faces a global shortage of 11 million health workers. More than half, 5.8 million, are nurses. That fact alone should be setting off alarm bells everywhere. No nurses means no healthcare. Nurses are the backbone of health systems. But right now, that backbone is showing signs of spinal instability. We are asking nurses to carry more and more: ageing populations, rising chronic disease, pandemics, conflict, climate-related crises, mental health pressures, and widening inequalities. Yet too often we continue to treat nursing as a cost to be contained instead of one of the smartest investments societies can make. That is why this year’s International Nurses Day report from ICN, Our Nurses. Our Future. Empowered Nurses Save Lives is so important. The report moves beyond outdated, one-dimensional images of nursing to show how nurses both save and improve lives at scale. For too long, nursing has too often been portrayed only through the language of compassion and sacrifice. Compassion matters enormously. But nursing is also power: economic power, clinical power, leadership power, workforce power, and social power. Our report sets out seven key nursing powers that are transforming health systems around the world. There is the Power of Trust: year after year nurses remain the most trusted profession globally, a foundation that becomes critical during health emergencies, public health crises, and vaccination campaigns. There is the Power of Practice: advanced nurse practitioners and specialist nurses are delivering high-quality care, reducing waiting times, improving outcomes, and expanding access, particularly in underserved communities. There is the Power of Numbers: nearly 30 million nurses worldwide represent the single largest health workforce on earth. Another of the most important powers is what we call the Power of Proximity. Nurses are where people are. In hospitals, clinics, schools, refugee camps, conflict zones, remote villages, and people’s homes. Nurses are often the first health professional a person sees and the last one they remember. They understand communities because they are part of those communities. That proximity saves lives. And when nurses are empowered to work to their full potential, the evidence is overwhelming. Expanding primary healthcare, where nurses are central, could save 60 million lives by 2030. Closing global health workforce gaps could prevent 189 million years of life lost and add US$1.1 trillion to the global economy. We can’t see these as “soft skills”. These are hard powers delivering hard outcomes. Investing for impact This year’s report builds on ICN’s wider work, including our 2024 report, Our Nurses. Our Future. The economic power of care. This has consistently shown that investing in nursing is not a cost to health systems and economies; it is one of the highest-return investments societies can make. Investing in health brings a $2–4 return per $1, while poor health reduces GDP by 15%. Yet despite all this evidence, many countries continue to underinvest in nursing. Exacerbating inequalities, high-income countries continue to underinvest in educating enough nurses domestically while increasingly relying on international recruitment to fill workforce gaps. This means many lower-income countries are effectively financing the health systems of wealthier nations through the loss of their trained nurses. Countries already facing severe shortages are losing experienced clinicians, educators, and leaders faster than they can replace them. At the same time, destination countries are making substantial savings. Training costs are being avoided. Workforce gaps are being filled quickly. Tax revenues are being generated by internationally educated nurses working in destination countries. But where is the reinvestment? Recent evidence submitted by ICN to a UK All-Party Parliamentary Group inquiry highlighted the enormous financial benefit that recruiting countries derive from this model. By recruiting abroad, data shows that the UK has saved £14 billion in health workforce training costs. Canada has saved an estimated C$1 billion. In effect, lower-income countries are subsidising the workforce costs of richer nations. Some high-income countries are effectively outsourcing responsibility for nurse education internationally while failing to adequately reinvest in the systems they depend upon. That is neither sustainable nor equitable. It risks creating exactly the perceptions many countries are now voicing openly: neo-colonialism, exploitation, and a growing erosion of global solidarity. Nurse Everlyne Esige examines an expectant mother at Vihiga County Referral Hospital in Kisumu, Kenya. WHA as a turning point This is why ICN has urged WHO Member States to use this year’s World Health Assembly as a turning point. In our letter, we call for practical and collective action to strengthen the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel. That includes coordinated co-investment by major recruiting countries into nurse education, employment, retention, leadership development, and workforce planning in source countries. We are proposing practical mechanisms: proportionate reinvestment linked to recruitment, directing a share of education savings and tax revenues into source-country health systems, debt relief linked to workforce investment, and even a global fund to strengthen fragile health workforces. Imagine the impact if high-income countries pooled resources and coordinated action instead of acting individually and reactively. The sums involved would not be insignificant. But neither are the savings currently being made. And the return on investment would be enormous: stronger health systems, greater global health security, reduced inequalities, and a more sustainable global workforce for everyone. Strengthen support for nursing At the same time, we are increasingly concerned that the global focus on nursing and the health workforce risks being diluted precisely when it should be intensifying. Last year, WHO Member States agreed to extend the Strategic Directions for Nursing and Midwifery and to accelerate progress. That word matters: accelerate. Yet we are still hearing concerns about cuts and reduced capacity at exactly the institutions and programmes designed to support the global health workforce. We understand the financial pressures that the WHO and many governments face. These are difficult decisions. But support for the very people who deliver healthcare, the foundations upon which health systems are built, must be the very last place to cut. Because ultimately, this conversation is about far more than staffing numbers. Nursing is also one of the largest majority-women workforces in the world. Investing in nursing means investing in women, in economic participation, in education, in families, and in reducing inequality. This International Nurses’ Day, we should celebrate nurses. But celebration alone is not enough. We must also recognise nurses’ power to change lives, strengthen economies, and transform societies and finally invest in that power for the sake of all our health. Howard Catton is CEO of the International Council of Nurses. Image Credits: World Bank/Flickr, Flickr – World Bank, International Council for Nurses, Brian Otieno /Global Fund, Studioregard.ch. WHO Sets Out Timetable and Ethical Guardrails for Election of New Director-General; but Loopholes Remain 11/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The proposed WHO Director-General election cycle for 2026–2027 lays out the path from the initial call for nominations in April 2026 to the final appointment in May 2027. As the campaign to elect a new World Health Organization Director-General officially opens, a timeline and guidelines for the process have been published by outgoing DG Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus for consideration by member states at next week’s World Health Assembly and the upcoming Executive Board. While these aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. With the call for nominations for the next World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General officially underway, the global health community is bracing for an intense, year-long campaign season. The upcoming 2026/2027 WHO DG election cycle marks a definitive departure from the previous race in 2021, which unfolded amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, featured an incumbent, and relied heavily on remote adaptations. The current contest expects a full return to “normal” physical in-person campaigning at regional committee sessions. However, a “new normal” is also unfolding under complex conditions, as the WHO grapples with a sharply polarized body of member states and a drastically reduced budget following the United States’ withdrawal last year, forcing it to implement massive, ongoing workforce reductions. To maintain fairness in this highly pressured, post-pandemic landscape, WHO has published a draft set of guidelines that would help create a firewall between candidates’ campaign activities and official organisation business – rules that will be particularly important for candidates that emerge from within WHO’s ranks. The Director-General’s recommendations on the election process, to be reviewed by Member States at the upcoming World Health Assembly and Executive Board, aim to reinforce established parameters from the previous election cycle. But enforcement still relies mostly on ‘good faith’ as compared to legally binding measures. WHO staff members who join the race will have to go on leave – but Regional Directors may be exempt Current WHO staff members entering the competition face the election’s strictest internal guardrails, according to the newly published guidelines. To prevent conflicts of interest between campaigning and official business, they will be immediately placed on annual leave. Once their annual leave allowance is exhausted, they would be placed on mandatory special leave with half pay leading up to the January 2027 Executive Board nominations. If they survive this initial selection process and make the final shortlist, their full salary would be restored for the remainder of the race. Yet, past precedent has explicitly exempted WHO Regional Directors from this rule – due to their status as WHO officials elected by member states. This means that potential candidates such as Hanan Balkhy, Regional Director of WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Region, or Hans Kluge, European Regional Director, could theoretically campaign while remaining in their positions – while other potential candidates such as Assistant Director-General Jeremy Farrar, would have to spend months on leave in order to compete, at a sharp inherent professional and financial disadvantage. Prospective candidates also must not conduct campaign activities as part of WHO regional committees’ official programmes. Reaffirming the standing rules, candidates will not be given speaking time during official meetings to promote their campaigns, and must instead restrict their promotional events strictly to the margins of these meetings. The guidelines also set forth a proposed timeline – following the Director-General’s invitation to member states to nominate candidates, which was delivered by letter to Geneva’s UN missions on 24 April. After nominations close on 24 September, contenders would participate in a live candidates’ forum, with a proposed date of November 18. The field would then be narrowed to up to three finalists during the 160th Executive Board session, preliminarily set for 25 January-2 February 2027. After a second interactive forum, tentatively set for 15 March 2027, member states will vote at the May 2027 World Health Assembly, with the winner taking office in August 2027. A gauntlet of public appearances Economy-class travel remains the standard for WHO candidates, underscoring the organisation’s push for financial equity. The framework further aims to create a gauntlet of public scrutiny for the election process. During the first live candidates’ forum, contenders will face structured 60-minute interviews. To ensure the question and answer process is not rigged, member states will drop colour-coded tokens into receptacles, which the Chair of the Executive Board will draw by lot to determine exactly who gets the opportunity to ask the candidates a question. To curb the potential for opaque backroom deals, the WHO relies on a Code of Conduct to oversee activities on the physical campaign trail. Originally adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2013 and most recently amended in November 2020, this framework was specifically designed to promote an open, fair, equitable, and transparent election process. Additionally, previous World Health Assembly decisions and WHO Secretariat practices guarantee financial travel support. Specifically, this involves provision of an economy-class airline ticket and a daily per diem for every candidate participating in both of the two live public forums that will be sponsored by WHO, and, upon request, for their interviews at the 160th session of the Executive Board. This logistical support aims to ensure prospective leaders from lower-income regions receive a genuinely fair opportunity without relying entirely on massive domestic or private funding. Guardrails built on ‘good faith’ – no binding enforcement Outgoing Director-General Tedros’s 2022 pandemic-era election gives way to a high-stakes, in-person 2026 WHO DG election cycle. While these guidelines aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. A closer reading of the WHO’s rulebook reveals that the Code of Conduct is not legally binding. The framework openly acknowledges it is merely a “political understanding” that recommends “desirable behaviour”, relying on the good faith of candidates and member states to honour its contents. This lack of binding enforcement mechanisms leaves critical transparency measures vulnerable. For instance, candidates and member states are instructed to promptly disclose all campaign activities and funding sources to the Secretariat for public posting. But this system relies on self-reporting without independent audits. Furthermore, while the regulations state that campaign-related travel should be “limited” to prevent financial inequality, and that using official technical meetings as a guise for electoral promotion “should be avoided”, these vague parameters leave vast room for interpretation. Ultimately, as the mandate of Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus approaches its expiration after the end of the upcoming election cycle, the focus will inevitably shift from the rules of the campaign trail to the monumental task awaiting his successor. Whoever emerges victorious from this highly scrutinised election must not only navigate deep geopolitical divides and restore internal trust, but also prepare the global health body for future crises. Want to Become the Next WHO Director-General? Get in Line Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, Alexander Schimmeck via unsplash. Hantavirus: Experts Question Claim that Only ‘Symptomatic’ People are Infectious 11/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Evacuation of passengers from MV Hondius, the ship hit by hantavirus, continue. Hantavirus has been confirmed in a French citizen evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship on Sunday, while two tests on a US citizen turned up one “weakly positive” and one negative result – but it is still unclear how the virus is being transmitted. The evacuation of passengers from the ship, now docked in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, continued on Monday under the supervision of health officials from Spain, assisted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and several other European countries. Passengers were only allowed to disembark to board chartered flights arranged by their countries. However, countries differ on how they plan to treat citizens who do