Руководство воз 2021

Члены высшего руководства ВОЗ

Члены высшего руководства ВОЗ

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Исполнительный директор

Д-р Майкл Райан, Исполнительный директор Программы ВОЗ по чрезвычайным ситуациям в области здравоохранения

Майкл Райан

В качестве Исполнительного директора Программы ВОЗ по чрезвычайным ситуациям в области здравоохранения возглавляет работу ВОЗ по реагированию на вспышки заболеваний, гуманитарные кризисы и другие чрезвычайные ситуации в области общественного здравоохранения. 
 

Уже почти 25 лет работает на переднем крае борьбы с серьезными факторами риска для здоровья населения во всем мире. Начал работать в ВОЗ в 1996 г. в новом отделе по реагированию на угрозы, связанные с новыми и эпидемическими заболеваниями. 
Работал во многих странах, затронутых конфликтами, и возглавлял работу ВОЗ по реагированию на масштабные чрезвычайные ситуации в области здравоохранения, такие как пандемия COVID-19 и эпидемия ТОРС.  С 2013 по 2017 г. занимал должность старшего
советника по вопросам ликвидации полиомиелита при Глобальной инициативе по ликвидации полиомиелита и в этом качестве совершил ряд продолжительных командировок в страны Ближнего Востока. 

Выступил одним из основателей Глобальной сети по предупреждению о вспышках болезней и ответным действиям (ГОАРН), которая помогла в принятии мер реагирования на сотни вспышек болезней по всему миру.  

Получил медицинское образование в Национальном университете Ирландии в Голуэе, степень магистра в сфере общественного здравоохранения в Университетском колледже Дублина и специализацию в области борьбы с инфекционными болезнями в Агентстве охраны здоровья
в Лондоне, Великобритания, и проходил обучение в рамках Европейской программы подготовки специалистов в области аналитической и практической эпидемиологии.

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Главный научный сотрудник

Д-р Джереми Фаррар, главный научный сотрудник

Д-р Джереми Фаррар

Wellcome

Д-р Джереми Фаррар

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На посту главного научного сотрудника д-р Фаррар будет курировать Управление по научной работе, мобилизуя усилия экспертов и объединений, работающих в сфере науки и инноваций по всему миру, по осмыслению, разработке и проведению в жизнь высокоэффективных мер политики и механизмов обслуживания в области здравоохранения в интересах наиболее нуждающихся в этом людей.

До перехода на работу в ВОЗ занимал должность директора фонда Wellcome Trust. Работал в фонде в течение девяти лет, руководя целым рядом крупных инициатив по реформированию, реструктуризации и обеспечению роста организации, благодаря чему в настоящее время фонд Wellcome Trust сотрудничает с партнерами по всему миру и концентрирует усилия на организации фундаментальных теоретических исследований в трех сложных областях – инфекционные болезни; климат и здоровье; и психическое здоровье, – каждый раз целенаправленно обеспечивая соблюдение принципов справедливости, многообразия и инклюзивности в рамках поддерживаемых партнерами научных проектов.

До прихода на работу в фонд Wellcome Trust в течение 17 лет работал директором Отдела клинических исследований Больницы тропических болезней в Хошимине (Вьетнаме). Сфера научных и практических интересов д-р Фаррара включает комплексные исследования в области охраны здоровья применительно к целому ряду инфекционных и неинфекционных заболеваний, включая новые инфекции, грипп, инфекции головного мозга, денге, брюшной тиф, малярию, туберкулез, устойчивость к противомикробным препаратам, оппортунистические инфекции при ВИЧ и инсульты. Он был первым председателем Программы ВОЗ по НИОКР, а также первым директором Международного консорциума по проблемам тяжелых острых респираторных и новых инфекций (ISARIC), который руководил клиническим исследованием Recovery, а также Консорциума Соединенного Королевства по геномным исследованиям COVID-19.

Изучал неврологию и инфекционные болезни в Лондоне, Эдинбурге и Оксфорде (Соединенное Королевство) и Мельбурне (Австралия). Получил степень доктора наук по направлению «иммунология» в Оксфордском университете (Соединенное Королевство) в рамках совместной докторантуры с Калифорнийским университетом в Сан-Франциско (США).

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Помощники Генерального директора

Д-р Самира Асма, помощник Генерального директора по сбору и анализу данных и информационному обеспечению

Самира Асма

В качестве помощника Генерального директора и руководителя Управления по сбору и анализу данных и информационному обеспечению возглавляет работу ВОЗ по своевременному сбору и анализу надежных данных в целях оценки хода достижения провозглашенных ВОЗ «целей
трех миллиардов» и, в более широком смысле, целей в области устойчивого развития (ЦУР), связанных со здоровьем.

Начала работу в ВОЗ в 2018 г. на должности директора Департамента по метрике и статистическим измерениям в области здравоохранения. В этом качестве руководила общеорганизационной работой в сотрудничестве с целым рядом партнерских структур по созданию
системы результатов для измерения хода достижения показателей, предусмотренных в 13-й Общей программе работы ВОЗ (ОПР-13) и Глобальном плане действий по ЦУР.

До работы в ВОЗ на протяжении более двух десятилетий занимала руководящие должности в Центрах по контролю и профилактике заболеваний США. Формируя эффективные партнерские связи, учредила ряд глобальных программ в области борьбы против табака и неинфекционных
заболеваний, гигиены окружающей среды и травматизма. Является соавтором более 100 публикаций, книг и аналитических докладов по вопросам глобального здравоохранения и эпидемиологического надзора.

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Соглашение (на английском языке)

Д-р Брюс Эйлвард, помощник Генерального директора и руководитель Управления по вопросам всеобщего охвата услугами здравоохранения и охвата всех этапов жизни

Брюс Эйлвард

ВОЗ /C. Black

Д-р Брюс Эйлвард

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На посту помощника Генерального директора и руководителя Управления по вопросам всеобщего охвата услугами здравоохранения и охвата всех этапов жизни д-р Брюс Эйлвард отвечает за выполнение задач Организации по обеспечению доступности первичной медико-санитарной помощи и защиты от финансовых трудностей для всех людей и курирует работу ВОЗ по таким вопросам, как системы здравоохранения, иммунизация и охрана репродуктивного здоровья и здоровья матери и ребенка.

До назначения на текущую должность руководил программой преобразований в ВОЗ, а также участием Организации в специальных инициативах, в частности в работе межучрежденческого центра Инициативы по ускорению доступа к средствам для борьбы с COVID-19 (Инициативы ACT) и Совместной целевой группы по финансам и здравоохранению Группы двадцати.

Имеет 30-летний опыт работы в ВОЗ на всех трех уровнях Организации, в том числе на множестве руководящих должностей, включая должность директора партнерства Глобальной инициативы по ликвидации полиомиелита, помощника Генерального директора, курирующего кластер ВОЗ по полиомиелиту и чрезвычайным ситуациям, Исполнительного директора Программы ВОЗ по чрезвычайным ситуациям и заместителя Генерального директора по вопросам реагирования на вспышку Эболы в Западной Африке. С сентября 2014 г. по июль 2016 г. также занимал должность Специального представителя Генерального директора при Миссии Организации Объединенных Наций по чрезвычайному реагированию на Эболу (МООНЧРЭ). В 2016 г. возглавил работу по созданию Программы ВОЗ по чрезвычайным ситуациям в области здравоохранения, после чего руководил реформой Управления Организации Объединенных Наций по координации гуманитарных вопросов (УКГВ) и в конце 2017 г. вернулся в ВОЗ, где возглавил процесс разработки и реализации текущей программы преобразований ВОЗ.

По профессии врач и эпидемиолог, имеет степень доктора медицины Мемориального университета Ньюфаундленда (Канада), диплом Лондонской школы гигиены и тропической медицины (Соединенное Королевство) и степень магистра по специальности «общественное здравоохранение» Школы общественного здравоохранения Блумберга, Университет Джонса Хопкинса (США).

Д-р Ханан Балхи (Hanan Balkhy), Помощник Генерального директора по проблеме устойчивости к противомикробным препаратам

Ханан Балхи

В 2019 г. назначена Помощником Генерального директора по проблеме устойчивости к противомикробным препаратам. На этой должности обеспечивает политическое и техническое руководство работой по борьбе с разрушительными последствиями лекарственной устойчивости
для здоровья населения и экономики. Данная работа включает как оказание поддержки странам в реализации национальных планов действий по борьбе с устойчивостью к противомикробным препаратам, так и усиление глобальных ответных мер, в том числе посредством
многосекторального сотрудничества с Продовольственной и сельскохозяйственной организацией Объединенных Наций, Всемирной организацией по охране здоровья животных и Программой ООН по окружающей среде.

До работы в ВОЗ занимала должность Исполнительного директора по вопросам профилактики и контроля инфекционных заболеваний в Министерстве национальной гвардии Саудовской Аравии и первого Председателя департамента исследований инфекционных заболеваний в
Международном медицинском исследовательском центре им. короля Абдаллы в Эр-Рияде. Также руководила сотрудничающим центром ВОЗ по профилактике и контролю инфекционных заболеваний и устойчивости к противомикробным препаратам при Городской больнице им.
короля Абдулазиза.

Окончила Университет имени короля Абдулазиза в Джидде, после чего обучалась в ординатуре по специальности «педиатрия» в Общеклинической больнице штата Массачусетс в Бостоне, США, и в аспирантуре по специальности «детские инфекционные
болезни» в Кливлендской клинике и Университете Кейс-Вестерн-Резерв, США.

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Д-р Катарина Бёме, помощник Генерального директора по внешним связям и руководящим органам

Катарина Бёме

ВОЗ

Д-р Катарина Бёме, Начальник канцелярии

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На посту помощника Генерального директора по внешним связям и руководящим органам курирует внешнее стратегическое взаимодействие ВОЗ по вопросам управления Организацией, мобилизации ресурсов и отношений с партнерами. Имеет опыт оказания секретариатской поддержки Всемирной ассамблее здравоохранения и Исполнительному комитету ВОЗ, а также участия в межправительственных процессах, реализуемых по поручениям руководящих органов ВОЗ, в том числе связанных с реформой управления и обеспечением устойчивого финансирования. Координирует действия ВОЗ по привлечению ресурсов и работе с донорами, а также общеорганизационные усилия по повышению предсказуемости, гибкости и устойчивости финансирования. Также отвечает за работу ВОЗ в рамках многосторонних и многосекторальных партнерств, направленных на развитие глобального здравоохранения, в том числе партнерств с участием гражданского общества, частного сектора и других негосударственных структур.

В 2021–2023 гг. занимала должность руководителя Канцелярии Генерального директора. В этой должности координировала процессы достижения стратегических целей руководства Организации, обеспечивая согласованность действия всех подразделений Организации, а также взаимодействие с государствами-членами и партнерами.

До этого в течение восьми лет работала Генеральным директором фонда FIND – международного альянса по средствам диагностики. Под ее руководством фонд добился расширения доступа к средствам диагностики для более чем 100 млн человек в странах с низким или средним уровнем дохода, а также участвовал в решении важных актуальных проблем в таких областях, как устойчивость к противомикробным препаратам, вспышки инфекционных болезней и неинфекционные заболевания. Выступала одним из соучредителей Инициативы по ускорению доступа к средствам для борьбы с COVID-19, в рамках которой занималась вопросами обеспечения справедливого доступа к средствам диагностики COVID-19.

В самом начале карьеры работала в Гане и Объединенной Республике Танзания, где занималась клиническими исследованиями в области элиминации туберкулеза. Имеет опыт работы в ряде консультативных органов в ВОЗ и на глобальном уровне, входила в состав двух комиссий Lancet и является автором сотен научных публикаций в рецензируемых журналах.

Имеет медицинское образование, а также дипломы в области общественного здравоохранения и менеджмента.

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Д-р Чикве Ихеквеазу, помощник Генерального директора и руководитель Информационно-аналитического управления по чрезвычайным ситуациям в области здравоохранения при Программе ВОЗ по чрезвычайным ситуациям

Чикве Ихеквеазу

В должности помощника Генерального директора и руководителя Информационно-аналитического управления по чрезвычайным ситуациям в области здравоохранения при Программе ВОЗ по чрезвычайным ситуациям возглавляет Центр ВОЗ по оперативно-аналитической информации
о пандемиях и эпидемиях. В этой роли координирует работу глобального многосекторального партнерства, которое оказывает странам и заинтересованным сторонам поддержку в области коррекции факторов риска пандемий и эпидемий посредством расширения доступа
к данным, укрепления потенциала в области анализа данных и совершенствования механизмов и инструментов принятия решений.

До этого являлся первым генеральным директором Центра по контролю и профилактике заболеваний Нигерии, которым руководил с 2016 по 2021 г. В 2017 г. занимал должность временно исполняющего обязанности директора Регионального центра по эпиднадзору
и контролю за заболеваниями в Западной Африке. Занимал различные должности в Национальном институте инфекционных заболеваний Южной Африки, Агентстве охраны здоровья Великобритании и Институте Роберта Коха в Германии.

Окончил Институт медицины при Нигерийском университете по специальности «эпидемиология инфекционных заболеваний». Имеет степень магистра общественного здравоохранения Университета им. Генриха Гейне в Дюссельдорфе, Германия. В 2003 г.
проходил обучение в рамках Европейской программы подготовки специалистов в области аналитической и практической эпидемиологии, после чего получил специализацию в области общественного здравоохранения в Институте общественного здравоохранения в Великобритании. 

