I am reposting this good article by a friend, Philip Stevens, published in BusinessWorld last Thursday, January 18.
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AS one of 34 executive board members of the World Health
Organization (WHO) meeting in Geneva next week, the Philippines shares a
pivotal role in setting the global health agenda for the next year.
The WHO’s work has never been more important to address serious
and evolving international health threats. It is only a matter of time before
there is another global influenza pandemic to match the devastating outbreak of
1918, and, as recent outbreaks of Ebola and Zika have shown, new and deadly
diseases can emerge at any time.
As a UN organization to which almost every country in the
world belongs, the WHO should make strengthening national health systems and
coordinating defenses against transnational disease its priority. But it’s
often hard to know if the organization has any priority.
Superficial involvement in a ballooning number of health
areas has made it a directionless, ineffective, and inward-looking player in an
increasingly crowded global health scene.
The WHO’s tendency to do a lot poorly has seen it fail in
its core business of leading international action on transnational disease
outbreaks.
Take the organization’s response to the West African
Ebola crisis of 2014.
An expert panel convened by Harvard Global Health
Institute and the London School of Tropical Medicine criticized the WHO for its
“catastrophic” delay in declaring a public health emergency.
The worry is that WHO will fail to handle the next
inevitable global pandemic, leading to needless loss of life.
Funding is part of the problem: The WHO spent just 5.7%
of its 2014-2015 budget on disease outbreaks, a 50% drop on the previous two
years.
The WHO’s core budget, paid by member governments, fell
from $579 million in 1990 to a feeble $465 million this year. To put this in
context, this is considerably less than the Philippines receives each year in
foreign aid earmarked for health.
The WHO has topped up its budget with project-based
donations from countries and big charities, which now constitute 80% of its
overall income. But that has cost the WHO its strategic independence.
Alongside global health staples like tropical diseases
and immunization, the WHO now publishes recommendations on subjects from
adolescent health and headaches to traffic safety and prisons.
Jeremy Farrar, director of the UK-based global health
research charity the Wellcome Trust, argues the WHO is being undermined by its
inability to focus on a few core issues.
“It’s so thinly stretched,” he told Reuters. “There’s
arguably no organization on earth that could cover all those (topics) at
sufficient depth to be authoritative.”
This lack of focus and mission creep will be on full
display at next week’s WHO executive board meeting. Bizarrely, large parts of
the agenda are dedicated to discussion of how to dilute the intellectual
property (IP) protections that drive discovery of new health technologies.
Given the scale of today’s global health challenges, it’s
not clear how repeating a tired and long discredited debate about IP and access
to medicines will help. The vast majority of treatments prescribed in both
developing and developed countries are off-patent and therefore unaffected by
IP rules, yet far too many still do not have reliable access to them.
The real reasons for this have been well known for
decades. There are too few doctors and clinics, and a lack of social and health
insurance to protect people from the cost of health care expenditures
(something WHO itself implicitly recognizes in its efforts to promote universal
health care). In many places, weak supply chains and poor infrastructure
separate people from the treatments they need.
A narrow and divisive focus by WHO on IP may tick
political boxes, but it does nothing to improve health and will only lead to
more unproductive debate. It looks like a power grab by WHO staff to intervene
in areas that are best left to national governments.
In 2017, former Ethiopian foreign minister Tedros Adhanom
was elected as new director general on a mandate to reform and consolidate the
WHO. Almost immediately, he appointed no fewer than 14 assistant director
generals to oversee a huge number of program areas. This is not the work of a
reformer.
Next week is the first executive board meeting under
Tedros’s leadership. The Philippines and other member states need to steady the
ship. To maintain its relevance, WHO must get back to basics and do a few
things well, not many things poorly. It must therefore unite nations around
practical solutions, not divide them in pointless debates.
Philip Stevens is director of Geneva Network, a UK-based
research organization focusing on international trade and health issues.
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