not test positive for the virus right away, given that it can take up to 42 days before symptoms appear. Quarantine Spain, the UK, and Australia will require citizens to quarantine in designated government facilities for varying periods. The six Australians will spend up to 42 days in a government quarantine facility while undergoing PCR testing, according to Health Minister Mark Butler. US health officials – many vehemently against lockdown measures to contain COVID-19 – have suggested that asymptomatic citizens will be allowed to return home. Sixteen of the 18 US evacuated passengers are currently being assessed in a regional emerging special pathogen (RESPTC) treatment centre in Omaha, Nebraska. Two others, including the person with the weakly positive test, are being assessed in Atlanta. John Knox, deputy secretary for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), told a media briefing on Monday afternoon that asymptomatic passengers may be able to complete 42 days of isolation at home if they remain without symptoms and have the necessary support. On Sunday, Dr Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told CNN that asymptomatic passengers could not spread the virus. However, Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen told Monday’s media briefing that “no one who poses a risk to public health is walking out the front door”. How close is ‘close contact’? Although most transmission is from rats, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus, the hantavirus species affecting the ship, has previously been documented in Argentina in 2018. Genome sequencing of the current outbreak has shown it to be 99% similar to that outbreak, where the index patient attended a concert, subsequently infecting 34 people. BREAKING: First sequencing of the Hantavirus from the outbreak. -99% identical to a June 2018 case from a patient in Argentina -10.4 SNV/year mutation rate – The Andes genome is about 12 kb across three RNA segments. At 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻³ substitutions/site/year, that translates… pic.twitter.com/FleaIMmORV — Dr Steven Quay (@quay_dr) May 11, 2026 Human-to-human transmission is possible with “close contact”, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, there is some debate about the nature of this “close contact”. Professor Joseph Allen from Harvard’s Department of Exposure Assessment Science, said in a weekend TV interview that a doctor on board the ship had told him that some infected passengers had little interaction with the first three patients identified with the virus. These are a Dutch couple (now deceased), and a British man, currently making a slow recovery in South Africa. The International Hantavirus Society and members of the international hantavirus research and clinical community have also warned against various “simplified conclusions”, including that the Andes virus (ANDV) has “minimal or negligible human-to-human transmission potential” and that only symptomatic patients are infectious. Are asymptomatic people infectious? The experts warned in a statement last week that “the precise timing of infectiousness remains incompletely defined”. “While symptomatic patients are likely to represent the highest-risk group, available outbreak reconstructions do not support overly categorical statements that transmission can occur only after clear symptom onset,” they said. “Transmission potential during prodromal, early symptomatic or minimally symptomatic phases, should be considered when designing contact tracing, testing and quarantine strategies.” They stated that this is “particularly relevant in closed settings such as a cruise vessel where ANDV-exposed individuals may still be within the incubation period”. Infectious disease specialist Dr Jeremy Faust, writing in his substack, on Monday said that “it remains possible that an animal on the ship spread [Andes virus] to multiple people, or that the infected people visited the same place on land where the virus was waiting for them”. But, Faustus added, “given that human-to-human superspreader events of the Andes hantavirus have been documented, I’d bet that human-to-human transmission did occur here”, adding that the ship’s doctor also got infected. WHO Gender Parity Dips Amidst Staff Cuts, but Women Advance Slightly in Professional Ranks 10/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen WHO professional gender parity has risen as more men depart, even as overall staff representation slightly declines. A dramatically shrinking World Health Organization (WHO) has seen a slight decline in gender parity amidst restructuring. Strict recruitment policies and targeted job cuts have actively boosted female representation within the organisation’s professional ranks. But deep regional disparities in gender representation remain unresolved, with men holding the overwhelming majority of staff posts in the African, South-East Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Amid sweeping job cuts triggered by the US withdrawal and a massive budget crisis, the World Health Organization (WHO) claims that “gender parity has been achieved” among its remaining 8,569 staff members in the Director General’s annual report, for WHO member states at next week’s World Health Assembly. However, WHO human resources data for 2025, released on 1 May, reveals this to be slightly misleading: women actually lost their 50.1% majority from 2024, dropping slightly to 49.7% by the end of 2025. Despite this broader decline, progress was made within the professional and higher categories, where female representation successfully rose from 47.9% in December 2024 to 48.5% by December 2025. While the absolute numbers for both genders shrank during the restructuring phase, a larger number of male professionals left the organisation than women (105 men compared to 67 women). This progress is not solely the result of the ongoing downsizing but reflects an intentional, long-term policy shift: targeted recruitment measures introduced in 2023 to achieve the gender parity mandate that job openings must be reopened if the applicant pool is less than 30% female or if shortlists lack at least two women. These strict policies, which remain in place until parity is reached in under-represented grades, helped drive the percentage of female applicants up from 31.4% to 32.1% over the past four years. Gender parity by region: a tale of two organisations WHO regional gender disparities persist. While the WHO’s official designation points to overall gender parity on a global scale, examining the workforce data for 2025 reveals a starkly divided WHO. True gender balance remains elusive, with distinct female-majority and male-majority regions painting a complex picture of international representation. The Western Pacific Region currently boasts the highest overall female representation at 65.2%, followed closely by headquarters and global shared services at 63.5%, and the European Region at 59.2%. Conversely, male staff retain a dominant majority in the African Region (65.5% male), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (59.2% male), and the South-East Asia Region (57.4% male). However, a more in-depth look at the data reveals that majorities are characterised by a concentration of women in administrative and clerical roles. In both headquarters and the Western Pacific, the high overall female representation is heavily driven by the ‘general service’ category, where women make up 79.5% and 74.3% of the staff, respectively. In contrast, the male-dominated regions exhibit male majorities across nearly all job categories: in the African Region, for example, men hold 67.8% of the general service roles and dominate the professional ranks. Data on the WHO Region of the Americas, which has its own governing body, budget and HR processes, is not included in the global HR report. Uneven gains in field and senior leadership WHO’s glass ceiling remains intact as female representation thins significantly at the highest director levels. These regional disparities become even more pronounced when examining crucial leadership roles. While women are increasingly securing top diplomatic and operational roles, these leadership gains remain highly uneven across the globe. The South-East Asia Region leads the agency in field leadership, successfully achieving exact gender parity, with 50% of its country offices now headed by women. In stark contrast, female leadership in the field lags severely in other regions. In the African Region, only 25.5% of country offices are headed by women, and the Eastern Mediterranean Region reports a similarly low 26.3%. A similar divide exists within the highest echelons of senior management at the D1 and D2 grades – the WHO’s top director-level roles. The European Region has the highest percentage of women in these senior leadership positions at 40%, followed by Headquarters at 36%. Meanwhile, the lowest senior female representation is found in the South-East Asia Region (23.1%) and the African Region (24.1%). In the DG’s annual human resources report, the organisation openly acknowledges that the greatest remaining gaps in global gender parity exist exactly at this glass ceiling: the uppermost D2 (director) level is only 24.5% female, and the P6/D1 (senior leadership) levels stand at 37.3% female. Staff decline tracks toward June projections WHO aims to slash nearly 25% of its workforce by June 2026, shifting the focus to country offices. The DG’s human resources report also confirms the scale of the ongoing departures. By December 2025, the WHO counted a steep 9.4% decrease in regular staff members, down to 8,569 from the 9,463 staff recorded at the end of 2024, or the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. The data on end-of-year departures indicate that the health agency is well on its way to reaching its previously announced target of slashing nearly 25% of its global workforce by mid-2026. According to the latest projections before WHA, only 7,283 regular WHO staff will remain by 30 June, about 23% less than the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. By 30 June 2026, WHO’s global staff count is projected to decline to 7283 ‒ roughly 23% less than 1 January 2025 (9401). Meanwhile, the number of non-staff affiliates decreased by 23% in 2025, down to 5,844 full-time equivalent positions across three non-staff categories as compared to 7,582 in 2024. These categories include professionals and general service staff working under “Agreement for Performance of Work” contracts for specific, time-limited tasks, “Consultants” for more ongoing roles, and Special Service Agreements (SSAs), a type of non-staff category common in Africa and South-East Asia. Non-staff ‘affiliates’ in 2025 as compared to 2024 in terms of numbers of contracts and full-time equivalent posts. SSA positions are typically full-time. Headquarters is bearing the heaviest burden of the realignment. Official projections indicate that Geneva and Global Shared Services will shrink by 29% by June 2026, losing over 800 staff members. Meanwhile, the proportion of personnel based in country offices has increased to nearly 46% of the remaining global workforce. This deliberate geographic shift reflects a strategic institutional goal to build a significantly leaner administrative headquarters while vigorously protecting country-level health delivery. “The development aid era is over. WHO Geneva needs to be much smaller,” as diplomatic sources who spoke to Health Policy Watch framed it. Financing the restructuring The missing US flag at WHO headquarters – Washington’s departure triggered a deep budget crisis and workforce restructuring, which is still ongoing. The WHO currently faces a funding gap of approximately $630 million, representing roughly 15% of its $4.2 billion base budget for the upcoming 2026-2027 biennium. Officials have managed to shrink this deficit through aggressive reprioritisation, extensive staff cuts, and a 50% reduction in travel costs. This represents a massive reduction from the initial projected deficit of $1.7 billion, which was catalysed by the geopolitical earthquake of the US withdrawal from the global health agency, announced in January 2025 when President Donald Trump took office. To finance the sweeping realignment, the 78th World Health Assembly in 2025 authorised the temporary use of up to $410 million from Programme Support Costs reserve funds to cover unavoidable indemnities and salary gaps. Yet, the organisation has successfully minimised its reliance on these reserves. To date, the projected utilisation of the reserve funds stands at $206.2 million, roughly half of the authorised amount, according to the Human Resources report focusing on “WHO’s prioritisation and realignment process.” Senior management says they achieved this by prioritising “preventive measures” to manage the downsizing. Approximately 51% of all global separations were managed through natural attrition, the expiration of fixed-term contracts, and a voluntary early retirement package, completely sparing the agency from paying out costly forced termination indemnities for those individuals. As attention turns to the next WHA and the election process for a new Director-General, the incoming leader will inherit a downsized organisation that has stronger female representation in its professional ranks in some regions, with more work to achieve parity in others, but that remains fundamentally fractured by severe budget constraints and glaring regional disparities. EXCLUSIVE: WHO Opens Nominations for Next Director General; Germany May Advance Former Merkel Aide, Helge Braun Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO/Human Resources – Prioritization and Realignment Process , WHO Human Resources Update, 31 December 2025. More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Nurses Are Not a Cost to Health Systems. They Are the Power Holding Them Together. 