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Д-р Айлань Ли, помощник Генерального директора и руководитель Управления по вопросам всеобщего охвата услугами здравоохранения и повышения показателей здоровья населения

Д-р Айлань Ли

На посту помощника Генерального директора и руководителя Управления по вопросам всеобщего охвата услугами здравоохранения и повышения показателей здоровья населения д-р Ли руководит работой ВОЗ по укреплению здоровья и благополучия людей посредством воздействия на экологические, социальные и экономические детерминанты здоровья, такие как изменение климата, борьба против табака, химическая безопасность, дорожно-транспортная безопасность, продовольственные системы и питание, физическая активность, загрязнение воздуха и радиация. Эта работа осуществляется на принципах концепции «Единое здоровье».

В 2019–2023 гг. занимала должность представителя ВОЗ в Королевстве Камбоджа. Ранее работала региональным директором Программы ВОЗ по чрезвычайным ситуациям в области здравоохранения в Региональном бюро ВОЗ для стран Западной части Тихого океана, а до этого – руководителем управления того же бюро по вопросам санитарно-эпидемиологической безопасности и чрезвычайным ситуациям. До перехода на работу в ВОЗ была доцентом факультета общественного здравоохранения Пекинского университета. Имеет опыт работы в таких областях общественного здравоохранения, как профилактическая медицина, профилактика и контроль заболеваний, политика охраны здоровья населения, системы здравоохранения, социальные науки и безопасность пищевых продуктах.

Имеет медицинский диплом Пекинского медицинского университета (Китай) и степень магистра по специальности «медико-социальные науки», полученную в Университете им. принца Махидола в Таиланде.

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Д-р Юкико Накатани, помощник Генерального директора по вопросам доступа к лекарственным средствам и медицинской продукции 

Юкико Накатани

В качестве помощника Генерального директора по вопросам доступа к лекарственным средствам и медицинской продукции д-р Накатани осуществляет надзор за разработкой и осуществлением норм и мер политики ВОЗ, направленных на обеспечение справедливого доступа к качественным лекарственным препаратам, вакцинам и средствам диагностики для всех групп населения во всем мире, в том числе в целях предупреждения эпидемий и принятия мер реагирования на них.

Перед вступлением в эту должность д-р Накатани занимала должность директора Отдела по борьбе с онкологическими и другими заболеваниями Министерства здравоохранения, труда и благосостояния Японии, а также технического советника Государственного министра Японии в рамках Целевой группы по вакцинации против COVID-19. Д-р Накатани начала работать в Министерстве здравоохранения, труда и благосостояния Японии в 2001 г. В последующие 20 лет она занималась такими вопросами, как экономика здравоохранения, исследования и разработки, оценка медицинских технологий и продукты крови. Кроме того, д-р Накатани работала в Министерстве здравоохранения и социальных служб Соединенных Штатов Америки, занимаясь вопросами медико-санитарных мер реагирования на грипп H1N1 в сотрудничестве с Национальными институтами здравоохранения, Управлением по санитарному надзору за качеством пищевых продуктов и медикаментов и Центрами по контролю и профилактике заболеваний США. В 2012-2014 гг. она также работала медицинским сотрудником в группе по изделиям медицинского назначения в штаб-квартире ВОЗ.

Д-р Накатани получила медицинскую степень в медицинском колледже Асахикава (Япония), а также докторскую степень в области общественного здравоохранения в Высшей медицинской школе Японии.

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Д-р Разия Пендсе, руководитель Канцелярии

Разия Пендсе

На должности руководителя Канцелярии обеспечивает работу Бюро Генерального директора, помогая реализовать приоритеты и инициативы Организации и обеспечивая согласованность действий высшего руководства ВОЗ, а также трех уровней Организации.

До текущего назначения занимала должность директора Отдела по вопросам укрепления здоровья населения и борьбы с неинфекционными заболеваниями Регионального бюро ВОЗ для стран Юго-Восточной Азии. До этого была представителем ВОЗ в Шри-Ланке, а прежде в течение более десяти лет занималась вопросам борьбы с инфекционными заболеваниями и охраны репродуктивного здоровья в Региональном бюро ВОЗ для стран Юго-Восточной Азии. Также имеет опыт работы в штаб-квартире ВОЗ по вопросам здоровья семьи и общества.

Имеет степень магистра по специальности «общественное здравоохранения» Лондонской школы гигиены и тропической медицины (Соединенное Королевство) и медицинский диплом, полученный в Раджастанском университете медицинских наук (Индия).

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Соглашение (на английском языке)

Д-р Жером Саломон, помощник Генерального директора и руководитель Управления по вопросам всеобщего охвата услугами здравоохранения и инфекционным и неинфекционным заболеваниям

Жером Саломон

Д-р Жером Саломон был назначен на текущую должность
в апреле 2023 г. и курирует широкий круг специализированных программ,
охватывающих проблематику ВИЧ, вирусного гепатита, инфекций, передаваемых
половым путем, туберкулеза, малярии, забытых тропических болезней, психического
здоровья, расстройств, связанных с употреблением психоактивных веществ, а также
неинфекционных заболеваний, включая сердечно-сосудистые, хронические
респираторные, онкологические заболевания и диабет.

Ранее занимал посты Главного санитарного
врача и руководителя Генерального управления по вопросам охраны здоровья
Министерства здравоохранения и профилактики заболеваний Франции. До назначения
на должность помощника Генерального директора ВОЗ входил в состав
Исполнительного комитета ВОЗ и имеет обширный опыт работы в области управления
системами здравоохранения, борьбы с инфекционными заболеваниями и
международного сотрудничества по вопросам охраны здоровья.

Имеет медицинское образование, степень
магистра по специальности «общественное здравоохранение» и докторскую степень
по эпидемиологии.

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ (на английском языке)

Г-н Рауль Томас, помощник Генерального директора по вопросам административно-финансового обеспечения

Рауль Томас

В качестве помощника Генерального директора и руководителя Управления административно-финансового обеспечения отвечает за такие вопросы, как бюджет ВОЗ и планирование, управление финансами, кадровые ресурсы, закупки, безопасность, административная работа и обеспечение соблюдения нормативных требований.

Работает в ВОЗ в течение более 25 лет; за это время занимал различные должности в регионах Африки, стран Америки, Восточного Средиземноморья и Западной части Тихого океана, а также в Международном агентстве по изучению рака (МАИР).

Помимо указанных выше областей, также занимался административными вопросами и мерами обеспечения безопасности в условиях природных бедствий и чрезвычайных ситуаций, в том числе в районах гражданских беспорядков и вооруженных конфликтов.

В качестве временно исполняющего обязанности руководителя Академии ВОЗ курирует выполнение программы действий в области организации обучения по широкому кругу тем, связанных с общественным здравоохранением.

До прихода в ВОЗ в течение двух лет работал в Программе развития ООН в Нью-Йорке.

Имеет степень магистра в области организационного управления и степень бакалавра в области делового администрирования. 

Полномочия согласно поручению Генерального директора ВОЗ — Помощник Генерального директора по вопросам административно-финансового обеспечения (на английском языке)

Coordinates: 46°13′56″N 06°08′03″E / 46.23222°N 6.13417°E

World Health Organization (WHO)

World Health Organization Logo.svg
World Health Organisation headquarters, Geneva, north and west sides.jpg

The headquarter in Geneva was designed by Jean Tschumi and inaugurated in 1966.[1]

Abbreviation WHO
Pronunciation
  • by WHO itself and the governments that work with it; is an often-heard spelling pronunciation
Formation 7 April 1948; 75 years ago
Type United Nations specialized agency
Legal status Active
Headquarters Geneva, Switzerland

Head

Tedros Adhanom
(Director-General)

Parent organization

United Nations Economic and Social Council

Budget

$7.96 billion (2020–21)
Website www.who.int Edit this at Wikidata
icon Medicine portal
icon Politics portal

The World Health Organization (WHO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations responsible for international public health.[2] Headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, it has six regional offices and 150 field offices worldwide.[3]

The WHO was established on 7 April 1948.[4][5] The first meeting of the World Health Assembly (WHA), the agency’s governing body, took place on 24 July of that year. The WHO incorporated the assets, personnel, and duties of the League of Nations’ Health Organization and the Office International d’Hygiène Publique, including the International Classification of Diseases (ICD).[6] Its work began in earnest in 1951 after a significant infusion of financial and technical resources.[7]

The WHO’s mandate seeks and includes: working worldwide to promote health, keeping the world safe, and serve the vulnerable. It advocates that a billion more people should have: universal health care coverage, engagement with the monitoring of public health risks, coordinating responses to health emergencies, and promoting health and well-being.[8] It provides technical assistance to countries, sets international health standards, and collects data on global health issues. A publication, the World Health Report, provides assessments of worldwide health topics.[9] The WHO also serves as a forum for discussions of health issues.[2]

The WHO has played a leading role in several public health achievements, most notably the eradication of smallpox, the near-eradication of polio, and the development of an Ebola vaccine. Its current priorities include communicable diseases, particularly HIV/AIDS, Ebola, COVID-19, malaria and tuberculosis; non-communicable diseases such as heart disease and cancer; healthy diet, nutrition, and food security; occupational health; and substance abuse. Its World Health Assembly, the agency’s decision-making body, elects and advises an executive board made up of 34 health specialists. It selects the director-general, sets goals and priorities, and approves the budget and activities. The current director-general is Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus of Ethiopia.[10]

The WHO relies on contributions from member states (both assessed and voluntary) and private donors for funding. Its total approved budget for 2020–2021 is over $7.2 billion, of which the majority comes from voluntary contributions from member states.[2][11]
Since the late 20th century, the rise of new actors engaged in global health such as the World Bank, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and dozens of public-private partnerships for global health have weakened the WHO’s role as a coordinator and policy leader in the field.[12]

History

Origin

The International Sanitary Conferences (ISC), the first of which was held on 23 June 1851, were a series of conferences that took place until 1938, about 87 years.[13] The first conference, in Paris, was almost solely concerned with cholera, which would remain the disease of major concern for the ISC for most of the 19th century. With the etiology (causation), even the communicability, of many epidemic diseases still uncertain and a matter of scientific argument, international agreement on appropriate measures was difficult to reach.[13]
Seven of these international conferences, spanning 41 years, were convened before any resulted in a multi-state international agreement. The seventh conference, in Venice in 1892, finally resulted in a convention. It was concerned only with the sanitary control of shipping traversing the Suez Canal, and was an effort to guard against importation of cholera.[14]: 65 

Five years later, in 1897, a convention concerning the bubonic plague was signed by sixteen of the 19 states attending the Venice conference. While Denmark, Sweden-Norway, and the US did not sign this convention, it was unanimously agreed that the work of the prior conferences should be codified for implementation.[15] Subsequent conferences, from 1902 until the final one in 1938, widened the diseases of concern for the ISC, and included discussions of responses to yellow fever, brucellosis, leprosy, tuberculosis, and typhoid.[16] In part as a result of the successes of the Conferences, the Pan-American Sanitary Bureau (1902), and the Office International d’Hygiène Publique (1907) were soon founded. When the League of Nations was formed in 1920, they established the Health Organization of the League of Nations. After World War II, the United Nations absorbed all the other health organizations, to form the WHO.[17]

Establishment

During the 1945 United Nations Conference on International Organization, Szeming Sze, a delegate from China, conferred with Norwegian and Brazilian delegates on creating an international health organization under the auspices of the new United Nations. After failing to get a resolution passed on the subject, Alger Hiss, the secretary general of the conference, recommended using a declaration to establish such an organization. Sze and other delegates lobbied and a declaration passed calling for an international conference on health.[18] The use of the word «world», rather than «international», emphasized the truly global nature of what the organization was seeking to achieve.[19] The constitution of the World Health Organization was signed by all 51 countries of the United Nations, and by 10 other countries, on 22 July 1946.[20] It thus became the first specialized agency of the United Nations to which every member subscribed.[21] Its constitution formally came into force on the first World Health Day on 7 April 1948, when it was ratified by the 26th member state.[20]

The first meeting of the World Health Assembly finished on 24 July 1948, having secured a budget of US$5 million(then £1,250,000) for the 1949 year. G. Brock Chisholm was appointed director-general of the WHO, having served as executive secretary and a founding member during the planning stages,[22][19] while Andrija Štampar was the assembly’s first president. Its first priorities were to control the spread of malaria, tuberculosis and sexually transmitted infections, and to improve maternal and child health, nutrition and environmental hygiene.[23] Its first legislative act was concerning the compilation of accurate statistics on the spread and morbidity of disease.[19] The logo of the World Health Organization features the Rod of Asclepius as a symbol for healing.[24]

Activities

IAEA – Agreement WHA 12–40

In 1959, the WHO signed Agreement WHA 12–40 with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which says:[25]

whenever either organization proposes to initiate a programme or activity on a subject in which the other organization has or may have a substantial interest, the first party shall consult the other with a view to adjusting the matter by mutual agreement.

The nature of this statement has led some groups and activists including Women in Europe for a Common Future to claim that the WHO is restricted in its ability to investigate the effects on human health of radiation caused by the use of nuclear power and the continuing effects of nuclear disasters in Chernobyl and Fukushima. They believe WHO must regain what they see as independence.[25][26][27]
Independent WHO held a weekly vigil from 2007 to 2017 in front of WHO headquarters.[28]
However, as pointed out by Foreman[29] in clause 2 it states:

In particular, and in accordance with the Constitution of the World Health Organization and the Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency and its agreement with the United Nations together with the exchange of letters related thereto, and taking into account the respective co-ordinating responsibilities of both organizations, it is recognized by the World Health Organization that the International Atomic Energy Agency has the primary responsibility for encouraging, assisting and co-ordinating research and development and practical application of atomic energy for peaceful uses throughout the world
without prejudice to the right of the World Health Organization to concern itself with promoting, developing, assisting and co-ordinating international health work, including research, in all its aspects

The key text is highlighted in bold, the agreement in clause 2 states that the WHO is free to perform any health-related work.

Operational history of WHO

1947: The WHO established an epidemiological information service via telex.[30]: 5 

1950: A mass tuberculosis inoculation drive using the BCG vaccine gets under way.[30]: 8 

1955: The malaria eradication programme was launched, although objectives were later modified. (In most areas, the programme goals became control instead of eradication.)[30]: 9 

1958: Viktor Zhdanov, Deputy Minister of Health for the USSR, called on the World Health Assembly to undertake a global initiative to eradicate smallpox, resulting in Resolution WHA11.54.[31][32]: 366–371, 393, 399, 419 

1965: The first report on diabetes mellitus and the creation of the International Agency for Research on Cancer.[30]: 10–11 

1966: The WHO moved its headquarters from the Ariana wing at the Palace of Nations to a newly constructed headquarters elsewhere in Geneva.[33][30]: 12 

1967: The WHO intensified the global smallpox eradication campaign by contributing $2.4 million annually to the effort and adopted a new disease surveillance method,[34][35] at a time when 2 million people were dying from smallpox per year.[36] The initial problem the WHO team faced was inadequate reporting of smallpox cases. WHO established a network of consultants who assisted countries in setting up surveillance and containment activities.[37] The WHO also helped contain the last European outbreak in Yugoslavia in 1972.[38] After over two decades of fighting smallpox, a Global Commission declared in 1979 that the disease had been eradicated – the first disease in history to be eliminated by human effort.[39]

1974: The Expanded Programme on Immunization[30]: 13  and the control programme of onchocerciasis was started, an important partnership between the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and the World Bank.[30]: 14 

1975: The WHO launched the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical diseases (the TDR).[30]: 15  Co-sponsored by UNICEF, UNDP, and the World Bank, it was established in response to a 1974 request from the WHA for an intensive effort to develop improved control of tropical diseases. The TDR’s goals are, firstly, to support and coordinate international research into diagnosis, treatment and control of tropical diseases; and, secondly, to strengthen research capabilities within endemic countries.[40]

1976: The WHA enacted a resolution on disability prevention and rehabilitation, with a focus on community-driven care[30]: 16 

1977 and 1978: The first list of essential medicines was drawn up,[30]: 17  and a year later the ambitious goal of «Health For All» was declared.[30]: 18 

1986: The WHO began its global programme on HIV/AIDS.[30]: 20  Two years later preventing discrimination against patients was attended to[30]: 21  and in 1996 the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) was formed.[30]: 23 

1988: The Global Polio Eradication Initiative was established.[30]: 22 

1995: WHO established an independent International Commission for the Certification of Dracunculiasis Eradication (Guinea worm disease eradication; ICCDE).[30]: 23  The ICCDE recommends to the WHO which countries fulfil requirements for certification. It also has role in advising on progress made towards elimination of transmission and processes for verification.[41]

1998: WHO’s director-general highlighted gains in child survival, reduced infant mortality, increased life expectancy and reduced rates of «scourges» such as smallpox and polio on the fiftieth anniversary of WHO’s founding. He, did, however, accept that more had to be done to assist maternal health and that progress in this area had been slow.[42]

2000: The Stop TB Partnership was created along with the UN’s formulation of the Millennium Development Goals.[30]: 24 

2001: The measles initiative was formed, and credited with reducing global deaths from the disease by 68% by 2007.[30]: 26 

2002: The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was drawn up to improve the resources available.[30]: 27 

2005: WHO revises International Health Regulations (IHR) in light of emerging health threats and the experience of the 2002/3 SARS epidemic, authorizing WHO, among other things, to declare a health threat a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.[43]

2006: WHO endorsed the world’s first official HIV/AIDS Toolkit for Zimbabwe, which formed the basis for global prevention, treatment, and support the plan to fight the AIDS pandemic.[44][better source needed]

2016: Following the perceived failure of the response to the West Africa Ebola outbreak, the World Health Emergencies programme was formed, changing the WHO from just being a «normative» agency to one that responds operationally to health emergencies.[45]

2020: WHO helped in controlling the worldwide outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.[citation needed]

2022: WHO suggests formation of a Global Health Emergency Council, with new global health emergency workforce, recommends revision of the International Health Regulations.[46]

Policies and objectives

Overall focus

The WHO’s Constitution states that its objective «is the attainment by all people of the highest possible level of health».[47]

The WHO fulfils this objective through its functions as defined in its Constitution:
(a) To act as the directing and coordinating authority on international health work;
(b) To establish and maintain effective collaboration with the United Nations, specialized agencies, governmental health administrations, professional groups and such other organizations as may be deemed appropriate;
(c) To assist Governments, upon request, in strengthening health services;
(d) To furnish appropriate technical assistance and, in emergencies, necessary aid upon the request or acceptance of Governments;(e) To provide or assist in providing, upon the request of the United Nations, health services and facilities to special groups, such as the peoples of trust territories; (f) To establish and maintain such administrative and technical services as may be required, including epidemiological and statistical services;(g) to stimulate and advance work to eradicate epidemic, endemic and other diseases; (h) To promote, in co-operation with other specialized agencies where necessary, the prevention of accidental injuries;
(i) To promote, in co-operation with other specialized agencies where necessary, the improvement of nutrition, housing, sanitation, recreation, economic or working conditions and other aspects of environmental hygiene; (j) To promote co-operation among scientific and professional groups which contribute to the advancement of health; (k) To propose conventions, agreements and regulations, and make recommendations with respect to international health matters and to perform.[citation needed]

As of 2012, the WHO has defined its role in public health as follows:[48]

  • providing leadership on matters critical to health and engaging in partnerships where joint action is needed;
  • shaping the research agenda and stimulating the generation, translation, and dissemination of valuable knowledge;[49]
  • setting norms and standards and promoting and monitoring their implementation;
  • articulating ethical and evidence-based policy options;
  • providing technical support, catalysing change, and building sustainable institutional capacity; and
  • monitoring the health situation and assessing health trends.
  • CRVS (civil registration and vital statistics) to provide monitoring of vital events (birth, death, wedding, divorce).[50]

Communicable diseases

The 2012–2013 WHO budget identified five areas among which funding was distributed.[51]: 5, 20  Two of those five areas related to communicable diseases: the first, to reduce the «health, social and economic burden» of communicable diseases in general; the second to combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis in particular.[51]: 5, 26 

As of 2015, the World Health Organization has worked within the UNAIDS network and strives to involve sections of society other than health to help deal with the economic and social effects of HIV/AIDS.[52] In line with UNAIDS, WHO has set itself the interim task between 2009 and 2015 of reducing the number of those aged 15–24 years who are infected by 50%; reducing new HIV infections in children by 90%; and reducing HIV-related deaths by 25%.[53]

In 2003, the WHO denounced the Roman Curia’s health department’s opposition to the use of condoms, saying: «These incorrect statements about condoms and HIV are dangerous when we are facing a global pandemic which has already killed more than 20 million people, and currently affects at least 42 million.»[54] As of 2009, the Catholic Church remains opposed to increasing the use of contraception to combat HIV/AIDS.[55] At the time, the World Health Assembly president, Guyana’s Health Minister Leslie Ramsammy, condemned Pope Benedict’s opposition to contraception, saying he was trying to «create confusion» and «impede» proven strategies in the battle against the disease.[56]

During the 1970s, WHO had dropped its commitment to a global malaria eradication campaign as too ambitious, it retained a strong commitment to malaria control. WHO’s Global Malaria Programme works to keep track of malaria cases, and future problems in malaria control schemes. As of 2012, the WHO was to report as to whether RTS,S/AS01, were a viable malaria vaccine. For the time being, insecticide-treated mosquito nets and insecticide sprays are used to prevent the spread of malaria, as are antimalarial drugs – particularly to vulnerable people such as pregnant women and young children.[57]

Between 1990 and 2010, WHO’s help has contributed to a 40% decline in the number of deaths from tuberculosis, and since 2005, over 46 million people have been treated and an estimated 7 million lives saved through practices advocated by WHO. These include engaging national governments and their financing, early diagnosis, standardising treatment, monitoring of the spread and effect of tuberculosis, and stabilising the drug supply. It has also recognized the vulnerability of victims of HIV/AIDS to tuberculosis.[58]

In 1988, WHO launched the Global Polio Eradication Initiative to eradicate polio.[59] It has also been successful in helping to reduce cases by 99% since WHO partnered with Rotary International, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and smaller organizations. As of 2011, it has been working to immunize young children and prevent the re-emergence of cases in countries declared «polio-free».[60] In 2017, a study was conducted as to why Polio Vaccines may not be enough to eradicate the Virus & conduct new technology. Polio is now on the verge of extinction, thanks to a Global Vaccination Drive. The World Health Organization (WHO) stated the eradication programme has saved millions from deadly disease.[61]

In 2007, the WHO organized work on pandemic influenza vaccine development through clinical trials in collaboration with many experts and health officials.[62] A pandemic involving the H1N1 influenza virus was declared by the then director-general Margaret Chan in April 2009.[63] Margret Chan declared in 2010 that the H1N1 has moved into the post-pandemic period.[64] By the post-pandemic period, critics claimed the WHO had exaggerated the danger, spreading «fear and confusion» rather than «immediate information».[65] Industry experts countered that the 2009 pandemic had led to «unprecedented collaboration between global health authorities, scientists and manufacturers, resulting in the most comprehensive pandemic response ever undertaken, with a number of vaccines approved for use three months after the pandemic declaration. This response was only possible because of the extensive preparations undertaken during the last decade».[66]

Non-communicable diseases

One of the thirteen WHO priority areas is aimed at the prevention and reduction of «disease, disability and premature deaths from chronic noncommunicable diseases, mental disorders, violence and injuries, and visual impairment which are collectively responsible for almost 71% of all deaths worldwide».[51][67][68] The Division of Noncommunicable Diseases for Promoting Health through the Reproductive Health has published the magazine, Entre Nous, across Europe since 1983.[69]

WHO is mandated under two of the international drug control conventions (Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, 1961 and Convention on Psychotropic Substances, 1971) to carry out scientific assessments of substances for international drug control. Through the WHO Expert Committee on Drug Dependence (ECDD), it can recommend changes to scheduling of substances to the United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs.[70] The ECDD is in charge of evaluating «the impact of psychoactive substances on public health» and «their dependence producing properties and potential harm to health, as well as considering their potential medical benefits and therapeutic applications.»[71]

Environmental health

The WHO estimates that 12.6 million people died as a result of living or working in an unhealthy environment in 2012 – this accounts for nearly 1 in 4 of total global deaths. Environmental risk factors, such as air, water, and soil pollution, chemical exposures, climate change, and ultraviolet radiation, contribute to more than 100 diseases and injuries. This can result in a number of pollution-related diseases.

  • 2018 (30 October – 1 November) : 1 WHO’s first global conference on air pollution and health (Improving air quality, combatting climate change – saving lives) ; organized in collaboration with UN Environment, World Meteorological Organization (WMO), and the secretariat of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)[72]

Life course and life style

WHO works to «reduce morbidity and mortality and improve health during key stages of life, including pregnancy, childbirth, the neonatal period, childhood and adolescence, and improve sexual and reproductive health and promote active and healthy aging for all individuals», for instance with the Special Programme on Human Reproduction.[51]: 39–45 [73]

It also tries to prevent or reduce risk factors for «health conditions associated with use of tobacco, alcohol, drugs and other psychoactive substances, unhealthy diets and physical inactivity and unsafe sex».[51]: 50–55 [74][75]

The WHO works to improve nutrition, food safety and food security and to ensure this has a positive effect on public health and sustainable development.[51]: 66–71 

In April 2019, the WHO released new recommendations stating that children between the ages of two and five should spend no more than one hour per day engaging in sedentary behaviour in front of a screen and that children under two should not be permitted any sedentary screen time.[76]

Surgery and trauma care

The World Health Organization promotes road safety as a means to reduce traffic-related injuries.[77] It has also worked on global initiatives in surgery, including emergency and essential surgical care,[78] trauma care,[79] and safe surgery.[80] The WHO Surgical Safety Checklist is in current use worldwide in the effort to improve patient safety.[81]

Emergency work

The World Health Organization’s primary objective in natural and man-made emergencies is to coordinate with member states and other stakeholders to «reduce avoidable loss of life and the burden of disease and disability.»[51]: 46–49 

On 5 May 2014, WHO announced that the spread of polio was a world health emergency – outbreaks of the disease in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East were considered «extraordinary».[82][83]

On 8 August 2014, WHO declared that the spread of Ebola was a public health emergency; an outbreak which was believed to have started in Guinea had spread to other nearby countries such as Liberia and Sierra Leone. The situation in West Africa was considered very serious.[84]