12/05/2026 Howard Catton Fatmata Bamorie Turay (far left) and Elizabeth Tumoe, registered nurses look after newborns at the Princess Christian Maternity Hospital, in Freetown Sierra Leone Recently, I met with African nursing leaders who told me stories of nurses in countries such as Ghana and Nigeria earning the equivalent of only a few hundred US dollars a month – sometimes less than $300 – while being offered opportunities abroad with salaries many times higher. They described a growing crisis, where nurses are now leaving not yearly or monthly, but almost weekly. In some hospitals, managers only discover a nurse has accepted a post overseas when a resignation letter is pushed under the door. One nurse leader told me: “We are training nurses for export.” Migration itself is not the problem. Like anyone else, all nurses have the right to migrate and pursue opportunities. But many have been put in an impossible position, where they are also leaving behind families, colleagues and communities they care deeply about. And the countries they leave behind are losing the experienced nurses they have trained, often with little evidence of any meaningful reinvestment in return. This story is now being repeated across the world at an alarming scale. This is why, ahead of this month’s World Health Assembly (WHA), the International Council of Nurses (ICN) has written to WHO Member States recommending concrete actions to address the escalating international recruitment that is deepening workforce shortages in lower-income countries and threatening global health system sustainability. We are calling for coordinated co-investment by recruiting countries into nurse education, retention, and workforce and leadership development. But this is not just a story about migration and workforce shortages. This situation speaks to the profound global failure to understand the true power of nursing and the enormous cost of not investing in it. No nurses, no care A registered nurse vaccinates a child for polio in Beirut, Lebanon. The world faces a global shortage of 11 million health workers. More than half, 5.8 million, are nurses. That fact alone should be setting off alarm bells everywhere. No nurses means no healthcare. Nurses are the backbone of health systems. But right now, that backbone is showing signs of spinal instability. We are asking nurses to carry more and more: ageing populations, rising chronic disease, pandemics, conflict, climate-related crises, mental health pressures, and widening inequalities. Yet too often we continue to treat nursing as a cost to be contained instead of one of the smartest investments societies can make. That is why this year’s International Nurses Day report from ICN, Our Nurses. Our Future. Empowered Nurses Save Lives is so important. The report moves beyond outdated, one-dimensional images of nursing to show how nurses both save and improve lives at scale. For too long, nursing has too often been portrayed only through the language of compassion and sacrifice. Compassion matters enormously. But nursing is also power: economic power, clinical power, leadership power, workforce power, and social power. Our report sets out seven key nursing powers that are transforming health systems around the world. There is the Power of Trust: year after year nurses remain the most trusted profession globally, a foundation that becomes critical during health emergencies, public health crises, and vaccination campaigns. There is the Power of Practice: advanced nurse practitioners and specialist nurses are delivering high-quality care, reducing waiting times, improving outcomes, and expanding access, particularly in underserved communities. There is the Power of Numbers: nearly 30 million nurses worldwide represent the single largest health workforce on earth. Another of the most important powers is what we call the Power of Proximity. Nurses are where people are. In hospitals, clinics, schools, refugee camps, conflict zones, remote villages, and people’s homes. Nurses are often the first health professional a person sees and the last one they remember. They understand communities because they are part of those communities. That proximity saves lives. And when nurses are empowered to work to their full potential, the evidence is overwhelming. Expanding primary healthcare, where nurses are central, could save 60 million lives by 2030. Closing global health workforce gaps could prevent 189 million years of life lost and add US$1.1 trillion to the global economy. We can’t see these as “soft skills”. These are hard powers delivering hard outcomes. Investing for impact This year’s report builds on ICN’s wider work, including our 2024 report, Our Nurses. Our Future. The economic power of care. This has consistently shown that investing in nursing is not a cost to health systems and economies; it is one of the highest-return investments societies can make. Investing in health brings a $2–4 return per $1, while poor health reduces GDP by 15%. Yet despite all this evidence, many countries continue to underinvest in nursing. Exacerbating inequalities, high-income countries continue to underinvest in educating enough nurses domestically while increasingly relying on international recruitment to fill workforce gaps. This means many lower-income countries are effectively financing the health systems of wealthier nations through the loss of their trained nurses. Countries already facing severe shortages are losing experienced clinicians, educators, and leaders faster than they can replace them. At the same time, destination countries are making substantial savings. Training costs are being avoided. Workforce gaps are being filled quickly. Tax revenues are being generated by internationally educated nurses working in destination countries. But where is the reinvestment? Recent evidence submitted by ICN to a UK All-Party Parliamentary Group inquiry highlighted the enormous financial benefit that recruiting countries derive from this model. By recruiting abroad, data shows that the UK has saved £14 billion in health workforce training costs. Canada has saved an estimated C$1 billion. In effect, lower-income countries are subsidising the workforce costs of richer nations. Some high-income countries are effectively outsourcing responsibility for nurse education internationally while failing to adequately reinvest in the systems they depend upon. That is neither sustainable nor equitable. It risks creating exactly the perceptions many countries are now voicing openly: neo-colonialism, exploitation, and a growing erosion of global solidarity. Nurse Everlyne Esige examines an expectant mother at Vihiga County Referral Hospital in Kisumu, Kenya. WHA as a turning point This is why ICN has urged WHO Member States to use this year’s World Health Assembly as a turning point. In our letter, we call for practical and collective action to strengthen the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel. That includes coordinated co-investment by major recruiting countries into nurse education, employment, retention, leadership development, and workforce planning in source countries. We are proposing practical mechanisms: proportionate reinvestment linked to recruitment, directing a share of education savings and tax revenues into source-country health systems, debt relief linked to workforce investment, and even a global fund to strengthen fragile health workforces. Imagine the impact if high-income countries pooled resources and coordinated action instead of acting individually and reactively. The sums involved would not be insignificant. But neither are the savings currently being made. And the return on investment would be enormous: stronger health systems, greater global health security, reduced inequalities, and a more sustainable global workforce for everyone. Strengthen support for nursing At the same time, we are increasingly concerned that the global focus on nursing and the health workforce risks being diluted precisely when it should be intensifying. Last year, WHO Member States agreed to extend the Strategic Directions for Nursing and Midwifery and to accelerate progress. That word matters: accelerate. Yet we are still hearing concerns about cuts and reduced capacity at exactly the institutions and programmes designed to support the global health workforce. We understand the financial pressures that the WHO and many governments face. These are difficult decisions. But support for the very people who deliver healthcare, the foundations upon which health systems are built, must be the very last place to cut. Because ultimately, this conversation is about far more than staffing numbers. Nursing is also one of the largest majority-women workforces in the world. Investing in nursing means investing in women, in economic participation, in education, in families, and in reducing inequality. This International Nurses’ Day, we should celebrate nurses. But celebration alone is not enough. We must also recognise nurses’ power to change lives, strengthen economies, and transform societies and finally invest in that power for the sake of all our health. Howard Catton is CEO of the International Council of Nurses. Image Credits: World Bank/Flickr, Flickr – World Bank, International Council for Nurses, Brian Otieno /Global Fund, Studioregard.ch. WHO Sets Out Timetable and Ethical Guardrails for Election of New Director-General; but Loopholes Remain 11/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The proposed WHO Director-General election cycle for 2026–2027 lays out the path from the initial call for nominations in April 2026 to the final appointment in May 2027. As the campaign to elect a new World Health Organization Director-General officially opens, a timeline and guidelines for the process have been published by outgoing DG Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus for consideration by member states at next week’s World Health Assembly and the upcoming Executive Board. While these aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. With the call for nominations for the next World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General officially underway, the global health community is bracing for an intense, year-long campaign season. The upcoming 2026/2027 WHO DG election cycle marks a definitive departure from the previous race in 2021, which unfolded amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, featured an incumbent, and relied heavily on remote adaptations. The current contest expects a full return to “normal” physical in-person campaigning at regional committee sessions. However, a “new normal” is also unfolding under complex conditions, as the WHO grapples with a sharply polarized body of member states and a drastically reduced budget following the United States’ withdrawal last year, forcing it to implement massive, ongoing workforce reductions. To maintain fairness in this highly pressured, post-pandemic landscape, WHO has published a draft set of guidelines that would help create a firewall between candidates’ campaign activities and official organisation business – rules that will be particularly important for candidates that emerge from within WHO’s ranks. The Director-General’s recommendations on the election process, to be reviewed by Member States at the upcoming World Health Assembly and Executive Board, aim to reinforce established parameters from the previous election cycle. But enforcement still relies mostly on ‘good faith’ as compared to legally binding measures. WHO staff members who join the race will have to go on leave – but Regional Directors may be exempt Current WHO staff members entering the competition face the election’s strictest internal guardrails, according to the newly published guidelines. To prevent conflicts of interest between campaigning and official business, they will be immediately placed on annual leave. Once their annual leave allowance is exhausted, they would be placed on mandatory special leave with half pay leading up to the January 2027 Executive Board nominations. If they survive this initial selection process and make the final shortlist, their full salary would be restored for the remainder of the race. Yet, past precedent has explicitly exempted WHO Regional Directors from this rule – due to their status as WHO officials elected by member states. This means that potential candidates such as Hanan Balkhy, Regional Director of WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Region, or Hans Kluge, European Regional Director, could theoretically campaign while remaining in their positions – while other potential candidates such as Assistant Director-General Jeremy Farrar, would have to spend months on leave in order to compete, at a sharp inherent professional and financial disadvantage. Prospective candidates also must not conduct campaign activities as part of WHO regional committees’ official programmes. Reaffirming the standing rules, candidates will not be given speaking time during official meetings to promote their campaigns, and must instead restrict their promotional events strictly to the margins of these meetings. The guidelines also set forth a proposed timeline – following the Director-General’s invitation to member states to nominate candidates, which was delivered by letter to Geneva’s UN missions on 24 April. After nominations close on 24 September, contenders would participate in a live candidates’ forum, with a proposed date of November 18. The field would then be narrowed to up to three finalists during the 160th Executive Board session, preliminarily set for 25 January-2 February 2027. After a second interactive forum, tentatively set for 15 March 2027, member states will vote at the May 2027 World Health Assembly, with the winner taking office in August 2027. A gauntlet of public appearances Economy-class travel remains the standard for WHO candidates, underscoring the organisation’s push for financial equity. The framework further aims to create a gauntlet of public scrutiny for the election process. During the first live candidates’ forum, contenders will face structured 60-minute interviews. To ensure the question and answer process is not rigged, member states will drop colour-coded tokens into receptacles, which the Chair of the Executive Board will draw by lot to determine exactly who gets the opportunity to ask the candidates a question. To curb the potential for opaque backroom deals, the WHO relies on a Code of Conduct to oversee activities on the physical campaign trail. Originally adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2013 and most recently amended in November 2020, this framework was specifically designed to promote an open, fair, equitable, and transparent election process. Additionally, previous World Health Assembly decisions and WHO Secretariat practices guarantee financial travel support. Specifically, this involves provision of an economy-class airline ticket and a daily per diem for every candidate participating in both of the two live public forums that will be sponsored by WHO, and, upon request, for their interviews at the 160th session of the Executive Board. This logistical support aims to ensure prospective leaders from lower-income regions receive a genuinely fair opportunity without relying entirely on massive domestic or private funding. Guardrails built on ‘good faith’ – no binding enforcement Outgoing Director-General Tedros’s 2022 pandemic-era election gives way to a high-stakes, in-person 2026 WHO DG election cycle. While these guidelines aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. A closer reading of the WHO’s rulebook reveals that the Code of Conduct is not legally binding. The framework openly acknowledges it is merely a “political understanding” that recommends “desirable behaviour”, relying on the good faith of candidates and member states to honour its contents. This lack of binding enforcement mechanisms leaves critical transparency measures vulnerable. For instance, candidates and member states are instructed to promptly disclose all campaign activities and funding sources to the Secretariat for public posting. But this system relies on self-reporting without independent audits. Furthermore, while the regulations state that campaign-related travel should be “limited” to prevent financial inequality, and that using official technical meetings as a guise for electoral promotion “should be avoided”, these vague parameters leave vast room for interpretation. Ultimately, as the mandate of Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus approaches its expiration after the end of the upcoming election cycle, the focus will inevitably shift from the rules of the campaign trail to the monumental task awaiting his successor. Whoever emerges victorious from this highly scrutinised election must not only navigate deep geopolitical divides and restore internal trust, but also prepare the global health body for future crises. Want to Become the Next WHO Director-General? Get in Line Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, Alexander Schimmeck via unsplash. Hantavirus: Experts Question Claim that Only ‘Symptomatic’ People are Infectious 11/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Evacuation of passengers from MV Hondius, the ship hit by hantavirus, continue. Hantavirus has been confirmed in a French citizen evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship on Sunday, while two tests on a US citizen turned up one “weakly positive” and one negative result – but it is still unclear how the virus is being transmitted. The evacuation of passengers from the ship, now docked in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, continued on Monday under the supervision of health officials from Spain, assisted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and several other European countries. Passengers were only allowed to disembark to board chartered flights arranged by their countries. However, countries differ on how they plan to treat citizens who do not test positive for the virus right away, given