Reform efforts following the Ebola outbreak

Following the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the organization was heavily criticized for its bureaucracy, insufficient financing, regional structure, and staffing profile.[85]

An internal WHO report on the Ebola response pointed to underfunding and the lack of «core capacity» in health systems in developing countries as the primary weaknesses of the existing system. At the annual World Health Assembly in 2015, Director-General Margaret Chan announced a $100 million Contingency Fund for rapid response to future emergencies,[86][87] of which it had received $26.9 million by April 2016 (for 2017 disbursement). WHO has budgeted an additional $494 million for its Health Emergencies Programme in 2016–17, for which it had received $140 million by April 2016.[88]

The program was aimed at rebuilding WHO capacity for direct action, which critics said had been lost due to budget cuts in the previous decade that had left the organization in an advisory role dependent on member states for on-the-ground activities. In comparison, billions of dollars have been spent by developed countries on the 2013–2016 Ebola epidemic and 2015–16 Zika epidemic.[89]

Response to the COVID-19 pandemic

The WHO created an Incident Management Support Team on 1 January 2020, one day after Chinese health authorities notified the organization of a cluster of pneumonia cases of unknown aetiology.[90][91][92] On 5 January the WHO notified all member states of the outbreak,[93] and in subsequent days provided guidance to all countries on how to respond,[93] and confirmed the first infection outside China.[94] On 14 January 2020, the WHO announced that preliminary investigations conducted by Chinese authorities had found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission of the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) identified in Wuhan.[95] The same day, the organization warned of limited human-to-human transmission, and confirmed human-to-human transmission one week later.[96][97][98] On 30 January the WHO declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC),[99][100][101] considered a «call to action» and «last resort» measure for the international community and a pandemic on 11 March.[102]

While organizing the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic and overseeing «more than 35 emergency operations» for cholera, measles and other epidemics internationally,[90] the WHO has been criticized for praising China’s public health response to the crisis while seeking to maintain a «diplomatic balancing act» between the United States and China.[92][103][104][105] David L. Heymann, professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said that «China has been very transparent and open in sharing its data… and they opened up all of their files with the WHO present.»[106]

The WHO faced criticism from the United States’ Trump administration while «guid[ing] the world in how to tackle the deadly» COVID-19 pandemic.[90] On 14 April 2020, United States president Donald Trump said that he would halt United States funding to the WHO while reviewing its role in «severely mismanaging and covering up the spread of the coronavirus.»[107] World leaders and health experts largely condemned President Trump’s announcement, which came amid criticism of his response to the outbreak in the United States.[108] WHO called the announcement «regrettable» and defended its actions in alerting the world to the emergence of COVID-19.[109] On 8 May 2020, the United States blocked a vote on a U.N. Security Council resolution aimed at promoting nonviolent international cooperation during the pandemic, and mentioning the WHO.[110] On 7 July 2020, President Trump formally notified the UN of his intent to withdraw the United States from the WHO.[111] However, Trump’s successor, President Joe Biden, cancelled the planned withdrawal and announced in January 2021 that the U.S. would resume funding the organization.[112][113][114]

Health policy

WHO addresses government health policy with two aims: firstly, «to address the underlying social and economic determinants of health through policies and programmes that enhance health equity and integrate pro-poor, gender-responsive, and human rights-based approaches» and secondly «to promote a healthier environment, intensify primary prevention and influence public policies in all sectors so as to address the root causes of environmental threats to health».[51]: 61–65 

The organization develops and promotes the use of evidence-based tools, norms and standards to support member states to inform health policy options. It oversees the implementation of the International Health Regulations, and publishes a series of medical classifications; of these, three are over-reaching «reference classifications»: the International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD), the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and the International Classification of Health Interventions (ICHI).[115] Other international policy frameworks produced by WHO include the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes (adopted in 1981),[116] Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (adopted in 2003)[117] the Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel (adopted in 2010)[118] as well as the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines and its pediatric counterpart. An international convention on pandemic prevention and preparedness is being actively considered.[119]

In terms of health services, WHO looks to improve «governance, financing, staffing and management» and the availability and quality of evidence and research to guide policy. It also strives to «ensure improved access, quality and use of medical products and technologies».[51]: 72–83  WHO – working with donor agencies and national governments – can improve their reporting about use of research evidence.[120]

Digital Health

On Digital Health topics, WHO has existing Inter-Agency collaboration with the International Telecommunication Union (the UN Specialized Agency for ICT), including the Be Health, Be Mobile initiate and the ITU-WHO Focus Group on Artificial Intelligence for Health.

World Health Organization, Bangladesh

Governance and support

The remaining two of WHO’s thirteen identified policy areas relate to the role of WHO itself:[51]: 84–91 

  • «to provide leadership, strengthen governance and foster partnership and collaboration with countries, the United Nations system, and other stakeholders in order to fulfil the mandate of WHO in advancing the global health agenda»; and
  • «to develop and sustain WHO as a flexible, learning organization, enabling it to carry out its mandate more efficiently and effectively».

Partnerships

The WHO along with the World Bank constitute the core team responsible for administering the International Health Partnership (IHP+). The IHP+ is a group of partner governments, development agencies, civil society, and others committed to improving the health of citizens in developing countries. Partners work together to put international principles for aid effectiveness and development co-operation into practice in the health sector.[121]

The organization relies on contributions from renowned scientists and professionals to inform its work, such as the WHO Expert Committee on Biological Standardization,[122] the WHO Expert Committee on Leprosy,[123] and the WHO Study Group on Interprofessional Education & Collaborative Practice.[124]

WHO runs the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research, targeted at improving health policy and systems.[125]

WHO also aims to improve access to health research and literature in developing countries such as through the HINARI network.[126]

WHO collaborates with The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, UNITAID, and the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief[127] to spearhead and fund the development of HIV programs.

WHO created the Civil Society Reference Group on HIV,[127] which brings together other networks that are involved in policymaking and the dissemination of guidelines.

WHO, a sector of the United Nations, partners with UNAIDS[127] to contribute to the development of HIV responses in different areas of the world.

WHO facilitates technical partnerships through the Technical Advisory Committee on HIV,[128] which they created to develop WHO guidelines and policies.

In 2014, WHO released the Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the End of Life in a joint publication with the Worldwide Hospice Palliative Care Alliance, an affiliated NGO working collaboratively with the WHO to promote palliative care in national and international health policy.[129][130]

Public health education and action

The practice of empowering individuals to exert more control over and make improvements to their health is known as health education, as described by the WHO. It shifts away from an emphasis on personal behaviour and toward a variety of societal and environmental solutions.[131]

Each year, the organization marks World Health Day and other observances focusing on a specific health promotion topic. World Health Day falls on 7 April each year, timed to match the anniversary of WHO’s founding. Recent themes have been vector-borne diseases (2014), healthy ageing (2012) and drug resistance (2011).[132]

The other official global public health campaigns marked by WHO are World Tuberculosis Day, World Immunization Week, World Malaria Day, World No Tobacco Day, World Blood Donor Day, World Hepatitis Day, and World AIDS Day.

As part of the United Nations, the World Health Organization supports work towards the Millennium Development Goals.[133] Of the eight Millennium Development Goals, three – reducing child mortality by two-thirds, to reduce maternal deaths by three-quarters, and to halt and begin to reduce the spread of HIV/AIDS – relate directly to the WHO’s scope; the other five inter-relate and affect world health.[134]

Data handling and publications

The World Health Organization works to provide the needed health and well-being evidence through a variety of data collection platforms, including the World Health Survey covering almost 400,000 respondents from 70 countries,[135] and the Study on Global Aging and Adult Health (SAGE) covering over 50,000 persons over 50 years old in 23 countries.[136] The Country Health Intelligence Portal (CHIP), has also been developed to provide an access point to information about the health services that are available in different countries.[137] The information gathered in this portal is used by the countries to set priorities for future strategies or plans, implement, monitor, and evaluate it.

The WHO has published various tools for measuring and monitoring the capacity of national health systems[138] and health workforces.[139] The Global Health Observatory (GHO) has been the WHO’s main portal which provides access to data and analyses for key health themes by monitoring health situations around the globe.[140]

The WHO Assessment Instrument for Mental Health Systems (WHO-AIMS), the WHO Quality of Life Instrument (WHOQOL), and the Service Availability and Readiness Assessment (SARA) provide guidance for data collection.[141] Collaborative efforts between WHO and other agencies, such as through the Health Metrics Network, also aim to provide sufficient high-quality information to assist governmental decision making.[142] WHO promotes the development of capacities in member states to use and produce research that addresses their national needs, including through the Evidence-Informed Policy Network (EVIPNet).[143] The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO/AMRO) became the first region to develop and pass a policy on research for health approved in September 2009.[144]

On 10 December 2013, a new WHO database, known as MiNDbank, went online. The database was launched on Human Rights Day, and is part of WHO’s QualityRights initiative, which aims to end human rights violations against people with mental health conditions. The new database presents a great deal of information about mental health, substance abuse, disability, human rights, and the different policies, strategies, laws, and service standards being implemented in different countries.[145] It also contains important international documents and information. The database allows visitors to access the health information of WHO member states and other partners. Users can review policies, laws, and strategies and search for the best practices and success stories in the field of mental health.[145]

The WHO regularly publishes a World Health Report, its leading publication, including an expert assessment of a specific global health topic.[146] Other publications of WHO include the Bulletin of the World Health Organization,[147] the Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal (overseen by EMRO),[148] the Human Resources for Health (published in collaboration with BioMed Central),[149] and the Pan American Journal of Public Health (overseen by PAHO/AMRO).[150]

In 2016, the World Health Organization drafted a global health sector strategy on HIV. In the draft, the World Health Organization outlines its commitment to ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030[151] with interim targets for the year 2020. To make achievements towards these targets, the draft lists actions that countries and the WHO can take, such as a commitment to universal health coverage, medical accessibility, prevention and eradication of disease, and efforts to educate the public. Some notable points made in the draft include addressing gender inequity where females are nearly twice as likely as men to get infected with HIV and tailoring resources to mobilized regions where the health system may be compromised due to natural disasters, etc. Among the points made, it seems clear that although the prevalence of HIV transmission is declining, there is still a need for resources, health education, and global efforts to end this epidemic.[citation needed]

The WHO has a Framework Convention on Tobacco implementation database which is one of the few mechanisms to help enforce compliance with the FCTC.[152] However, there have been reports of numerous discrepancies between it and national implementation reports on which it was built. As researchers Hoffman and Rizvi report «As of July 4, 2012, 361 (32·7%) of 1104 countries’ responses were misreported: 33 (3·0%) were clear errors (e.g., database indicated ‘yes’ when report indicated ‘no’), 270 (24·5%) were missing despite countries having submitted responses, and 58 (5·3%) were, in our opinion, misinterpreted by WHO staff».[153]

WHO has been moving toward acceptance and integration of traditional medicine and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). In 2022, the new International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-11, will attempt to enable classifications from traditional medicine to be integrated with classifications from evidence-based medicine. Though Chinese authorities have pushed for the change, this and other support of the WHO for traditional medicine has been criticized by the medical and scientific community, due to lack of evidence and the risk of endangering wildlife hunted for traditional remedies.[154][155][156] A WHO spokesman said that the inclusion was «not an endorsement of the scientific validity of any Traditional Medicine practice or the efficacy of any Traditional Medicine intervention.»[155]

International Agency for Research on Cancer

The WHO sub-department, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), conducts and coordinates research into the causes of cancer.[157] It also collects and publishes surveillance data regarding the occurrence of cancer worldwide.[158]

Its Monographs Programme identifies carcinogenic hazards and evaluates environmental causes of cancer in humans.[159][160]

Structure

The World Health Organization is a member of the United Nations Development Group.[161]

Membership

Countries by World Health Organization membership status

As of January 2021, the WHO has 194 member states: all member states of the United Nations except for Liechtenstein (192 countries), plus the Cook Islands and Niue.[162][163] A state becomes a full member of WHO by ratifying the treaty known as the Constitution of the World Health Organization. As of January 2021, it also had two associate members, Puerto Rico and Tokelau.[164][163] The WHO two-year budget for 2022–2023 is paid by its 194 members and 2 associate members.[163] Several other countries have been granted observer status. Palestine is an observer as a «national liberation movement» recognized by the League of Arab States under United Nations Resolution 3118. The Sovereign Military Order of Malta (or Order of Malta) also attends on an observer basis. The Holy See attends as an observer, and its participation as «non-Member State Observer» was formalized by an Assembly resolution in 2021.[165][166] The government of Taiwan was allowed to participate under the designation «Chinese Taipei» as an observer from 2009 to 2016, but has not been invited again since.[167]

WHO member states appoint delegations to the World Health Assembly, the WHO’s supreme decision-making body. All UN member states are eligible for WHO membership, and, according to the WHO website, «other countries may be admitted as members when their application has been approved by a simple majority vote of the World Health Assembly».[162] The World Health Assembly is attended by delegations from all member states, and determines the policies of the organization.

The executive board is composed of members technically qualified in health and gives effect to the decisions and policies of the World Health Assembly. In addition, the UN observer organizations International Committee of the Red Cross and International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies have entered into «official relations» with WHO and are invited as observers. In the World Health Assembly, they are seated alongside the other NGOs.[166]

Membership and participation of the Republic of China

The Republic of China (ROC), which controlled mainland China from 1912 to 1949 and currently governs Taiwan since 1945 following World War II, was the founding member of WHO since its inception had represented «China» in the organization, but the representation was changed to the People’s Republic of China (PRC), established in 1949 by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), in 1971 that expelled the ROC from both WHO and the UN organs. Since that time, per the One-China policy, both the ROC and PRC lay claims of sovereignty to each other’s territory.[168][169]

In May 2009, the Department of Health of the Republic of China was invited by the WHO to attend the 62nd World Health Assembly as an observer under the name «Chinese Taipei». This was the ROC’s first participation at WHO meetings since 1971, as a result of the improved cross-strait relations since Ma Ying-jeou became the president of the Republic of China a year before.[170] Its participation with WHO ended due to diplomatic pressure from the PRC following the election in 2016 that brought the independence-minded Democratic Progressive Party back into power.[171]

Political pressure from the PRC has led to the ROC being barred from membership of the WHO and other UN-affiliated organizations, and in 2017 to 2020 the WHO refused to allow Taiwanese delegates to attend the WHO annual assembly.[172] According to Taiwanese publication The News Lens, on multiple occasions Taiwanese journalists have been denied access to report on the assembly.[173]

In May 2018, the WHO denied access to its annual assembly by Taiwanese media, reportedly due to demands from the PRC.[174] Later in May 172 members of the United States House of Representatives wrote to the director-general of the World Health Organization to argue for Taiwan’s inclusion as an observer at the WHA.[175] The United States, Japan, Germany, and Australia all support Taiwan’s inclusion in WHO.[176]

Pressure to allow the ROC to participate in WHO increased as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic with Taiwan’s exclusion from emergency meetings concerning the outbreak bringing a rare united front from Taiwan’s diverse political parties. Taiwan’s main opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT, Chinese Nationalist Party), expressed their anger at being excluded arguing that disease respects neither politics nor geography. China once again dismissed concerns over Taiwanese inclusion with the foreign minister claiming that no-one cares more about the health and wellbeing of the Taiwanese people than central government of the PRC.[177] During the outbreak Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau[178] voiced his support for Taiwan’s participation in WHO, as did Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.[171] In January 2020 the European Union, a WHO observer, backed Taiwan’s participation in WHO meetings related to the coronavirus pandemic as well as their general participation.[179]

In a 2020 interview, Assistant Director-General Bruce Aylward appeared to dodge a question from RTHK reporter Yvonne Tong about Taiwan’s response to the pandemic and inclusion in the WHO, blaming internet connection issues.[180] When the video chat was restarted, he was asked another question about Taiwan. He responded by indicating that they had already discussed China and formally ended the interview.[181] This incident led to accusations about the PRC’s political influence over the international organization.[182][183]

Taiwan’s effective response to the 2019–20 COVID-19 pandemic has bolstered its case for WHO membership. Taiwan’s response to the outbreak has been praised by a number of experts.[184][185] In early May 2020, New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters expressed support for the ROC’s bid to rejoin the WHO during a media conference.[186][187] The New Zealand Government subsequently supporting Taiwan’s bid to join the WHO, putting NZ alongside Australia and the United States who have taken similar positions.[188][189]

On 9 May, Congressmen Eliot Engel, the Democratic chairman of the United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Michael McCaul, the House Committee’s ranking Republican member, Senator Jim Risch, the Republican chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, and Senator Bob Menendez, the Senate Committee’s ranking Democratic member, submitted a joint letter to nearly 60 «like-minded» countries including Canada, Thailand, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia, and Australia, urging them to support ROC’s participation in the World Health Organization.[190][191]

In November 2020, the word «Taiwan» was blocked in comments on a livestream on the WHO’s Facebook page.[192]

World Health Assembly and Executive Board

WHO headquarters in Geneva

The World Health Assembly (WHA) is the legislative and supreme body of the WHO. Based in Geneva, it typically meets yearly in May. It appoints the director-general every five years and votes on matters of policy and finance of WHO, including the proposed budget. It also reviews reports of the executive board and decides whether there are areas of work requiring further examination.

The Assembly elects 34 members, technically qualified in the field of health, to the executive board for three-year terms. The main functions of the board are to carry out the decisions and policies of the Assembly, to advise it, and to facilitate its work.[193] As of May 2021, the chairman of the executive board is Dr. Patrick Amoth of Kenya.[194]

Director-General

The head of the organization is the director-general, elected by the World Health Assembly.[195] The term lasts for five years, and directors-general are typically appointed in May, when the Assembly meets. The current director-general is Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who was appointed on 1 July 2017.[196]

Global institutions

Apart from regional, country, and liaison offices, the World Health Assembly has also established other institutions for promoting and carrying on research.[197]

  • International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)[198]

Regional offices

Map of the WHO’s regional offices and their respective operating regions:

  Africa; HQ: Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo

  Western Pacific; HQ: Manila, Philippines

The regional divisions of WHO were created between 1949 and 1952, following the model of the pre-existing Pan American Health Organization,[199] and are based on article 44 of the WHO’s constitution, which allowed the WHO to «establish a [single] regional organization to meet the special needs of [each defined] area». Many decisions are made at the regional level, including important discussions over WHO’s budget, and in deciding the members of the next assembly, which are designated by the regions.[200]

Each region has a regional committee, which generally meets once a year, normally in the autumn. Representatives attend from each member or associative member in each region, including those states that are not full members. For example, Palestine attends meetings of the Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office. Each region also has a regional office.[200] Each regional office is headed by a director, who is elected by the Regional Committee. The board must approve such appointments, although as of 2004, it had never over-ruled the preference of a regional committee. The exact role of the board in the process has been a subject of debate, but the practical effect has always been small.[200] Since 1999, regional directors serve for a once-renewable five-year term, and typically take their position on 1 February.[201]

Each regional committee of the WHO consists of all the Health Department heads, in all the governments of the countries that constitute the Region. Aside from electing the regional director, the regional committee is also in charge of setting the guidelines for the implementation, within the region, of the health and other policies adopted by the World Health Assembly. The regional committee also serves as a progress review board for the actions of WHO within the Region.[citation needed]

The regional director is effectively the head of WHO for his or her region. The RD manages and/or supervises a staff of health and other experts at the regional offices and in specialized centres. The RD is also the direct supervising authority – concomitantly with the WHO Director-General – of all the heads of WHO country offices, known as WHO Representatives, within the region.[citation needed]

The strong position of the regional offices has been criticized in WHO history for undermining its effectiveness and led to unsuccessful attempts to integrate them more strongly within ‘One WHO’.[199] Disease specific programmes such as the smallpox eradication programme[202] or the 1980s Global Programme on AIDS [203] were set up with more direct, vertical structures that bypassed the regional offices.

Regional offices of WHO

Region Headquarters Notes Website
Africa Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo AFRO includes most of Africa, with the exception of Egypt, Sudan, Djibouti, Tunisia, Libya, Somalia and Morocco (all fall under EMRO).[204] The regional director is Matshidiso Moeti, a Botswana national. (Tenure: 2015 – present).[205] AFRO
Europe Copenhagen, Denmark EURO includes all of Europe (except Liechtenstein), Israel, and all of the former USSR.[206] The regional director is Hans Kluge, a Belgian national (Tenure: 2020 – present).[207] EURO
South-East Asia New Delhi, India North Korea is served by SEARO.[208] The regional director is Poonam Khetrapal Singh, an Indian national (Tenure: 2014 – present).[209] SEARO
Eastern Mediterranean Cairo, Egypt The Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office serves the countries of Africa that are not included in AFRO, as well as all countries in the Middle East except for Israel. Pakistan is served by EMRO.[210] The regional director is Ahmed Al-Mandhari, an Omani national (Tenure: 2018 – present).[211] EMRO
Western Pacific Manila, the Philippines WPRO covers all the Asian countries not served by SEARO and EMRO, and all the countries in Oceania. South Korea is served by WPRO.[212] The regional director is Shin Young-soo, a South Korean national (Tenure: 2009 – present).[213] WPRO
The Americas Washington, D.C., United States Also known as the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), and covers the Americas.[214] The WHO regional director is Carissa F. Etienne, a Dominican national (Tenure: 2013 – present).[215] AMRO

Employees

The WHO employs 7,000 people in 149 countries and regions to carry out its principles.[216] In support of the principle of a tobacco-free work environment, the WHO does not recruit cigarette smokers.[217] The organization has previously instigated the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in 2003.[218]

Goodwill Ambassadors

The WHO operates «Goodwill Ambassadors»; members of the arts, sports, or other fields of public life aimed at drawing attention to the WHO’s initiatives and projects. There are currently five Goodwill Ambassadors (Jet Li, Nancy Brinker, Peng Liyuan, Yohei Sasakawa and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra) and a further ambassador associated with a partnership project (Craig David).[219]

On 21 October 2017, the director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus appointed the then Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe as a WHO Goodwill Ambassador to help promote the fight against non-communicable diseases. The appointment address praised Mugabe for his commitment to public health in Zimbabwe. The appointment attracted widespread condemnation and criticism in WHO member states and international organizations due to Robert Mugabe’s poor record on human rights and presiding over a decline in Zimbabwe’s public health.[220][221] Due to the outcry, the following day the appointment was revoked.[222]

Medical Society of the World Health Organization

Since the beginning,[223] the WHO has had the Medical Society of the World Health Organization. It has conducted lectures by noted researchers and published findings, recommendations.[224][225][226][227][228][229][230][231][excessive citations] The founder, Dr. S. William A. Gunn[232] has been its president.[233] In 1983, Murray Eden was awarded the WHO Medical Society medal, for his work as consultant on research and development for WHO’s director-general.[234]

Country and liaison offices

The World Health Organization operates 150 country offices in six different regions.[235] It also operates several liaison offices, including those with the European Union, United Nations and a single office covering the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. It also operates the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France, and the WHO Centre for Health Development in Kobe, Japan.[236] Additional offices include those in Pristina; the West Bank and Gaza; the US-Mexico Border Field Office in El Paso; the Office of the Caribbean Program Coordination in Barbados; and the Northern Micronesia office.[237] There will generally be one WHO country office in the capital, occasionally accompanied by satellite-offices in the provinces or sub-regions of the country in question.

The country office is headed by a WHO Representative (WR). As of 2010, the only WHO Representative outside Europe to be a national of that country was for the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya («Libya»); all other staff was international. WHO Representatives in the Region termed the Americas are referred to as PAHO/WHO Representatives. In Europe, WHO Representatives also serve as head of the country office, and are nationals except for Serbia; there are also heads of the country office in Albania, the Russian Federation, Tajikistan, Turkey, and Uzbekistan.[237] The WR is a member of the UN system country team which is coordinated by the UN System Resident Coordinator.

The country office consists of the WR, and several health and other experts, both foreign and local, as well as the necessary support staff.[235] The main functions of WHO country offices include being the primary adviser of that country’s government in matters of health and pharmaceutical policies.[238]

Financing and partnerships

Present

The WHO is financed by contributions from member states and outside donors. As of 2020, the biggest contributor is the United States, which gives over $400 million annually.[239] U.S. contributions to the WHO are funded through the U.S. State Department’s account for Contributions to International Organizations (CIO). In 2018 the largest contributors ($150+ each) were the United States, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, United Kingdom, Germany and GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance.[240] The WHO Executive Board formed a Working Group on Sustainable Financing in 2021, charged to rethink WHO’s funding strategy and present recommendations.[241] Its recommendations were adopted by the 2022 World Health Assembly.[242]

In April 2020, U.S. President Donald Trump, supported by a group of members of his party,[243] announced that his administration would halt funding to the WHO.[244] Funds previously earmarked for the WHO were to be held for 60–90 days pending an investigation into the WHO’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in respect to the organization’s purported relationship with China.[245] The announcement was immediately criticized by world leaders including António Guterres, the secretary general of the United Nations; Heiko Maas, the German foreign minister; and Moussa Faki Mahamat, African Union chairman.[239] During the first two years of the pandemic, American funding of the WHO declined by a quarter, although it is expected to increase during 2022 and 2023.[246]

On 16 May 2020, U.S. President Donald Trump and his administration agreed to pay up to what China pays in Assessed contributions, which is less than about one-tenth of its previous funding. Biennium 2018–2019 China paid in assessed contributions US$75,796K, in specified voluntary contributions US$10,184K, for a total US$85,980K.[247][248]

Top 10 contributors (Biennium 2018–2019 updated until Q4-2019) M$

No. Contributor Assessed contributions Voluntary contributions specified Core voluntary contributions Total
(Biennium)
Share Source
1 United States of America 237 656 893 15.9% [249]
2 Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation 531 531 9.4% [250]
3 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 43 335 57 435 7.7% [251]
4 GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance 371 371 6.6% [252]
5 Federal Republic of Germany 61 231 292 5.2% [253]
6 Japan 93 122 214 3.8% [254]
7 United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 192 192 3.4% [255]
8 Rotary International 143 143 2.5% [256]
9 World Bank 133 133 2.4% [257]
10 European Commission 131 131 2.3% [258]
Others 524 1,484 103 2,289 40.7%
Total 957 4,328 161 5,624 100.0% [259]
  • Assessed contributions are the dues the Member States pay depending on the states’ wealth and population
  • Voluntary contributions specified are funds for specific programme areas provided by the Member States or other partners
  • Core voluntary contributions are funds for flexible uses provided by the Member States or other partners