that it can take up to 42 days before symptoms appear. Quarantine Spain, the UK, and Australia will require citizens to quarantine in designated government facilities for varying periods. The six Australians will spend up to 42 days in a government quarantine facility while undergoing PCR testing, according to Health Minister Mark Butler. US health officials – many vehemently against lockdown measures to contain COVID-19 – have suggested that asymptomatic citizens will be allowed to return home. Sixteen of the 18 US evacuated passengers are currently being assessed in a regional emerging special pathogen (RESPTC) treatment centre in Omaha, Nebraska. Two others, including the person with the weakly positive test, are being assessed in Atlanta. John Knox, deputy secretary for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), told a media briefing on Monday afternoon that asymptomatic passengers may be able to complete 42 days of isolation at home if they remain without symptoms and have the necessary support. On Sunday, Dr Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told CNN that asymptomatic passengers could not spread the virus. However, Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen told Monday’s media briefing that “no one who poses a risk to public health is walking out the front door”. How close is ‘close contact’? Although most transmission is from rats, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus, the hantavirus species affecting the ship, has previously been documented in Argentina in 2018. Genome sequencing of the current outbreak has shown it to be 99% similar to that outbreak, where the index patient attended a concert, subsequently infecting 34 people. BREAKING: First sequencing of the Hantavirus from the outbreak. -99% identical to a June 2018 case from a patient in Argentina -10.4 SNV/year mutation rate – The Andes genome is about 12 kb across three RNA segments. At 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻³ substitutions/site/year, that translates… pic.twitter.com/FleaIMmORV — Dr Steven Quay (@quay_dr) May 11, 2026 Human-to-human transmission is possible with “close contact”, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, there is some debate about the nature of this “close contact”. Professor Joseph Allen from Harvard’s Department of Exposure Assessment Science, said in a weekend TV interview that a doctor on board the ship had told him that some infected passengers had little interaction with the first three patients identified with the virus. These are a Dutch couple (now deceased), and a British man, currently making a slow recovery in South Africa. The International Hantavirus Society and members of the international hantavirus research and clinical community have also warned against various “simplified conclusions”, including that the Andes virus (ANDV) has “minimal or negligible human-to-human transmission potential” and that only symptomatic patients are infectious. Are asymptomatic people infectious? The experts warned in a statement last week that “the precise timing of infectiousness remains incompletely defined”. “While symptomatic patients are likely to represent the highest-risk group, available outbreak reconstructions do not support overly categorical statements that transmission can occur only after clear symptom onset,” they said. “Transmission potential during prodromal, early symptomatic or minimally symptomatic phases, should be considered when designing contact tracing, testing and quarantine strategies.” They stated that this is “particularly relevant in closed settings such as a cruise vessel where ANDV-exposed individuals may still be within the incubation period”. Infectious disease specialist Dr Jeremy Faust, writing in his substack, on Monday said that “it remains possible that an animal on the ship spread [Andes virus] to multiple people, or that the infected people visited the same place on land where the virus was waiting for them”. But, Faustus added, “given that human-to-human superspreader events of the Andes hantavirus have been documented, I’d bet that human-to-human transmission did occur here”, adding that the ship’s doctor also got infected. WHO Gender Parity Dips Amidst Staff Cuts, but Women Advance Slightly in Professional Ranks 10/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen WHO professional gender parity has risen as more men depart, even as overall staff representation slightly declines. A dramatically shrinking World Health Organization (WHO) has seen a slight decline in gender parity amidst restructuring. Strict recruitment policies and targeted job cuts have actively boosted female representation within the organisation’s professional ranks. But deep regional disparities in gender representation remain unresolved, with men holding the overwhelming majority of staff posts in the African, South-East Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Amid sweeping job cuts triggered by the US withdrawal and a massive budget crisis, the World Health Organization (WHO) claims that “gender parity has been achieved” among its remaining 8,569 staff members in the Director General’s annual report, for WHO member states at next week’s World Health Assembly. However, WHO human resources data for 2025, released on 1 May, reveals this to be slightly misleading: women actually lost their 50.1% majority from 2024, dropping slightly to 49.7% by the end of 2025. Despite this broader decline, progress was made within the professional and higher categories, where female representation successfully rose from 47.9% in December 2024 to 48.5% by December 2025. While the absolute numbers for both genders shrank during the restructuring phase, a larger number of male professionals left the organisation than women (105 men compared to 67 women). This progress is not solely the result of the ongoing downsizing but reflects an intentional, long-term policy shift: targeted recruitment measures introduced in 2023 to achieve the gender parity mandate that job openings must be reopened if the applicant pool is less than 30% female or if shortlists lack at least two women. These strict policies, which remain in place until parity is reached in under-represented grades, helped drive the percentage of female applicants up from 31.4% to 32.1% over the past four years. Gender parity by region: a tale of two organisations WHO regional gender disparities persist. While the WHO’s official designation points to overall gender parity on a global scale, examining the workforce data for 2025 reveals a starkly divided WHO. True gender balance remains elusive, with distinct female-majority and male-majority regions painting a complex picture of international representation. The Western Pacific Region currently boasts the highest overall female representation at 65.2%, followed closely by headquarters and global shared services at 63.5%, and the European Region at 59.2%. Conversely, male staff retain a dominant majority in the African Region (65.5% male), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (59.2% male), and the South-East Asia Region (57.4% male). However, a more in-depth look at the data reveals that majorities are characterised by a concentration of women in administrative and clerical roles. In both headquarters and the Western Pacific, the high overall female representation is heavily driven by the ‘general service’ category, where women make up 79.5% and 74.3% of the staff, respectively. In contrast, the male-dominated regions exhibit male majorities across nearly all job categories: in the African Region, for example, men hold 67.8% of the general service roles and dominate the professional ranks. Data on the WHO Region of the Americas, which has its own governing body, budget and HR processes, is not included in the global HR report. Uneven gains in field and senior leadership WHO’s glass ceiling remains intact as female representation thins significantly at the highest director levels. These regional disparities become even more pronounced when examining crucial leadership roles. While women are increasingly securing top diplomatic and operational roles, these leadership gains remain highly uneven across the globe. The South-East Asia Region leads the agency in field leadership, successfully achieving exact gender parity, with 50% of its country offices now headed by women. In stark contrast, female leadership in the field lags severely in other regions. In the African Region, only 25.5% of country offices are headed by women, and the Eastern Mediterranean Region reports a similarly low 26.3%. A similar divide exists within the highest echelons of senior management at the D1 and D2 grades – the WHO’s top director-level roles. The European Region has the highest percentage of women in these senior leadership positions at 40%, followed by Headquarters at 36%. Meanwhile, the lowest senior female representation is found in the South-East Asia Region (23.1%) and the African Region (24.1%). In the DG’s annual human resources report, the organisation openly acknowledges that the greatest remaining gaps in global gender parity exist exactly at this glass ceiling: the uppermost D2 (director) level is only 24.5% female, and the P6/D1 (senior leadership) levels stand at 37.3% female. Staff decline tracks toward June projections WHO aims to slash nearly 25% of its workforce by June 2026, shifting the focus to country offices. The DG’s human resources report also confirms the scale of the ongoing departures. By December 2025, the WHO counted a steep 9.4% decrease in regular staff members, down to 8,569 from the 9,463 staff recorded at the end of 2024, or the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. The data on end-of-year departures indicate that the health agency is well on its way to reaching its previously announced target of slashing nearly 25% of its global workforce by mid-2026. According to the latest projections before WHA, only 7,283 regular WHO staff will remain by 30 June, about 23% less than the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. By 30 June 2026, WHO’s global staff count is projected to decline to 7283 ‒ roughly 23% less than 1 January 2025 (9401). Meanwhile, the number of non-staff affiliates decreased by 23% in 2025, down to 5,844 full-time equivalent positions across three non-staff categories as compared to 7,582 in 2024. These categories include professionals and general service staff working under “Agreement for Performance of Work” contracts for specific, time-limited tasks, “Consultants” for more ongoing roles, and Special Service Agreements (SSAs), a type of non-staff category common in Africa and South-East Asia. Non-staff ‘affiliates’ in 2025 as compared to 2024 in terms of numbers of contracts and full-time equivalent posts. SSA positions are typically full-time. Headquarters is bearing the heaviest burden of the realignment. Official projections indicate that Geneva and Global Shared Services will shrink by 29% by June 2026, losing over 800 staff members. Meanwhile, the proportion of personnel based in country offices has increased to nearly 46% of the remaining global workforce. This deliberate geographic shift reflects a strategic institutional goal to build a significantly leaner administrative headquarters while vigorously protecting country-level health delivery. “The development aid era is over. WHO Geneva needs to be much smaller,” as diplomatic sources who spoke to Health Policy Watch framed it. Financing the restructuring The missing US flag at WHO headquarters – Washington’s departure triggered a deep budget crisis and workforce restructuring, which is still ongoing. The WHO currently faces a funding gap of approximately $630 million, representing roughly 15% of its $4.2 billion base budget for the upcoming 2026-2027 biennium. Officials have managed to shrink this deficit through aggressive reprioritisation, extensive staff cuts, and a 50% reduction in travel costs. This represents a massive reduction from the initial projected deficit of $1.7 billion, which was catalysed by the geopolitical earthquake of the US withdrawal from the global health agency, announced in January 2025 when President Donald Trump took office. To finance the sweeping realignment, the 78th World Health Assembly in 2025 authorised the temporary use of up to $410 million from Programme Support Costs reserve funds to cover unavoidable indemnities and salary gaps. Yet, the organisation has successfully minimised its reliance on these reserves. To date, the projected utilisation of the reserve funds stands at $206.2 million, roughly half of the authorised amount, according to the Human Resources report focusing on “WHO’s prioritisation and realignment process.” Senior management says they achieved this by prioritising “preventive measures” to manage the downsizing. Approximately 51% of all global separations were managed through natural attrition, the expiration of fixed-term contracts, and a voluntary early retirement package, completely sparing the agency from paying out costly forced termination indemnities for those individuals. As attention turns to the next WHA and the election process for a new Director-General, the incoming leader will inherit a downsized organisation that has stronger female representation in its professional ranks in some regions, with more work to achieve parity in others, but that remains fundamentally fractured by severe budget constraints and glaring regional disparities. EXCLUSIVE: WHO Opens Nominations for Next Director General; Germany May Advance Former Merkel Aide, Helge Braun Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO/Human Resources – Prioritization and Realignment Process , WHO Human Resources Update, 31 December 2025. More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