Past

At the beginning of the 21st century, the WHO’s work involved increasing collaboration with external bodies.[260] As of 2002, a total of 473 non-governmental organizations (NGO) had some form of partnership with WHO. There were 189 partnerships with international NGOs in formal «official relations» – the rest being considered informal in character.[261] Partners include the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation[262] and the Rockefeller Foundation.[263]

As of 2012, the largest annual assessed contributions from member states came from the United States ($110 million), Japan ($58 million), Germany ($37 million), United Kingdom ($31 million) and France ($31 million).[264] The combined 2012–2013 budget proposed a total expenditure of $3,959 million, of which $944 million (24%) will come from assessed contributions. This represented a significant fall in outlay compared to the previous 2009–2010 budget, adjusting to take account of previous underspends. Assessed contributions were kept the same. Voluntary contributions will account for $3,015 million (76%), of which $800 million is regarded as highly or moderately flexible funding, with the remainder tied to particular programmes or objectives.[265]

According to The Associated Press, the WHO routinely spends about $200 million a year on travel expenses, more than it spends to tackle mental health problems, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined. In 2016, Margaret Chan, director-general of WHO from January 2007 to June 2017,[266] stayed in a $1000-per-night hotel room while visiting West Africa.[267]

WHO Public Health Prizes and Awards

World Health Organization Prizes and Awards are given to recognize major achievements in public health. The candidates are nominated and recommended by each prize and award selection panel. The WHO Executive Board selects the winners, which are presented during the World Health Assembly.[268]

World headquarters

The seat of the organization is in Geneva, Switzerland. It was designed by Swiss architect Jean Tschumi and inaugurated in 1966.[269] In 2017, the organization launched an international competition to redesign and extend its headquarters.[270]

Gallery of the WHO headquarters building

  • Stairwell, 1969

    Stairwell, 1969

  • Internal courtyard, 1969

    Internal courtyard, 1969

  • Reflecting pool, 1969

    Reflecting pool, 1969

  • Exterior, 1969

    Exterior, 1969

  • From southwest, 2013

    From southwest, 2013

  • Entrance hall, 2013

    Entrance hall, 2013

  • Main conference room, 2013

    Main conference room, 2013

See also

  • Alliance for Healthy Cities, an international alliance
  • Global mental health
  • Health promotion
  • Health Sciences Online, virtual learning resources
  • Healthy city
  • High 5s Project, a patient safety collaboration
  • International Labour Organization
  • List of most polluted cities in the world by particulate matter concentration
  • Open Learning for Development, virtual learning resources
  • The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health
  • Timeline of global health
  • United Nations Interagency Task Force on the Prevention and Control of NCDs
  • WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
  • WHO Guidelines for drinking-water quality
  • WHO Pesticide Evaluation Scheme
  • World Hearing Day

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External links

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • «Staff regulations and staff rules» (PDF). WHO. February 2016.
  • «Covid-19: WHO Really Calls the Shots,» video by the Swiss Government Information Service, 2021
World Health Organization (WHO)

The headquarters in Geneva was designed by Jean Tschumi and inaugurated in 1966.[1]

Abbreviation WHO
Pronunciation
  • by WHO itself and the governments that work with it.
Formation 7 April 1948; 75 years ago
Type United Nations specialized agency
Legal status Active
Headquarters Geneva, Switzerland
46°13′56″N 06°08′03″E / 46.23222°N 6.13417°E

Head

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
(Director-General)

Parent organization

United Nations Economic and Social Council

Budget

$7.96 billion (2020–21)
Website www.who.int Edit this at Wikidata

The World Health Organization (WHO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations responsible for international public health.[2] It is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland and has six regional offices and 150 field offices worldwide.[3]

The WHO was established on 7 April 1948 and convened its first meeting on 24 July of that year.[4][5] It incorporated the assets, personnel, and duties of the League of Nations’ Health Organization and the Paris-based Office International d’Hygiène Publique, including the International Classification of Diseases (ICD).[6] The agency’s work began in earnest in 1951 after a significant infusion of financial and technical resources.[7]

The WHO’s official mandate is to promote health and safety while helping the vulnerable worldwide. It provides technical assistance to countries, sets international health standards, collects data on global health issues, and serves as a forum for scientific or policy discussions related to health.[2] Its official publication, the World Health Report, provides assessments of worldwide health topics.[8]

The WHO has played a leading role in several public health achievements, most notably the eradication of smallpox, the near-eradication of polio, and the development of an Ebola vaccine. Its current priorities include communicable diseases, particularly HIV/AIDS, Ebola, COVID-19, malaria and tuberculosis; non-communicable diseases such as heart disease and cancer; healthy diet, nutrition, and food security; occupational health; and substance abuse. The agency advocates for universal health care coverage, engagement with the monitoring of public health risks, coordinating responses to health emergencies, and promoting health and well-being generally.[9]

The WHO is governed by the World Health Assembly (WHA), which is composed of its 194 member states. The WHA elects and advises an executive board made up of 34 health specialists; selects the WHO’s chief administrator, the director-general (currently Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus of Ethiopia);[10] sets goals and priorities; and approves the budget and activities. The WHO is funded primarily by contributions from member states (both assessed and voluntary), followed by private donors. Its total approved budget for 2020–2021 is over $7.2 billion.[2][11], while the approved budget for 2022-2023 is over $6.2 billion.

History[edit]

Origin and founding[edit]

The International Sanitary Conferences (ISC), the first of which was held on 23 June 1851, were a series of conferences that took place until 1938, about 87 years.[12] The first conference, in Paris, was almost solely concerned with cholera, which would remain the disease of major concern for the ISC for most of the 19th century. With the etiology (causation), even the communicability, of many epidemic diseases still uncertain and a matter of scientific argument, international agreement on appropriate measures was difficult to reach.[12]
Seven of these international conferences, spanning 41 years, were convened before any resulted in a multi-state international agreement. The seventh conference, in Venice in 1892, finally resulted in a convention. It was concerned only with the sanitary control of shipping traversing the Suez Canal, and was an effort to guard against importation of cholera.[13]: 65 

Five years later, in 1897, a convention concerning the bubonic plague was signed by sixteen of the 19 states attending the Venice conference. While Denmark, Sweden-Norway, and the US did not sign this convention, it was unanimously agreed that the work of the prior conferences should be codified for implementation.[14] Subsequent conferences, from 1902 until the final one in 1938, widened the diseases of concern for the ISC, and included discussions of responses to yellow fever, brucellosis, leprosy, tuberculosis, and typhoid.[15] In part as a result of the successes of the Conferences, the Pan-American Sanitary Bureau (1902), and the Office International d’Hygiène Publique (1907) were soon founded. When the League of Nations was formed in 1920, it established the Health Organization of the League of Nations. After World War II, the United Nations absorbed all the other health organizations, to form the WHO.[16]

Establishment[edit]

During the 1945 United Nations Conference on International Organization, Szeming Sze, a delegate from China, conferred with Norwegian and Brazilian delegates on creating an international health organization under the auspices of the new United Nations. After failing to get a resolution passed on the subject, Alger Hiss, the secretary general of the conference, recommended using a declaration to establish such an organization. Sze and other delegates lobbied and a declaration passed calling for an international conference on health.[17] The use of the word «world», rather than «international», emphasized the truly global nature of what the organization was seeking to achieve.[18] The constitution of the World Health Organization was signed by all 51 countries of the United Nations, and by 10 other countries, on 22 July 1946.[19] It thus became the first specialized agency of the United Nations to which every member subscribed.[20] Its constitution formally came into force on the first World Health Day on 7 April 1948, when it was ratified by the 26th member state.[19]

The first meeting of the World Health Assembly finished on 24 July 1948, having secured a budget of US$5 million (then £1,250,000) for the 1949 year. G. Brock Chisholm was appointed director-general of the WHO, having served as executive secretary and a founding member during the planning stages,[21][18] while Andrija Štampar was the assembly’s first president. Its first priorities were to control the spread of malaria, tuberculosis and sexually transmitted infections, and to improve maternal and child health, nutrition and environmental hygiene.[22] Its first legislative act was concerning the compilation of accurate statistics on the spread and morbidity of disease.[18] The logo of the World Health Organization features the Rod of Asclepius as a symbol for healing.[23]

In 1959, the WHO signed Agreement WHA 12–40 with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which says:[24]

whenever either organization proposes to initiate a programme or activity on a subject in which the other organization has or may have a substantial interest, the first party shall consult the other with a view to adjusting the matter by mutual agreement.

The nature of this statement has led some groups and activists including Women in Europe for a Common Future to claim that the WHO is restricted in its ability to investigate the effects on human health of radiation caused by the use of nuclear power and the continuing effects of nuclear disasters in Chernobyl and Fukushima. They believe WHO must regain what they see as independence.[24][25][26] Independent WHO held a weekly vigil from 2007 to 2017 in front of WHO headquarters.[27] However, as pointed out by Foreman[28] in clause 2 it states:

In particular, and in accordance with the Constitution of the World Health Organization and the Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency and its agreement with the United Nations together with the exchange of letters related thereto, and taking into account the respective co-ordinating responsibilities of both organizations, it is recognized by the World Health Organization that the International Atomic Energy Agency has the primary responsibility for encouraging, assisting and co-ordinating research and development and practical application of atomic energy for peaceful uses throughout the world without prejudice to the right of the World Health Organization to concern itself with promoting, developing, assisting and co-ordinating international health work, including research, in all its aspects.

The key text is highlighted in bold, the agreement in clause 2 states that the WHO is free to perform any health-related work.

Operational history[edit]

Three former directors of the Global Smallpox Eradication Programme read the news that smallpox had been globally eradicated, 1980.

1947: The WHO established an epidemiological information service via telex.[29]: 5 

1950: A mass tuberculosis inoculation drive using the BCG vaccine gets under way.[29]: 8 

1955: The malaria eradication programme was launched, although objectives were later modified. (In most areas, the programme goals became control instead of eradication.)[29]: 9 

1958: Viktor Zhdanov, Deputy Minister of Health for the USSR, called on the World Health Assembly to undertake a global initiative to eradicate smallpox, resulting in Resolution WHA11.54.[30][31]: 366–371, 393, 399, 419 

1965: The first report on diabetes mellitus and the creation of the International Agency for Research on Cancer.[29]: 10–11 

1966: The WHO moved its headquarters from the Ariana wing at the Palace of Nations to a newly constructed headquarters elsewhere in Geneva.[32][29]: 12 

Alexey Yablokov (left) and Vassili Nesterenko (farthest right) protesting in front of the World Health Organization headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, in 2008

1967: The WHO intensified the global smallpox eradication campaign by contributing $2.4 million annually to the effort and adopted a new disease surveillance method,[33][34] at a time when 2 million people were dying from smallpox per year.[35] The initial problem the WHO team faced was inadequate reporting of smallpox cases. WHO established a network of consultants who assisted countries in setting up surveillance and containment activities.[36] The WHO also helped contain the last European outbreak in Yugoslavia in 1972.[37] After over two decades of fighting smallpox, a Global Commission declared in 1979 that the disease had been eradicated – the first disease in history to be eliminated by human effort.[38]

1974: The Expanded Programme on Immunization[29]: 13  and the control programme of onchocerciasis was started, an important partnership between the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and the World Bank.[29]: 14 

1975: The WHO launched the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical diseases (the TDR).[29]: 15  Co-sponsored by UNICEF, UNDP, and the World Bank, it was established in response to a 1974 request from the WHA for an intensive effort to develop improved control of tropical diseases. The TDR’s goals are, firstly, to support and coordinate international research into diagnosis, treatment and control of tropical diseases; and, secondly, to strengthen research capabilities within endemic countries.[39]

1976: The WHA enacted a resolution on disability prevention and rehabilitation, with a focus on community-driven care[29]: 16 

1977 and 1978: The first list of essential medicines was drawn up,[29]: 17  and a year later the ambitious goal of «Health For All» was declared.[29]: 18 

1986: The WHO began its global programme on HIV/AIDS.[29]: 20  Two years later preventing discrimination against patients was attended to[29]: 21  and in 1996 the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) was formed.[29]: 23 

1988: The Global Polio Eradication Initiative was established.[29]: 22 

1995: The WHO established an independent International Commission for the Certification of Dracunculiasis Eradication (Guinea worm disease eradication; ICCDE).[29]: 23  The ICCDE recommends to the WHO which countries fulfil requirements for certification. It also has role in advising on progress made towards elimination of transmission and processes for verification.[40]

1998: The WHO’s director-general highlighted gains in child survival, reduced infant mortality, increased life expectancy and reduced rates of «scourges» such as smallpox and polio on the fiftieth anniversary of WHO’s founding. He, did, however, accept that more had to be done to assist maternal health and that progress in this area had been slow.[41]

2000: The Stop TB Partnership was created along with the UN’s formulation of the Millennium Development Goals.[29]: 24 

2001: The measles initiative was formed, and credited with reducing global deaths from the disease by 68% by 2007.[29]: 26 

2002: The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was drawn up to improve the resources available.[29]: 27 

2005: The WHO revises International Health Regulations (IHR) in light of emerging health threats and the experience of the 2002/3 SARS epidemic, authorizing WHO, among other things, to declare a health threat a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.[42]

2006: The WHO endorsed the world’s first official HIV/AIDS Toolkit for Zimbabwe, which formed the basis for global prevention, treatment, and support the plan to fight the AIDS pandemic.[43][better source needed]

2016: Following the perceived failure of the response to the West Africa Ebola outbreak, the World Health Emergencies programme was formed, changing the WHO from just being a «normative» agency to one that responds operationally to health emergencies.[44]

2020: The WHO helped in controlling the worldwide outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.[citation needed]

2022: The WHO suggests formation of a Global Health Emergency Council, with new global health emergency workforce, and recommends revision of the International Health Regulations.[45]

Policies and objectives[edit]

Overall focus[edit]

The WHO’s Constitution states that its objective «is the attainment by all people of the highest possible level of health».[46]

The WHO fulfils this objective through its functions as defined in its Constitution:
(a) To act as the directing and coordinating authority on international health work;
(b) To establish and maintain effective collaboration with the United Nations, specialized agencies, governmental health administrations, professional groups and such other organizations as may be deemed appropriate;
(c) To assist Governments, upon request, in strengthening health services;
(d) To furnish appropriate technical assistance and, in emergencies, necessary aid upon the request or acceptance of Governments;
(e) To provide or assist in providing, upon the request of the United Nations, health services and facilities to special groups, such as the peoples of trust territories;
(f) To establish and maintain such administrative and technical services as may be required, including epidemiological and statistical services;
(g) To stimulate and advance work to eradicate epidemic, endemic and other diseases;
(h) To promote, in co-operation with other specialized agencies where necessary, the prevention of accidental injuries;
(i) To promote, in co-operation with other specialized agencies where necessary, the improvement of nutrition, housing, sanitation, recreation, economic or working conditions and other aspects of environmental hygiene; (j) To promote co-operation among scientific and professional groups which contribute to the advancement of health; (k) To propose conventions, agreements and regulations, and make recommendations with respect to international health matters and to perform.[citation needed]

As of 2012, the WHO has defined its role in public health as follows:[47]

  • providing leadership on matters critical to health and engaging in partnerships where joint action is needed;
  • shaping the research agenda and stimulating the generation, translation, and dissemination of valuable knowledge;[48]
  • setting norms and standards and promoting and monitoring their implementation;
  • articulating ethical and evidence-based policy options;
  • providing technical support, catalysing change, and building sustainable institutional capacity; and
  • monitoring the health situation and assessing health trends.
  • CRVS (civil registration and vital statistics) to provide monitoring of vital events (birth, death, wedding, divorce).[49]

Since the late 20th century, the rise of new actors engaged in global health—such as the World Bank, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and dozens of public-private partnerships for global health—have weakened the WHO’s role as a coordinator and policy leader in the field; subsequently, there are various proposals to reform or reorient the WHO’s role and priorities in public health, ranging from narrowing its mandate to strengthening its independence and authority.[50]

Communicable diseases[edit]

The 2012–2013 WHO budget identified five areas among which funding was distributed.[51]: 5, 20  Two of those five areas related to communicable diseases: the first, to reduce the «health, social and economic burden» of communicable diseases in general; the second to combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis in particular.[51]: 5, 26 

As of 2015, the World Health Organization has worked within the UNAIDS network and strives to involve sections of society other than health to help deal with the economic and social effects of HIV/AIDS.[52] In line with UNAIDS, WHO has set itself the interim task between 2009 and 2015 of reducing the number of those aged 15–24 years who are infected by 50%; reducing new HIV infections in children by 90%; and reducing HIV-related deaths by 25%.[53]

In 2003, the WHO denounced the Roman Curia’s health department’s opposition to the use of condoms, saying: «These incorrect statements about condoms and HIV are dangerous when we are facing a global pandemic which has already killed more than 20 million people, and currently affects at least 42 million.»[54] As of 2009, the Catholic Church remains opposed to increasing the use of contraception to combat HIV/AIDS.[55] At the time, the World Health Assembly president, Guyana’s Health Minister Leslie Ramsammy, condemned Pope Benedict’s opposition to contraception, saying he was trying to «create confusion» and «impede» proven strategies in the battle against the disease.[56]

During the 1970s, WHO had dropped its commitment to a global malaria eradication campaign as too ambitious, it retained a strong commitment to malaria control. WHO’s Global Malaria Programme works to keep track of malaria cases, and future problems in malaria control schemes. As of 2012, the WHO was to report as to whether RTS,S/AS01, were a viable malaria vaccine. For the time being, insecticide-treated mosquito nets and insecticide sprays are used to prevent the spread of malaria, as are antimalarial drugs – particularly to vulnerable people such as pregnant women and young children.[57]

Between 1990 and 2010, WHO’s help has contributed to a 40% decline in the number of deaths from tuberculosis, and since 2005, over 46 million people have been treated and an estimated 7 million lives saved through practices advocated by WHO. These include engaging national governments and their financing, early diagnosis, standardising treatment, monitoring of the spread and effect of tuberculosis, and stabilising the drug supply. It has also recognized the vulnerability of victims of HIV/AIDS to tuberculosis.[58]

In 1988, WHO launched the Global Polio Eradication Initiative to eradicate polio.[59] It has also been successful in helping to reduce cases by 99% since WHO partnered with Rotary International, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and smaller organizations. As of 2011, it has been working to immunize young children and prevent the re-emergence of cases in countries declared «polio-free».[60] In 2017, a study was conducted as to why Polio Vaccines may not be enough to eradicate the Virus & conduct new technology. Polio is now on the verge of extinction, thanks to a Global Vaccination Drive. The World Health Organization (WHO) stated the eradication programme has saved millions from deadly disease.[61]

In 2007, the WHO organized work on pandemic influenza vaccine development through clinical trials in collaboration with many experts and health officials.[62] A pandemic involving the H1N1 influenza virus was declared by the then director-general Margaret Chan in April 2009.[63] Margret Chan declared in 2010 that the H1N1 has moved into the post-pandemic period.[64] By the post-pandemic period, critics claimed the WHO had exaggerated the danger, spreading «fear and confusion» rather than «immediate information».[65] Industry experts countered that the 2009 pandemic had led to «unprecedented collaboration between global health authorities, scientists and manufacturers, resulting in the most comprehensive pandemic response ever undertaken, with a number of vaccines approved for use three months after the pandemic declaration. This response was only possible because of the extensive preparations undertaken during the last decade».[66]

The World Health Organization definition of neglected tropical disease has been criticised to be restrictive ( focussing only on communicable disease) and described as a form of epistemic injustice, where conditions like snakebite are forced to be framed as a medical problem.[67]

Non-communicable diseases[edit]

One of the thirteen WHO priority areas is aimed at the prevention and reduction of «disease, disability and premature deaths from chronic noncommunicable diseases, mental disorders, violence and injuries, and visual impairment which are collectively responsible for almost 71% of all deaths worldwide».[51][68][69] The Division of Noncommunicable Diseases for Promoting Health through the Reproductive Health has published the magazine, Entre Nous, across Europe since 1983.[70]

WHO is mandated under two of the international drug control conventions (Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, 1961 and Convention on Psychotropic Substances, 1971) to carry out scientific assessments of substances for international drug control. Through the WHO Expert Committee on Drug Dependence (ECDD), it can recommend changes to scheduling of substances to the United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs.[71] The ECDD is in charge of evaluating «the impact of psychoactive substances on public health» and «their dependence producing properties and potential harm to health, as well as considering their potential medical benefits and therapeutic applications.»[72]

Environmental health[edit]

The WHO estimates that 12.6 million people died as a result of living or working in an unhealthy environment in 2012 – this accounts for nearly 1 in 4 of total global deaths. Environmental risk factors, such as air, water, and soil pollution, chemical exposures, climate change, and ultraviolet radiation, contribute to more than 100 diseases and injuries. This can result in a number of pollution-related diseases.

  • 2018 (30 October – 1 November) : 1 WHO’s first global conference on air pollution and health (Improving air quality, combatting climate change – saving lives) ; organized in collaboration with UN Environment, World Meteorological Organization (WMO), and the secretariat of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)[73]

Life course and lifestyle[edit]

WHO works to «reduce morbidity and mortality and improve health during key stages of life, including pregnancy, childbirth, the neonatal period, childhood and adolescence, and improve sexual and reproductive health and promote active and healthy aging for all individuals», for instance with the Special Programme on Human Reproduction.[51]: 39–45 [74]

It also tries to prevent or reduce risk factors for «health conditions associated with use of tobacco, alcohol, drugs and other psychoactive substances, unhealthy diets and physical inactivity and unsafe sex».[51]: 50–55 [75][76]

The WHO works to improve nutrition, food safety and food security and to ensure this has a positive effect on public health and sustainable development.[51]: 66–71 

In April 2019, the WHO released new recommendations stating that children between the ages of two and five should spend no more than one hour per day engaging in sedentary behaviour in front of a screen and that children under two should not be permitted any sedentary screen time.[77]

Surgery and trauma care[edit]

The World Health Organization promotes road safety as a means to reduce traffic-related injuries.[78] It has also worked on global initiatives in surgery, including emergency and essential surgical care,[79] trauma care,[80] and safe surgery.[81] The WHO Surgical Safety Checklist is in current use worldwide in the effort to improve patient safety.[82]

Emergency work[edit]

The World Health Organization’s primary objective in natural and man-made emergencies is to coordinate with member states and other stakeholders to «reduce avoidable loss of life and the burden of disease and disability.»[51]: 46–49 

On 5 May 2014, WHO announced that the spread of polio was a world health emergency – outbreaks of the disease in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East were considered «extraordinary».[83][84]

On 8 August 2014, WHO declared that the spread of Ebola was a public health emergency; an outbreak which was believed to have started in Guinea had spread to other nearby countries such as Liberia and Sierra Leone. The situation in West Africa was considered very serious.[85]

Reform efforts following the Ebola outbreak[edit]

Following the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the organization was heavily criticized for its bureaucracy, insufficient financing, regional structure, and staffing profile.[86]

An internal WHO report on the Ebola response pointed to underfunding and the lack of «core capacity» in health systems in developing countries as the primary weaknesses of the existing system. At the annual World Health Assembly in 2015, Director-General Margaret Chan announced a $100 million Contingency Fund for rapid response to future emergencies,[87][88] of which it had received $26.9 million by April 2016 (for 2017 disbursement). WHO has budgeted an additional $494 million for its Health Emergencies Programme in 2016–17, for which it had received $140 million by April 2016.[89]

The program was aimed at rebuilding WHO capacity for direct action, which critics said had been lost due to budget cuts in the previous decade that had left the organization in an advisory role dependent on member states for on-the-ground activities. In comparison, billions of dollars have been spent by developed countries on the 2013–2016 Ebola epidemic and 2015–16 Zika epidemic.[90]

Response to the COVID-19 pandemic[edit]

Staffs of World Health Organization Bangladesh are in COVID vaccine program in Dhaka

The WHO created an Incident Management Support Team on 1 January 2020, one day after Chinese health authorities notified the organization of a cluster of pneumonia cases of unknown aetiology.[91][92][93] On 5 January the WHO notified all member states of the outbreak,[94] and in subsequent days provided guidance to all countries on how to respond,[94] and confirmed the first infection outside China.[95] On 14 January 2020, the WHO announced that preliminary investigations conducted by Chinese authorities had found no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission of the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) identified in Wuhan.[96] The same day, the organization warned of limited human-to-human transmission, and confirmed human-to-human transmission one week later.[97][98][99] On 30 January the WHO declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC),[100][101][102] considered a «call to action» and «last resort» measure for the international community and a pandemic on 11 March.[103]

While organizing the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic and overseeing «more than 35 emergency operations» for cholera, measles and other epidemics internationally,[91] the WHO has been criticized for praising China’s public health response to the crisis while seeking to maintain a «diplomatic balancing act» between the United States and China.[93][104][105][106] David L. Heymann, professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said that «China has been very transparent and open in sharing its data… and they opened up all of their files with the WHO present.»[107]

The WHO faced criticism from the United States’ Trump administration while «guid[ing] the world in how to tackle the deadly» COVID-19 pandemic.[91] On 14 April 2020, United States president Donald Trump said that he would halt United States funding to the WHO while reviewing its role in «severely mismanaging and covering up the spread of the coronavirus.»[108] World leaders and health experts largely condemned President Trump’s announcement, which came amid criticism of his response to the outbreak in the United States.[109] WHO called the announcement «regrettable» and defended its actions in alerting the world to the emergence of COVID-19.[110] On 8 May 2020, the United States blocked a vote on a U.N. Security Council resolution aimed at promoting nonviolent international cooperation during the pandemic, and mentioning the WHO.[111] On 7 July 2020, President Trump formally notified the UN of his intent to withdraw the United States from the WHO.[112] However, Trump’s successor, President Joe Biden, cancelled the planned withdrawal and announced in January 2021 that the U.S. would resume funding the organization.[113][114][115]

In May 2023, the WHO announced that COVID-19 was no longer a world-wide health emergency.[116]

Health policy[edit]

WHO addresses government health policy with two aims: firstly, «to address the underlying social and economic determinants of health through policies and programmes that enhance health equity and integrate pro-poor, gender-responsive, and human rights-based approaches» and secondly «to promote a healthier environment, intensify primary prevention and influence public policies in all sectors so as to address the root causes of environmental threats to health».[51]: 61–65 

The organization develops and promotes the use of evidence-based tools, norms and standards to support member states to inform health policy options. It oversees the implementation of the International Health Regulations, and publishes a series of medical classifications; of these, three are over-reaching «reference classifications»: the International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD), the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and the International Classification of Health Interventions (ICHI).[117] Other international policy frameworks produced by WHO include the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes (adopted in 1981),[118] Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (adopted in 2003)[119] the Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel (adopted in 2010)[120] as well as the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines and its pediatric counterpart. An international convention on pandemic prevention and preparedness is being actively considered.[121]

In terms of health services, WHO looks to improve «governance, financing, staffing and management» and the availability and quality of evidence and research to guide policy. It also strives to «ensure improved access, quality and use of medical products and technologies».[51]: 72–83  WHO – working with donor agencies and national governments – can improve their reporting about use of research evidence.[122]

Digital Health[edit]

On Digital Health topics, WHO has existing Inter-Agency collaboration with the International Telecommunication Union (the UN Specialized Agency for ICT), including the Be Health, Be Mobile initiate and the ITU-WHO Focus Group on Artificial Intelligence for Health.