WHO Sets Out Timetable and Ethical Guardrails for Election of New Director-General; but Loopholes Remain 11/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen The proposed WHO Director-General election cycle for 2026–2027 lays out the path from the initial call for nominations in April 2026 to the final appointment in May 2027. As the campaign to elect a new World Health Organization Director-General officially opens, a timeline and guidelines for the process have been published by outgoing DG Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus for consideration by member states at next week’s World Health Assembly and the upcoming Executive Board. While these aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. With the call for nominations for the next World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General officially underway, the global health community is bracing for an intense, year-long campaign season. The upcoming 2026/2027 WHO DG election cycle marks a definitive departure from the previous race in 2021, which unfolded amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, featured an incumbent, and relied heavily on remote adaptations. The current contest expects a full return to “normal” physical in-person campaigning at regional committee sessions. However, a “new normal” is also unfolding under complex conditions, as the WHO grapples with a sharply polarized body of member states and a drastically reduced budget following the United States’ withdrawal last year, forcing it to implement massive, ongoing workforce reductions. To maintain fairness in this highly pressured, post-pandemic landscape, WHO has published a draft set of guidelines that would help create a firewall between candidates’ campaign activities and official organisation business – rules that will be particularly important for candidates that emerge from within WHO’s ranks. The Director-General’s recommendations on the election process, to be reviewed by Member States at the upcoming World Health Assembly and Executive Board, aim to reinforce established parameters from the previous election cycle. But enforcement still relies mostly on ‘good faith’ as compared to legally binding measures. WHO staff members who join the race will have to go on leave – but Regional Directors may be exempt Current WHO staff members entering the competition face the election’s strictest internal guardrails, according to the newly published guidelines. To prevent conflicts of interest between campaigning and official business, they will be immediately placed on annual leave. Once their annual leave allowance is exhausted, they would be placed on mandatory special leave with half pay leading up to the January 2027 Executive Board nominations. If they survive this initial selection process and make the final shortlist, their full salary would be restored for the remainder of the race. Yet, past precedent has explicitly exempted WHO Regional Directors from this rule – due to their status as WHO officials elected by member states. This means that potential candidates such as Hanan Balkhy, Regional Director of WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean Region, or Hans Kluge, European Regional Director, could theoretically campaign while remaining in their positions – while other potential candidates such as Assistant Director-General Jeremy Farrar, would have to spend months on leave in order to compete, at a sharp inherent professional and financial disadvantage. Prospective candidates also must not conduct campaign activities as part of WHO regional committees’ official programmes. Reaffirming the standing rules, candidates will not be given speaking time during official meetings to promote their campaigns, and must instead restrict their promotional events strictly to the margins of these meetings. The guidelines also set forth a proposed timeline – following the Director-General’s invitation to member states to nominate candidates, which was delivered by letter to Geneva’s UN missions on 24 April. After nominations close on 24 September, contenders would participate in a live candidates’ forum, with a proposed date of November 18. The field would then be narrowed to up to three finalists during the 160th Executive Board session, preliminarily set for 25 January-2 February 2027. After a second interactive forum, tentatively set for 15 March 2027, member states will vote at the May 2027 World Health Assembly, with the winner taking office in August 2027. A gauntlet of public appearances Economy-class travel remains the standard for WHO candidates, underscoring the organisation’s push for financial equity. The framework further aims to create a gauntlet of public scrutiny for the election process. During the first live candidates’ forum, contenders will face structured 60-minute interviews. To ensure the question and answer process is not rigged, member states will drop colour-coded tokens into receptacles, which the Chair of the Executive Board will draw by lot to determine exactly who gets the opportunity to ask the candidates a question. To curb the potential for opaque backroom deals, the WHO relies on a Code of Conduct to oversee activities on the physical campaign trail. Originally adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2013 and most recently amended in November 2020, this framework was specifically designed to promote an open, fair, equitable, and transparent election process. Additionally, previous World Health Assembly decisions and WHO Secretariat practices guarantee financial travel support. Specifically, this involves provision of an economy-class airline ticket and a daily per diem for every candidate participating in both of the two live public forums that will be sponsored by WHO, and, upon request, for their interviews at the 160th session of the Executive Board. This logistical support aims to ensure prospective leaders from lower-income regions receive a genuinely fair opportunity without relying entirely on massive domestic or private funding. Guardrails built on ‘good faith’ – no binding enforcement Outgoing Director-General Tedros’s 2022 pandemic-era election gives way to a high-stakes, in-person 2026 WHO DG election cycle. While these guidelines aim to promote a transparent and level playing field, structural loopholes remain. A closer reading of the WHO’s rulebook reveals that the Code of Conduct is not legally binding. The framework openly acknowledges it is merely a “political understanding” that recommends “desirable behaviour”, relying on the good faith of candidates and member states to honour its contents. This lack of binding enforcement mechanisms leaves critical transparency measures vulnerable. For instance, candidates and member states are instructed to promptly disclose all campaign activities and funding sources to the Secretariat for public posting. But this system relies on self-reporting without independent audits. Furthermore, while the regulations state that campaign-related travel should be “limited” to prevent financial inequality, and that using official technical meetings as a guise for electoral promotion “should be avoided”, these vague parameters leave vast room for interpretation. Ultimately, as the mandate of Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus approaches its expiration after the end of the upcoming election cycle, the focus will inevitably shift from the rules of the campaign trail to the monumental task awaiting his successor. Whoever emerges victorious from this highly scrutinised election must not only navigate deep geopolitical divides and restore internal trust, but also prepare the global health body for future crises. Want to Become the Next WHO Director-General? Get in Line Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, Alexander Schimmeck via unsplash. Hantavirus: Experts Question Claim that Only ‘Symptomatic’ People are Infectious 11/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Evacuation of passengers from MV Hondius, the ship hit by hantavirus, continue. Hantavirus has been confirmed in a French citizen evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship on Sunday, while two tests on a US citizen turned up one “weakly positive” and one negative result – but it is still unclear how the virus is being transmitted. The evacuation of passengers from the ship, now docked in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, continued on Monday under the supervision of health officials from Spain, assisted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and several other European countries. Passengers were only allowed to disembark to board chartered flights arranged by their countries. However, countries differ on how they plan to treat citizens who do not test positive for the virus right away, given that it can take up to 42 days before symptoms appear. Quarantine Spain, the UK, and Australia will require citizens to quarantine in designated government facilities for varying periods. The six Australians will spend up to 42 days in a government quarantine facility while undergoing PCR testing, according to Health Minister Mark Butler. US health officials – many vehemently against lockdown measures to contain COVID-19 – have suggested that asymptomatic citizens will be allowed to return home. Sixteen of the 18 US evacuated passengers are currently being assessed in a regional emerging special pathogen (RESPTC) treatment centre in Omaha, Nebraska. Two others, including the person with the weakly positive test, are being assessed in Atlanta. John Knox, deputy secretary for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), told a media briefing on Monday afternoon that asymptomatic passengers may be able to complete 42 days of isolation at home if they remain without symptoms and have the necessary support. On Sunday, Dr Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told CNN that asymptomatic passengers could not spread the virus. However, Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen told Monday’s media briefing that “no one who poses a risk to public health is walking out the front door”. How close is ‘close contact’? Although most transmission is from rats, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus, the hantavirus species affecting the ship, has previously been documented in Argentina in 2018. Genome sequencing of the current outbreak has shown it to be 99% similar to that outbreak, where the index patient attended a concert, subsequently infecting 34 people. BREAKING: First sequencing of the Hantavirus from the outbreak. -99% identical to a June 2018 case from a patient in Argentina -10.4 SNV/year mutation rate – The Andes genome is about 12 kb across three RNA segments. At 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻³ substitutions/site/year, that translates… pic.twitter.com/FleaIMmORV — Dr Steven Quay (@quay_dr) May 11, 2026 Human-to-human transmission is possible with “close contact”, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, there is some debate about the nature of this “close contact”. Professor Joseph Allen from Harvard’s Department of Exposure Assessment Science, said in a weekend TV interview that a doctor on board the ship had told him that some infected passengers had little interaction with the first three patients identified with the virus. These are a Dutch couple (now deceased), and a British man, currently making a slow recovery in South Africa. The International Hantavirus Society and members of the international hantavirus research and clinical community have also warned against various “simplified conclusions”, including that the Andes virus (ANDV) has “minimal or negligible human-to-human transmission potential” and that only symptomatic patients are infectious. Are asymptomatic people infectious? The experts warned in a statement last week that “the precise timing of infectiousness remains incompletely defined”. “While symptomatic patients are likely to represent the highest-risk group, available outbreak reconstructions do not support overly categorical statements that transmission can occur only after clear symptom onset,” they said. “Transmission potential during prodromal, early symptomatic or minimally symptomatic phases, should be considered when designing contact tracing, testing and quarantine strategies.” They stated that this is “particularly relevant in closed settings such as a cruise vessel where ANDV-exposed individuals may still be within the incubation period”. Infectious disease specialist Dr Jeremy Faust, writing in his substack, on Monday said that “it remains possible that an animal on the ship spread [Andes virus] to multiple people, or that the infected people visited the same place on land where the virus was waiting for them”. But, Faustus added, “given that human-to-human superspreader events of the Andes hantavirus have been documented, I’d bet that human-to-human transmission did occur here”, adding that the ship’s doctor also got infected. WHO Gender Parity Dips Amidst Staff Cuts, but Women Advance Slightly in Professional Ranks 10/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen WHO professional gender parity has risen as more men depart, even as overall staff representation slightly declines. A dramatically shrinking World Health Organization (WHO) has seen a slight decline in gender parity amidst restructuring. Strict recruitment policies and targeted job cuts have actively boosted female representation within the organisation’s professional ranks. But deep regional disparities in gender representation remain unresolved, with men holding the overwhelming majority of staff posts in the African, South-East Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Amid sweeping job cuts triggered by the US withdrawal and a massive budget crisis, the World Health Organization (WHO) claims that “gender parity has been achieved” among its remaining 8,569 staff members in the Director General’s annual report, for WHO member states at next week’s World Health Assembly. However, WHO human resources data for 2025, released on 1 May, reveals this to be slightly misleading: women actually lost their 50.1% majority from 2024, dropping slightly to 49.7% by the end of 2025. Despite this broader decline, progress was made within the professional and higher categories, where female representation successfully rose from 47.9% in December 2024 to 48.5% by December 2025. While the absolute numbers for both genders shrank during the restructuring phase, a larger number of male professionals left the organisation than women (105 men compared to 67 women). This progress is not solely the result of the ongoing downsizing but reflects an intentional, long-term policy shift: targeted recruitment measures introduced in 2023 to achieve the gender parity mandate that job openings must be reopened if the applicant pool is less than 30% female or if shortlists lack at least two women. These strict policies, which remain in place until parity is reached in under-represented grades, helped drive the percentage of female applicants up from 31.4% to 32.1% over the past four years. Gender parity by region: a tale of two organisations WHO regional gender disparities persist. While the WHO’s official designation points to overall gender parity on a global scale, examining the workforce data for 2025 reveals a starkly divided WHO. True gender balance remains elusive, with distinct female-majority and male-majority regions painting a complex picture of international representation. The Western Pacific Region currently boasts the highest overall female representation at 65.2%, followed closely by headquarters and global shared services at 63.5%, and the European Region at 59.2%. Conversely, male staff retain a dominant majority in the African Region (65.5% male), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (59.2% male), and the South-East Asia Region (57.4% male). However, a more in-depth look at the data reveals that majorities are characterised by a concentration of women in administrative and clerical roles. In both headquarters and the Western Pacific, the high overall female representation is heavily driven by the ‘general service’ category, where women make up 79.5% and 74.3% of the staff, respectively. In contrast, the male-dominated regions exhibit male majorities across nearly all job categories: in the African Region, for example, men hold 67.8% of the general service roles and dominate the professional ranks. Data on the WHO Region of the Americas, which has its own governing body, budget and HR processes, is not included in the global HR report. Uneven gains in field and senior leadership WHO’s glass ceiling remains intact as female representation thins significantly at the highest director levels. These regional disparities become even more pronounced when examining crucial leadership roles. While women are increasingly securing top diplomatic and operational roles, these leadership gains remain highly uneven across the globe. The South-East Asia Region leads the agency in field leadership, successfully achieving exact gender parity, with 50% of its country offices now headed by women. In stark contrast, female leadership in the field lags severely in other regions. In the African Region, only 25.5% of country offices are headed by women, and the Eastern Mediterranean Region reports a similarly low 26.3%. A similar divide exists within the highest echelons of senior management at the D1 and D2 grades – the WHO’s top director-level roles. The European Region has the highest percentage of women in these senior leadership positions at 40%, followed by Headquarters at 36%. Meanwhile, the lowest senior female representation is found in the South-East Asia Region (23.1%) and the African Region (24.1%). In the DG’s annual human resources report, the organisation openly acknowledges that the greatest remaining gaps in global gender parity exist exactly at this glass ceiling: the uppermost D2 (director) level is only 24.5% female, and the P6/D1 (senior leadership) levels stand at 37.3% female. Staff decline tracks toward June projections WHO aims to slash nearly 25% of its workforce by June 2026, shifting the focus to country offices. The DG’s human resources report also confirms the scale of the ongoing departures. By December 2025, the WHO counted a steep 9.4% decrease in regular staff members, down to 8,569 from the 9,463 staff recorded at the end of 2024, or the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. The data on end-of-year departures indicate that the health agency is well on its way to reaching its previously announced target of slashing nearly 25% of its global workforce by mid-2026. According to the latest projections before WHA, only 7,283 regular WHO staff will remain by 30 June, about 23% less than the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. By 30 June 2026, WHO’s global staff count is projected to decline to 7283 ‒ roughly 23% less than 1 January 2025 (9401). Meanwhile, the number of non-staff affiliates decreased by 23% in 2025, down to 5,844 full-time equivalent positions across three non-staff categories as compared to 7,582 in 2024. These categories include professionals and general service staff working under “Agreement for Performance of Work” contracts for specific, time-limited tasks, “Consultants” for more ongoing roles, and Special Service Agreements (SSAs), a type of non-staff category common in Africa and South-East Asia. Non-staff ‘affiliates’ in 2025 as compared to 2024 in terms of numbers of contracts and full-time equivalent posts. SSA positions are typically full-time. Headquarters is bearing the heaviest burden of the realignment. Official projections indicate that Geneva and Global Shared Services will shrink by 29% by June 2026, losing over 800 staff members. Meanwhile, the proportion of personnel based in country offices has increased to nearly 46% of the remaining global workforce. This deliberate geographic shift reflects a strategic institutional goal to build a significantly leaner administrative headquarters while vigorously protecting country-level health delivery. “The development aid era is over. WHO Geneva needs to be much smaller,” as diplomatic sources who spoke to Health Policy Watch framed it. Financing the restructuring The missing US flag at WHO headquarters – Washington’s departure triggered a deep budget crisis and workforce restructuring, which is still ongoing. The WHO currently faces a funding gap of approximately $630 million, representing roughly 15% of its $4.2 billion base budget for the upcoming 2026-2027 biennium. Officials have managed to shrink this deficit through aggressive reprioritisation, extensive staff cuts, and a 50% reduction in travel costs. This represents a massive reduction from the initial projected deficit of $1.7 billion, which was catalysed by the geopolitical earthquake of the US withdrawal from the global health agency, announced in January 2025 when President Donald Trump took office. To finance the sweeping realignment, the 78th World Health Assembly in 2025 authorised the temporary use of up to $410 million from Programme Support Costs reserve funds to cover unavoidable indemnities and salary gaps. Yet, the organisation has successfully minimised its reliance on these reserves. To date, the projected utilisation of the reserve funds stands at $206.2 million, roughly half of the authorised amount, according to the Human Resources report focusing on “WHO’s prioritisation and realignment process.” Senior management says they achieved this by prioritising “preventive measures” to manage the downsizing. Approximately 51% of all global separations were managed through natural attrition, the expiration of fixed-term contracts, and a voluntary early retirement package, completely sparing the agency from paying out costly forced termination indemnities for those individuals. As attention turns to the next WHA and the election process for a new Director-General, the incoming leader will inherit a downsized organisation that has stronger female representation in its professional ranks in some regions, with more work to achieve parity in others, but that remains fundamentally fractured by severe budget constraints and glaring regional disparities. EXCLUSIVE: WHO Opens Nominations for Next Director General; Germany May Advance Former Merkel Aide, Helge Braun Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO/Human Resources – Prioritization and Realignment Process , WHO Human Resources Update, 31 December 2025. More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
Hantavirus: Experts Question Claim that Only ‘Symptomatic’ People are Infectious 11/05/2026 Kerry Cullinan Evacuation of passengers from MV Hondius, the ship hit by hantavirus, continue. Hantavirus has been confirmed in a French citizen evacuated from the MV Hondius cruise ship on Sunday, while two tests on a US citizen turned up one “weakly positive” and one negative result – but it is still unclear how the virus is being transmitted. The evacuation of passengers from the ship, now docked in Tenerife in the Canary Islands, continued on Monday under the supervision of health officials from Spain, assisted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and several other European countries. Passengers were only allowed to disembark to board chartered flights arranged by their countries. However, countries differ on how they plan to treat citizens who do not test positive for the virus right away, given that it can take up to 42 days before symptoms appear. Quarantine Spain, the UK, and Australia will require citizens to quarantine in designated government facilities for varying periods. The six Australians will spend up to 42 days in a government quarantine facility while undergoing PCR testing, according to Health Minister Mark Butler. US health officials – many vehemently against lockdown measures to contain COVID-19 – have suggested that asymptomatic citizens will be allowed to return home. Sixteen of the 18 US evacuated passengers are currently being assessed in a regional emerging special pathogen (RESPTC) treatment centre in Omaha, Nebraska. Two others, including the person with the weakly positive test, are being assessed in Atlanta. John Knox, deputy secretary for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), told a media briefing on Monday afternoon that asymptomatic passengers may be able to complete 42 days of isolation at home if they remain without symptoms and have the necessary support. On Sunday, Dr Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told CNN that asymptomatic passengers could not spread the virus. However, Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen told Monday’s media briefing that “no one who poses a risk to public health is walking out the front door”. How close is ‘close contact’? Although most transmission is from rats, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus, the hantavirus species affecting the ship, has previously been documented in Argentina in 2018. Genome sequencing of the current outbreak has shown it to be 99% similar to that outbreak, where the index patient attended a concert, subsequently infecting 34 people. BREAKING: First sequencing of the Hantavirus from the outbreak. -99% identical to a June 2018 case from a patient in Argentina -10.4 SNV/year mutation rate – The Andes genome is about 12 kb across three RNA segments. At 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻³ substitutions/site/year, that translates… pic.twitter.com/FleaIMmORV — Dr Steven Quay (@quay_dr) May 11, 2026 Human-to-human transmission is possible with “close contact”, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). However, there is some debate about the nature of this “close contact”. Professor Joseph Allen from Harvard’s Department of Exposure Assessment Science, said in a weekend TV interview that a doctor on board the ship had told him that some infected passengers had little interaction with the first three patients identified with the virus. These are a Dutch couple (now deceased), and a British man, currently making a slow recovery in South Africa. The International Hantavirus Society and members of the international hantavirus research and clinical community have also warned against various “simplified conclusions”, including that the Andes virus (ANDV) has “minimal or negligible human-to-human transmission potential” and that only symptomatic patients are infectious. Are asymptomatic people infectious? The experts warned in a statement last week that “the precise timing of infectiousness remains incompletely defined”. “While symptomatic patients are likely to represent the highest-risk group, available outbreak reconstructions do not support overly categorical statements that transmission can occur only after clear symptom onset,” they said. “Transmission potential during prodromal, early symptomatic or minimally symptomatic phases, should be considered when designing contact tracing, testing and quarantine strategies.” They stated that this is “particularly relevant in closed settings such as a cruise vessel where ANDV-exposed individuals may still be within the incubation period”. Infectious disease specialist Dr Jeremy Faust, writing in his substack, on Monday said that “it remains possible that an animal on the ship spread [Andes virus] to multiple people, or that the infected people visited the same place on land where the virus was waiting for them”. But, Faustus added, “given that human-to-human superspreader events of the Andes hantavirus have been documented, I’d bet that human-to-human transmission did occur here”, adding that the ship’s doctor also got infected. WHO Gender Parity Dips Amidst Staff Cuts, but Women Advance Slightly in Professional Ranks 10/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen WHO professional gender parity has risen as more men depart, even as overall staff representation slightly declines. A dramatically shrinking World Health Organization (WHO) has seen a slight decline in gender parity amidst restructuring. Strict recruitment policies and targeted job cuts have actively boosted female representation within the organisation’s professional ranks. But deep regional disparities in gender representation remain unresolved, with men holding the overwhelming majority of staff posts in the African, South-East Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Amid sweeping job cuts triggered by the US withdrawal and a massive budget crisis, the World Health Organization (WHO) claims that “gender parity has been achieved” among its remaining 8,569 staff members in the Director General’s annual report, for WHO member states at next week’s World Health Assembly. However, WHO human resources data for 2025, released on 1 May, reveals this to be slightly misleading: women actually lost their 50.1% majority from 2024, dropping slightly to 49.7% by the end of 2025. Despite this broader decline, progress was made within the professional and higher categories, where female representation successfully rose from 47.9% in December 2024 to 48.5% by December 2025. While the absolute numbers for both genders shrank during the restructuring phase, a larger number of male professionals left the organisation than women (105 men compared to 67 women). This progress is not solely the result of the ongoing downsizing but reflects an intentional, long-term policy shift: targeted recruitment measures introduced in 2023 to achieve the gender parity mandate that job openings must be reopened if the applicant pool is less than 30% female or if shortlists lack at least two women. These strict policies, which remain in place until parity is reached in under-represented grades, helped drive the percentage of female applicants up from 31.4% to 32.1% over the past four years. Gender parity by region: a tale of two organisations WHO regional gender disparities persist. While the WHO’s official designation points to overall gender parity on a global scale, examining the workforce data for 2025 reveals a starkly divided WHO. True gender balance remains elusive, with distinct female-majority and male-majority regions painting a complex picture of international representation. The Western Pacific Region currently boasts the highest overall female representation at 65.2%, followed closely by headquarters and global shared services at 63.5%, and the European Region at 59.2%. Conversely, male staff retain a dominant majority in the African Region (65.5% male), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (59.2% male), and the South-East Asia Region (57.4% male). However, a more in-depth look at the data reveals that majorities are characterised by a concentration of women in administrative and clerical roles. In both headquarters and the Western Pacific, the high overall female representation is heavily driven by the ‘general service’ category, where women make up 79.5% and 74.3% of the staff, respectively. In contrast, the male-dominated regions exhibit male majorities across nearly all job categories: in the African Region, for example, men hold 67.8% of the general service roles and dominate the professional ranks. Data on the WHO Region of the Americas, which has its own governing body, budget and HR processes, is not included in the global HR report. Uneven gains in field and senior leadership WHO’s glass ceiling remains intact as female representation thins significantly at the highest director levels. These regional disparities become even more pronounced when examining crucial leadership roles. While women are increasingly securing top diplomatic and operational roles, these leadership gains remain highly uneven across the globe. The South-East Asia Region leads the agency in field leadership, successfully achieving exact gender parity, with 50% of its country offices now headed by women. In stark contrast, female leadership in the field lags severely in other regions. In the African Region, only 25.5% of country offices are headed by women, and the Eastern Mediterranean Region reports a similarly low 26.3%. A similar divide exists within the highest echelons of senior management at the D1 and D2 grades – the WHO’s top director-level roles. The European Region has the highest percentage of women in these senior leadership positions at 40%, followed by Headquarters at 36%. Meanwhile, the lowest senior female representation is found in the South-East Asia Region (23.1%) and the African Region (24.1%). In the DG’s annual human resources report, the organisation openly acknowledges that the greatest remaining gaps in global gender parity exist exactly at this glass ceiling: the uppermost D2 (director) level is only 24.5% female, and the P6/D1 (senior leadership) levels stand at 37.3% female. Staff decline tracks toward June projections WHO aims to slash nearly 25% of its workforce by June 2026, shifting the focus to country offices. The DG’s human resources report also confirms the scale of the ongoing departures. By December 2025, the WHO counted a steep 9.4% decrease in regular staff members, down to 8,569 from the 9,463 staff recorded at the end of 2024, or the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. The data on end-of-year departures indicate that the health agency is well on its way to reaching its previously announced target of slashing nearly 25% of its global workforce by mid-2026. According to the latest projections before WHA, only 7,283 regular WHO staff will remain by 30 June, about 23% less than the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. By 30 June 2026, WHO’s global staff count is projected to decline to 7283 ‒ roughly 23% less than 1 January 2025 (9401). Meanwhile, the number of non-staff affiliates decreased by 23% in 2025, down to 5,844 full-time equivalent positions across three non-staff categories as compared to 7,582 in 2024. These categories include professionals and general service staff working under “Agreement for Performance of Work” contracts for specific, time-limited tasks, “Consultants” for more ongoing roles, and Special Service Agreements (SSAs), a type of non-staff category common in Africa and South-East Asia. Non-staff ‘affiliates’ in 2025 as compared to 2024 in terms of numbers of contracts and full-time equivalent posts. SSA positions are typically full-time. Headquarters is bearing the heaviest burden of the realignment. Official projections indicate that Geneva and Global Shared Services will shrink by 29% by June 2026, losing over 800 staff members. Meanwhile, the proportion of personnel based in country offices has increased to nearly 46% of the remaining global workforce. This deliberate geographic shift reflects a strategic institutional goal to build a significantly leaner administrative headquarters while vigorously protecting country-level health delivery. “The development aid era is over. WHO Geneva needs to be much smaller,” as diplomatic sources who spoke to Health Policy Watch framed it. Financing the restructuring The missing US flag at WHO headquarters – Washington’s departure triggered a deep budget crisis and workforce restructuring, which is still ongoing. The WHO currently faces a funding gap of approximately $630 million, representing roughly 15% of its $4.2 billion base budget for the upcoming 2026-2027 biennium. Officials have managed to shrink this deficit through aggressive reprioritisation, extensive staff cuts, and a 50% reduction in travel costs. This represents a massive reduction from the initial projected deficit of $1.7 billion, which was catalysed by the geopolitical earthquake of the US withdrawal from the global health agency, announced in January 2025 when President Donald Trump took office. To finance the sweeping realignment, the 78th World Health Assembly in 2025 authorised the temporary use of up to $410 million from Programme Support Costs reserve funds to cover unavoidable indemnities and salary gaps. Yet, the organisation has successfully minimised its reliance on these reserves. To date, the projected utilisation of the reserve funds stands at $206.2 million, roughly half of the authorised amount, according to the Human Resources report focusing on “WHO’s prioritisation and realignment process.” Senior management says they achieved this by prioritising “preventive measures” to manage the downsizing. Approximately 51% of all global separations were managed through natural attrition, the expiration of fixed-term contracts, and a voluntary early retirement package, completely sparing the agency from paying out costly forced termination indemnities for those individuals. As attention turns to the next WHA and the election process for a new Director-General, the incoming leader will inherit a downsized organisation that has stronger female representation in its professional ranks in some regions, with more work to achieve parity in others, but that remains fundamentally fractured by severe budget constraints and glaring regional disparities. EXCLUSIVE: WHO Opens Nominations for Next Director General; Germany May Advance Former Merkel Aide, Helge Braun Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO/Human Resources – Prioritization and Realignment Process , WHO Human Resources Update, 31 December 2025. More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
WHO Gender Parity Dips Amidst Staff Cuts, but Women Advance Slightly in Professional Ranks 10/05/2026 Felix Sassmannshausen WHO professional gender parity has risen as more men depart, even as overall staff representation slightly declines. A dramatically shrinking World Health Organization (WHO) has seen a slight decline in gender parity amidst restructuring. Strict recruitment policies and targeted job cuts have actively boosted female representation within the organisation’s professional ranks. But deep regional disparities in gender representation remain unresolved, with men holding the overwhelming majority of staff posts in the African, South-East Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Amid sweeping job cuts triggered by the US withdrawal and a massive budget crisis, the World Health Organization (WHO) claims that “gender parity has been achieved” among its remaining 8,569 staff members in the Director General’s annual report, for WHO member states at next week’s World Health Assembly. However, WHO human resources data for 2025, released on 1 May, reveals this to be slightly misleading: women actually lost their 50.1% majority from 2024, dropping slightly to 49.7% by the end of 2025. Despite this broader decline, progress was made within the professional and higher categories, where female representation successfully rose from 47.9% in December 2024 to 48.5% by December 2025. While the absolute numbers for both genders shrank during the restructuring phase, a larger number of male professionals left the organisation than women (105 men compared to 67 women). This progress is not solely the result of the ongoing downsizing but reflects an intentional, long-term policy shift: targeted recruitment measures introduced in 2023 to achieve the gender parity mandate that job openings must be reopened if the applicant pool is less than 30% female or if shortlists lack at least two women. These strict policies, which remain in place until parity is reached in under-represented grades, helped drive the percentage of female applicants up from 31.4% to 32.1% over the past four years. Gender parity by region: a tale of two organisations WHO regional gender disparities persist. While the WHO’s official designation points to overall gender parity on a global scale, examining the workforce data for 2025 reveals a starkly divided WHO. True gender balance remains elusive, with distinct female-majority and male-majority regions painting a complex picture of international representation. The Western Pacific Region currently boasts the highest overall female representation at 65.2%, followed closely by headquarters and global shared services at 63.5%, and the European Region at 59.2%. Conversely, male staff retain a dominant majority in the African Region (65.5% male), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (59.2% male), and the South-East Asia Region (57.4% male). However, a more in-depth look at the data reveals that majorities are characterised by a concentration of women in administrative and clerical roles. In both headquarters and the Western Pacific, the high overall female representation is heavily driven by the ‘general service’ category, where women make up 79.5% and 74.3% of the staff, respectively. In contrast, the male-dominated regions exhibit male majorities across nearly all job categories: in the African Region, for example, men hold 67.8% of the general service roles and dominate the professional ranks. Data on the WHO Region of the Americas, which has its own governing body, budget and HR processes, is not included in the global HR report. Uneven gains in field and senior leadership WHO’s glass ceiling remains intact as female representation thins significantly at the highest director levels. These regional disparities become even more pronounced when examining crucial leadership roles. While women are increasingly securing top diplomatic and operational roles, these leadership gains remain highly uneven across the globe. The South-East Asia Region leads the agency in field leadership, successfully achieving exact gender parity, with 50% of its country offices now headed by women. In stark contrast, female leadership in the field lags severely in other regions. In the African Region, only 25.5% of country offices are headed by women, and the Eastern Mediterranean Region reports a similarly low 26.3%. A similar divide exists within the highest echelons of senior management at the D1 and D2 grades – the WHO’s top director-level roles. The European Region has the highest percentage of women in these senior leadership positions at 40%, followed by Headquarters at 36%. Meanwhile, the lowest senior female representation is found in the South-East Asia Region (23.1%) and the African Region (24.1%). In the DG’s annual human resources report, the organisation openly acknowledges that the greatest remaining gaps in global gender parity exist exactly at this glass ceiling: the uppermost D2 (director) level is only 24.5% female, and the P6/D1 (senior leadership) levels stand at 37.3% female. Staff decline tracks toward June projections WHO aims to slash nearly 25% of its workforce by June 2026, shifting the focus to country offices. The DG’s human resources report also confirms the scale of the ongoing departures. By December 2025, the WHO counted a steep 9.4% decrease in regular staff members, down to 8,569 from the 9,463 staff recorded at the end of 2024, or the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. The data on end-of-year departures indicate that the health agency is well on its way to reaching its previously announced target of slashing nearly 25% of its global workforce by mid-2026. According to the latest projections before WHA, only 7,283 regular WHO staff will remain by 30 June, about 23% less than the 9,401 employed as of 1 January 2025. By 30 June 2026, WHO’s global staff count is projected to decline to 7283 ‒ roughly 23% less than 1 January 2025 (9401). Meanwhile, the number of non-staff affiliates decreased by 23% in 2025, down to 5,844 full-time equivalent positions across three non-staff categories as compared to 7,582 in 2024. These categories include professionals and general service staff working under “Agreement for Performance of Work” contracts for specific, time-limited tasks, “Consultants” for more ongoing roles, and Special Service Agreements (SSAs), a type of non-staff category common in Africa and South-East Asia. Non-staff ‘affiliates’ in 2025 as compared to 2024 in terms of numbers of contracts and full-time equivalent posts. SSA positions are typically full-time. Headquarters is bearing the heaviest burden of the realignment. Official projections indicate that Geneva and Global Shared Services will shrink by 29% by June 2026, losing over 800 staff members. Meanwhile, the proportion of personnel based in country offices has increased to nearly 46% of the remaining global workforce. This deliberate geographic shift reflects a strategic institutional goal to build a significantly leaner administrative headquarters while vigorously protecting country-level health delivery. “The development aid era is over. WHO Geneva needs to be much smaller,” as diplomatic sources who spoke to Health Policy Watch framed it. Financing the restructuring The missing US flag at WHO headquarters – Washington’s departure triggered a deep budget crisis and workforce restructuring, which is still ongoing. The WHO currently faces a funding gap of approximately $630 million, representing roughly 15% of its $4.2 billion base budget for the upcoming 2026-2027 biennium. Officials have managed to shrink this deficit through aggressive reprioritisation, extensive staff cuts, and a 50% reduction in travel costs. This represents a massive reduction from the initial projected deficit of $1.7 billion, which was catalysed by the geopolitical earthquake of the US withdrawal from the global health agency, announced in January 2025 when President Donald Trump took office. To finance the sweeping realignment, the 78th World Health Assembly in 2025 authorised the temporary use of up to $410 million from Programme Support Costs reserve funds to cover unavoidable indemnities and salary gaps. Yet, the organisation has successfully minimised its reliance on these reserves. To date, the projected utilisation of the reserve funds stands at $206.2 million, roughly half of the authorised amount, according to the Human Resources report focusing on “WHO’s prioritisation and realignment process.” Senior management says they achieved this by prioritising “preventive measures” to manage the downsizing. Approximately 51% of all global separations were managed through natural attrition, the expiration of fixed-term contracts, and a voluntary early retirement package, completely sparing the agency from paying out costly forced termination indemnities for those individuals. As attention turns to the next WHA and the election process for a new Director-General, the incoming leader will inherit a downsized organisation that has stronger female representation in its professional ranks in some regions, with more work to achieve parity in others, but that remains fundamentally fractured by severe budget constraints and glaring regional disparities. EXCLUSIVE: WHO Opens Nominations for Next Director General; Germany May Advance Former Merkel Aide, Helge Braun Image Credits: WHO/Christopher Black , Felix Sassmannshausen/HPW, WHO/Human Resources – Prioritization and Realignment Process , WHO Human Resources Update, 31 December 2025. More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy Loading Comments... You must be logged in to post a comment.
More Girls Will Finish School if India’s Supreme Court Ruling on Menstrual Health is Implemented 08/05/2026 Disha Shetty Schools have to been directed to build gender-segregated toilets and to keep stocks of menstrual hygiene products by India’s Supreme Court . In January, India’s Supreme Court has ruled that menstrual health is a fundamental right, directing states and schools to take measures to facilitate menstrual health and sanitation. The laws of the world’s most populous country are now in line with the United Nations (UN) stand on menstrual health taken in 2024, and one that is also echoed by the World Health Organization. India’s Supreme Court directed state governments and schools in the country to build gender segregated toilets, hold menstrual health awareness sessions for both boys and girls, and stock schools with menstrual hygiene products. After the ruling, Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, said she and her team jumped for joy. The foundation works across eight states in India on menstrual health and hygiene awareness, “Up until this ruling came through, the responsibility of managing menstruation was left to a 12-year-old girl,” said Desai. “With the Supreme Court ruling, what it has done is shifted that responsibility to the community, and in this case, the infrastructure of the school.” Megha Desai, president of the Desai Foundation, that works on menstrual health. The court relied on research that showed only half of the girls surveyed were aware of menstruation before puberty, toilets were scarce, and menstruation led to a high level of absenteeism. The issue is not restricted to India alone. A 2021 survey by global children’s non-profit Plan International done in the United Kingdom found that 64% of girls aged 14-21 missed part or a full day of school due to their period, and 13% of girls missed an entire day of school at least once a month. The UN children’s organisation, UNICEF, has long raised the issue of girls staying out of school due to their monthly periods in several continents, such as Africa, apart from Asia. Precedent for the developing world? A community open session on menstrual health and hygiene in Jahelipatti village of Bihar state in India conducted by World Neighbors’ partner Ghoghardiha Prakhand Swarajya Vikas Sangh. In many parts of the world, especially in rural areas, menstruation is still a taboo subject. Women can be labelled “unclean” and subjected to social isolation. Blood stains due to the periods are perceived to be shameful. “This is a very bold move by the Indian government, and I really hope other countries learn from that and decide to do more about it,” said Rannia Elsayed, regional portfolio director for South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa at Pathfinder International, a non-profit that focuses on women’s health. Elsayed, who is based in Egypt, said that talking about menstruation is taboo in many rural parts of Egypt and Jordan. India may have set a precedent in the developing world with its court ruling. “In Kenya, there’s been a ruling that mandates free sanitary pads for public schools. Again, but there’s no constitutional rights framing for it,” she said. The ruling comes at a time when climate change is making heatwaves more intense and changing rainfall patterns in India as well as the rest of the world. A policy like this will help girls become more resilient to the impact of climate change on menstrual health, Elsayed said. Also read: Climate Change Driving India’s Unseasonably Severe Heat Wave Slew of recent measures to improve health India has built millions of new toilets in the past decade. Over the past decade, the Indian government’s Swachh Bharat Mission has focused on building millions of new toilets in the country with an eye on improving health, sanitation, and women’s lives. Despite this, less than half of the schools researchers surveyed in India have gender segregated toilets. The Indian government claims that 100 million toilets were built by 2019, but the reality is more complex than that. “In some of the schools I’ve seen [that the] toilet is there but no water, or the situation of toilets is in such a pathetic condition that you wouldn’t step in,” said Srijana Karki, who oversees the projects in India and Nepal for the international development organisation, World Neighbors. But in communities where access to toilets has improved, this has also translated into increased mobility of women as they feel more confident about managing their periods, she added. More toilets are just one of the many requirements to improve menstrual equity, however. “You have to have awareness [on menstrual health], you have to be educated, and there has to be a functional toilet, not just a toilet, but a functional toilet… clean, have enough water, and then use of sanitary napkins or clean cloths, and knowledge about how to safely dispose the napkins or safely reuse the cotton cloths,” Karki said. But the Indian government’s campaign to build more toilets has started a conversation about the relationship between more toilets and improved women’s health. It has also created an appetite for such infrastructure among families, especially from women who are now pushing for it from within families. “That wonderful campaign with beautiful intentions did change the mindset of communities and community leaders,” Desai said. Impact depends on implementation A menstrual health awareness session in progress in India’s Tamil Nadu, organized by the Desai Foundation. The immediate impact of the ruling is to provide impetus for development organizations working in this area to speed up their work. “Having the support of a ruling allows us to eliminate the debate. So, for me, I can tell you that time is now being saved on the ground where I am now saying, okay, now that we all agree that this is the way forward, let’s work together for the best way to implement,” Desai said. She also said that the government can play a big role in the implementation by supporting new infrastructure, and that it is likely that we will see more girls finish school as a result of this ruling. The ruling has been welcomed by development organizations working in the region, while the non-profit International Planned Parenthood Federation’s South Asia team has called for such a ruling to be extended to workplaces. If India does get the implementation part right in the coming years, it could set an example for the rest of the developing world, Desai said. Image Credits: Desai Foundation, Yogendra Singh/ Unsplash, World Neighbors, Ignas Kukenys/ Openverse/ Flick. When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts This site uses cookies to help give you the best experience on our website. Cookies enable us to collect information that helps us personalise your experience and improve the functionality and performance of our site. By continuing to read our website, we assume you agree to this, otherwise you can adjust your browser settings. Please read our cookie and Privacy Policy. Our Cookies and Privacy Policy
When the UN Partners With the Harm It Is Meant to Prevent 08/05/2026 Unni Karunakara Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world, and a documented violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. The United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) announced a “strategic partnership” with Nestlé to establish the World Food Academy 4 Sustainable Food Systems on 26 March. The arrangement incorporates Nestlé’s science and technology seminars, which reached around 7,000 students across over 300 academic institutions in more than 90 countries last year, and will be extended through a joint symposium later in 2026. The World Food Academy targets students, early-career researchers, and young professionals “particularly from priority regions in the Global South.” Within days, an open letter coordinated by the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) and authored by Phillip Baker of the University of Sydney began circulating. It carries nearly 500 signatures from public health researchers, nutritionists, lawyers, and civil society organisations around the world. It calls on UNU-INWEH to terminate the partnership immediately. Its reasoning is grounded in the UN’s own published standards for engagement with the private sector. Nestlé is the largest transnational food corporation in the world. It is a documented and persistent violator of the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – the 1981 World Health Assembly instrument created, in substantial part, in response to the company’s marketing practices. It is among the largest global manufacturers of ultra-processed foods, identified by the 2025 Lancet series on ultra-processed food as a principal commercial determinant of diet-related chronic disease. Distorting nutrition science It is also documented as a major actor in the broader pattern by which large food and beverage corporations distort nutrition science – funding research designed to produce favourable findings, sponsoring professional societies, and undermining the independence of the evidence base that public health policy depends on. It participates in industry associations that lobby against public health regulation of food marketing and against the breastmilk code. Nestlé’s UN-system footprint expanded sharply between December 2025 and March 2026. A UNFPA coalition membership on women’s health, the UNU-INWEH academy, and a new ILO partnership on labour rights in coffee supply chains were announced within five days of the academy. None of these partnerships, nor their concentration in a single four-month window, has been the subject of any published UN-system review. Criminal investigation The contradiction is sharpest at the level of UNU-INWEH itself. Nestlé’s water-related conduct is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation in France, regulatory action in the United States, and decades of Indigenous-led litigation across the Americas over aquifer depletion, over-extraction, and unauthorised treatments. A water institute lending its name to a company whose water practices are themselves the subject of regulatory and judicial proceedings is the textbook case of reputation washing. The UN system has spent two decades building rules of engagement for this kind of oppositional arrangement. The 2015 UN Guidelines on Cooperation between the UN and the Business Sector require that partnerships advance UN aims and that partners demonstrate commitment to human rights and Global Compact principles. The 2017 UN Sustainable Development Group Common Approach to Due Diligence requires documented scrutiny where there is public brand association, exchange of assets, or promotion of a business-led initiative – all three of which this partnership involves. UNDP has translated these principles into a detailed operational policy with exclusionary criteria, risk-tiered due diligence pathways, and decision-making separated from initiating staff. Breach of due diligence policy UNU has its own due diligence policy, promulgated by the rector in September 2024, with comparable exclusionary criteria and a requirement that high-risk business-sector partnerships be escalated to institute directors in consultation with the office of the rector. A more specific layer applies to the food and nutrition sector. UNICEF’s 2023 guidance states categorically that it will avoid all partnerships with Code violators and with ultra-processed food manufacturers. WHO’s Framework of Engagement with Non-State Actors (FENSA) identifies the conferral of UN legitimacy on corporate actors as a foundational risk. World Health Assembly Resolution 69.9 of 2016 calls on academic institutions not to allow companies marketing foods for infants and young children to sponsor meetings or enter promotional partnerships. In 2024, WHO and UNICEF jointly reaffirmed the principle of avoiding all partnerships with Code violators. Beyond these frameworks, an open-ended intergovernmental working group is negotiating, under Human Rights Council Resolution 26/9, a legally binding instrument to give the voluntary 2011 UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights binding force. The Nestlé partnership is a breach of these provisions. The accountability failure is not procedural. It is categorical: the partnership is of a kind the UN system’s own frameworks identify as one to avoid, and UNU’s own Due Diligence Policy provides the mechanism that would have caught it. That mechanism does not appear to have been applied. Levels of harm Mothers and babies are harmed by the marketing of infant formula in place of breastfeeding. The harm operates on two levels. The first and most fundamental is to children, mothers, and parents whose feeding choices, nutrition, and health are shaped by the marketing practices and product environments the Code exists to regulate. The second is to the UN system itself, and to the institutions whose work the partnership undermines – among them WHO, UNICEF, and UNU’s own International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH). UNU-IIGH, in Kuala Lumpur, hosts a ‘power and accountability’ research programme covering, among other things: accountability deficits of the world’s largest food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and financial corporations; the political economy of commercial milk formula marketing; aggressive tax avoidance by transnational corporations that drains public fiscal capacity in the Global South; and governance capture of inter-governmental institutions. Among the programme’s recent outputs is a Lancet article on the inadequacy of current efforts to hold corporations accountable. The Nestlé partnership undermines this work. Publicly funded research products are lost, inter-agency collaborations disrupted, and the institutional voice of researchers working on commercial determinants of health is structurally weakened. Three years of work is now shadowed by an arrangement the work itself would have recommended against. The case is not isolated. In late 2025, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the WHO Regional Office for the Americas, signed a three-year Framework Agreement with Ferrero International to support initiatives for “children, adolescents, and families in vulnerable conditions.” Researchers, civil society, and the BMJ raised the same concerns that the IBFAN letter raises now: a UN agency lending its name to a major ultra-processed food manufacturer in the very policy domain where the company’s interests run against the public health evidence. On 15 April 2026, PAHO terminated the agreement. Private funding filling gaps Two cases, two UN agencies. The pattern is not accidental. The UN’s financial architecture – assessed contributions are now a small proportion of operating budgets, with voluntary earmarked private funding filling the gap – rewards arrangements with well-resourced private partners and penalises institutes that decline them. Reinforcing this is the multi-stakeholder model that the World Economic Forum and the World Health Summit have promoted for two decades as the standard architecture of global governance – framing corporations, philanthropies, and states as equivalent partners, weakening public responsibility and intergovernmental accountability. Without active central enforcement of the UN’s own frameworks, the pressure runs one way. The UN is a global public institution. Its founding Charter establishes it as an institution designed to serve the peoples of the world. It derives its mandate and legitimacy from member states acting through intergovernmental bodies: the World Health Assembly, the General Assembly, and the governing councils of the specialised agencies. Its authority rests on the premise that it represents collective public interest, not the interests of particular donors or sectors. Each partnership of this kind erodes public trust in the multilateral system itself, at a moment of declining public confidence in international institutions. Within this system, UNU institutes occupy a particular role: an academic and rigorous think tank governed by an independent academic council, providing space for constructive critique while operating in accordance with UN principles. Enforcing existing guidelines When UNU lends its name to a company whose practices the UN has spent decades regulating against, the exchange is clear: the corporation gains legitimacy and access to the next generation of food and nutrition professionals. The UN loses its legitimacy as the arbiter of the standards it exists to uphold. What is required is not new guidelines. They exist. What is required is enforcement – transparently, with documented risk-benefit analyses, with decision-makers separated from the staff initiating partnerships, with published exclusionary criteria actually applied. UNDP has done this; UNU has the equivalent on paper but appears not to have applied it here. Direct correspondence with the UNU rector and the directors of UNU-INWEH and UNU-IIGH, raising these concerns, has to date received no response. Under UNU’s own due diligence policy, a business-sector partnership of this scale would require enhanced due diligence with the direct involvement of the institute director and consultation with the office of the rector. Whether that consultation occurred, and what it concluded, is now the central question. Three steps must follow. First, UNU-INWEH should terminate the partnership and publish the due-diligence record that preceded its announcement. Second, UNU should apply its existing due diligence policy to the Nestlé case and expand its exclusionary criteria to align with the food and nutrition sector frameworks the broader UN system has already adopted – including ultra-processed food manufacturers and Code violators alongside the tobacco and weapons categories the policy already names. Third, the United Nations must take enforcement of its own engagement frameworks more seriously, including review by the UN Sustainable Development Group of concentrated patterns of corporate engagement, such as Nestlé’s recent clustering of partnerships across UN agencies, and active management of conflicts of interest, including the instrumentalisation of UN legitimacy by private actors. The credibility of the UN system depends on the clear separation of its public mandate from the commercial interests its work often contests. Once that line is blurred, it becomes very difficult to draw again. Dr Unni Karunakara is a Senior Fellow at the Global Health Justice Partnership at Yale Law School in the US; the Richard von Weizsäcker Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, and a visiting professor at Manipal University, India. He was the interim director of the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in 2024-2025. and international president of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) from 2010-2013. He has held various academic and research fellowships at universities in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Germany and the United Kingdom, focusing on forced migration, and healthcare delivery to neglected populations affected by conflict, disasters and epidemics. Image Credits: FDA, WHO. Posts navigation Older posts