World Health Organization, Bangladesh

Policy packages[edit]

The WHO has developed several technical policy packages to support countries to improve health:[123]

  • ACTIVE (physical activity)
  • HEARTS (cardiovascular diseases)
  • MPOWER (tobacco control)
  • REPLACE (trans fat)
  • SAFER (alcohol)
  • SHAKE (salt reduction)

Governance and support[edit]

The remaining two of WHO’s thirteen identified policy areas relate to the role of WHO itself:[51]: 84–91 

  • «to provide leadership, strengthen governance and foster partnership and collaboration with countries, the United Nations system, and other stakeholders in order to fulfil the mandate of WHO in advancing the global health agenda»; and
  • «to develop and sustain WHO as a flexible, learning organization, enabling it to carry out its mandate more efficiently and effectively».

Partnerships[edit]

The WHO along with the World Bank constitute the core team responsible for administering the International Health Partnership (IHP+). The IHP+ is a group of partner governments, development agencies, civil society, and others committed to improving the health of citizens in developing countries. Partners work together to put international principles for aid effectiveness and development co-operation into practice in the health sector.[124]

The organization relies on contributions from renowned scientists and professionals to inform its work, such as the WHO Expert Committee on Biological Standardization,[125] the WHO Expert Committee on Leprosy,[126] and the WHO Study Group on Interprofessional Education & Collaborative Practice.[127]

WHO runs the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research, targeted at improving health policy and systems.[128]

WHO also aims to improve access to health research and literature in developing countries such as through the HINARI network.[129]

WHO collaborates with The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, UNITAID, and the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief[130] to spearhead and fund the development of HIV programs.

WHO created the Civil Society Reference Group on HIV,[130] which brings together other networks that are involved in policymaking and the dissemination of guidelines.

WHO, a sector of the United Nations, partners with UNAIDS[130] to contribute to the development of HIV responses in different areas of the world.

WHO facilitates technical partnerships through the Technical Advisory Committee on HIV,[131] which they created to develop WHO guidelines and policies.

In 2014, WHO released the Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the End of Life in a joint publication with the Worldwide Hospice Palliative Care Alliance, an affiliated NGO working collaboratively with the WHO to promote palliative care in national and international health policy.[132][133]

Public health education and action[edit]

The practice of empowering individuals to exert more control over and make improvements to their health is known as health education, as described by the WHO. It shifts away from an emphasis on personal behaviour and toward a variety of societal and environmental solutions.[134]

Each year, the organization marks World Health Day and other observances focusing on a specific health promotion topic. World Health Day falls on 7 April each year, timed to match the anniversary of WHO’s founding. Recent themes have been vector-borne diseases (2014), healthy ageing (2012) and drug resistance (2011).[135]

The other official global public health campaigns marked by WHO are World Tuberculosis Day, World Immunization Week, World Malaria Day, World No Tobacco Day, World Blood Donor Day, World Hepatitis Day, and World AIDS Day.

As part of the United Nations, the World Health Organization supports work towards the Millennium Development Goals.[136] Of the eight Millennium Development Goals, three – reducing child mortality by two-thirds, to reduce maternal deaths by three-quarters, and to halt and begin to reduce the spread of HIV/AIDS – relate directly to the WHO’s scope; the other five inter-relate and affect world health.[137]

Data handling and publications[edit]

The World Health Organization works to provide the needed health and well-being evidence through a variety of data collection platforms, including the World Health Survey covering almost 400,000 respondents from 70 countries,[138] and the Study on Global Aging and Adult Health (SAGE) covering over 50,000 persons over 50 years old in 23 countries.[139] The Country Health Intelligence Portal (CHIP), has also been developed to provide an access point to information about the health services that are available in different countries.[140] The information gathered in this portal is used by the countries to set priorities for future strategies or plans, implement, monitor, and evaluate it.

The WHO has published various tools for measuring and monitoring the capacity of national health systems[141] and health workforces.[142] The Global Health Observatory (GHO) has been the WHO’s main portal which provides access to data and analyses for key health themes by monitoring health situations around the globe.[143]

The WHO Assessment Instrument for Mental Health Systems (WHO-AIMS), the WHO Quality of Life Instrument (WHOQOL), and the Service Availability and Readiness Assessment (SARA) provide guidance for data collection.[144] Collaborative efforts between WHO and other agencies, such as through the Health Metrics Network, also aim to provide sufficient high-quality information to assist governmental decision making.[145] WHO promotes the development of capacities in member states to use and produce research that addresses their national needs, including through the Evidence-Informed Policy Network (EVIPNet).[146] The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO/AMRO) became the first region to develop and pass a policy on research for health approved in September 2009.[147]

On 10 December 2013, a new WHO database, known as MiNDbank, went online. The database was launched on Human Rights Day, and is part of WHO’s QualityRights initiative, which aims to end human rights violations against people with mental health conditions. The new database presents a great deal of information about mental health, substance abuse, disability, human rights, and the different policies, strategies, laws, and service standards being implemented in different countries.[148] It also contains important international documents and information. The database allows visitors to access the health information of WHO member states and other partners. Users can review policies, laws, and strategies and search for the best practices and success stories in the field of mental health.[148]

The WHO regularly publishes a World Health Report, its leading publication, including an expert assessment of a specific global health topic.[149] Other publications of WHO include the Bulletin of the World Health Organization,[150] the Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal (overseen by EMRO),[151] the Human Resources for Health (published in collaboration with BioMed Central),[152] and the Pan American Journal of Public Health (overseen by PAHO/AMRO).[153]

In 2016, the World Health Organization drafted a global health sector strategy on HIV. In the draft, the World Health Organization outlines its commitment to ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 with interim targets for the year 2020. To make achievements towards these targets, the draft lists actions that countries and the WHO can take, such as a commitment to universal health coverage, medical accessibility, prevention and eradication of disease, and efforts to educate the public. Some notable points made in the draft include tailoring resources to mobilized regions where the health system may be compromised due to natural disasters, etc. Among the points made, it seems clear that although the prevalence of HIV transmission is declining, there is still a need for resources, health education, and global efforts to end this epidemic.[154]

The WHO has a Framework Convention on Tobacco implementation database which is one of the few mechanisms to help enforce compliance with the FCTC.[155] However, there have been reports of numerous discrepancies between it and national implementation reports on which it was built. As researchers Hoffman and Rizvi report «As of July 4, 2012, 361 (32·7%) of 1104 countries’ responses were misreported: 33 (3·0%) were clear errors (e.g., database indicated ‘yes’ when report indicated ‘no’), 270 (24·5%) were missing despite countries having submitted responses, and 58 (5·3%) were, in our opinion, misinterpreted by WHO staff».[156]

WHO has been moving toward acceptance and integration of traditional medicine and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). In 2022, the new International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-11, will attempt to enable classifications from traditional medicine to be integrated with classifications from evidence-based medicine. Though Chinese authorities have pushed for the change, this and other support of the WHO for traditional medicine has been criticized by the medical and scientific community, due to lack of evidence and the risk of endangering wildlife hunted for traditional remedies.[157][158][159] A WHO spokesman said that the inclusion was «not an endorsement of the scientific validity of any Traditional Medicine practice or the efficacy of any Traditional Medicine intervention.»[158]

International Agency for Research on Cancer[edit]

The WHO sub-department, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), conducts and coordinates research into the causes of cancer.[160] It also collects and publishes surveillance data regarding the occurrence of cancer worldwide.[161]

Its Monographs Programme identifies carcinogenic hazards and evaluates environmental causes of cancer in humans.[162][163]

Structure and governance[edit]

The World Health Organization is a member of the United Nations Development Group.[164]

Membership[edit]

Countries by World Health Organization membership status

As of January 2021, the WHO has 194 member states: all member states of the United Nations except for Liechtenstein (192 countries), plus the Cook Islands and Niue.[165][166] A state becomes a full member of WHO by ratifying the treaty known as the Constitution of the World Health Organization. As of January 2021, it also had two associate members, Puerto Rico and Tokelau.[167][166] The WHO two-year budget for 2022–2023 is paid by its 194 members and 2 associate members.[166] Several other countries have been granted observer status. Palestine is an observer as a «national liberation movement» recognized by the League of Arab States under United Nations Resolution 3118. The Sovereign Military Order of Malta (or Order of Malta) also attends on an observer basis. The Holy See attends as an observer, and its participation as «non-Member State Observer» was formalized by an Assembly resolution in 2021.[168][169] The government of Taiwan was allowed to participate under the designation «Chinese Taipei» as an observer from 2009 to 2016, but has not been invited again since.[170]

WHO member states appoint delegations to the World Health Assembly, the WHO’s supreme decision-making body. All UN member states are eligible for WHO membership, and, according to the WHO website, «other countries may be admitted as members when their application has been approved by a simple majority vote of the World Health Assembly».[165] The World Health Assembly is attended by delegations from all member states, and determines the policies of the organization.

The executive board is composed of members technically qualified in health and gives effect to the decisions and policies of the World Health Assembly. In addition, the UN observer organizations International Committee of the Red Cross and International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies have entered into «official relations» with WHO and are invited as observers. In the World Health Assembly, they are seated alongside the other NGOs.[169]

Membership and participation of the Republic of China[edit]

The Republic of China (ROC), which controlled mainland China from 1912 to 1949 and currently governs Taiwan since 1945 following World War II, was the founding member of WHO since its inception had represented «China» in the organization, but the representation was changed to the People’s Republic of China (PRC), established in 1949 by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), in 1971 that expelled the ROC from both WHO and the UN organs. Since that time, per the One-China policy, both the ROC and PRC lay claims of sovereignty to each other’s territory.[171][172]

In May 2009, the Department of Health of the Republic of China was invited by the WHO to attend the 62nd World Health Assembly as an observer under the name «Chinese Taipei». This was the ROC’s first participation at WHO meetings since 1971, as a result of the improved cross-strait relations since Ma Ying-jeou became the president of the Republic of China a year before.[173] Its participation with WHO ended due to diplomatic pressure from the PRC following the election in 2016 that brought the independence-minded Democratic Progressive Party back into power.[174]

Political pressure from the PRC has led to the ROC being barred from membership of the WHO and other UN-affiliated organizations, and in 2017 to 2020 the WHO refused to allow Taiwanese delegates to attend the WHO annual assembly.[175] According to Taiwanese publication The News Lens, on multiple occasions Taiwanese journalists have been denied access to report on the assembly.[176]

In May 2018, the WHO denied access to its annual assembly by Taiwanese media, reportedly due to demands from the PRC.[177] Later in May 172 members of the United States House of Representatives wrote to the director-general of the World Health Organization to argue for Taiwan’s inclusion as an observer at the WHA.[178] The United States, Japan, Germany, and Australia all support Taiwan’s inclusion in WHO.[179]

Pressure to allow the ROC to participate in WHO increased as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic with Taiwan’s exclusion from emergency meetings concerning the outbreak bringing a rare united front from Taiwan’s diverse political parties. Taiwan’s main opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT, Chinese Nationalist Party), expressed their anger at being excluded arguing that disease respects neither politics nor geography. China once again dismissed concerns over Taiwanese inclusion with the foreign minister claiming that no-one cares more about the health and wellbeing of the Taiwanese people than central government of the PRC.[180] During the outbreak Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau[181] voiced his support for Taiwan’s participation in WHO, as did Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.[174] In January 2020 the European Union, a WHO observer, backed Taiwan’s participation in WHO meetings related to the coronavirus pandemic as well as their general participation.[182]

In a 2020 interview, Assistant Director-General Bruce Aylward appeared to dodge a question from RTHK reporter Yvonne Tong about Taiwan’s response to the pandemic and inclusion in the WHO, blaming internet connection issues.[183] When the video chat was restarted, he was asked another question about Taiwan. He responded by indicating that they had already discussed China and formally ended the interview.[184] This incident led to accusations about the PRC’s political influence over the international organization.[185][186]

Taiwan’s effective response to the 2019–20 COVID-19 pandemic has bolstered its case for WHO membership. Taiwan’s response to the outbreak has been praised by a number of experts.[187][188] In early May 2020, New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters expressed support for the ROC’s bid to rejoin the WHO during a media conference.[189][190] The New Zealand Government subsequently supporting Taiwan’s bid to join the WHO, putting NZ alongside Australia and the United States who have taken similar positions.[191][192]

On 9 May, Congressmen Eliot Engel, the Democratic chairman of the United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Michael McCaul, the House Committee’s ranking Republican member, Senator Jim Risch, the Republican chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, and Senator Bob Menendez, the Senate Committee’s ranking Democratic member, submitted a joint letter to nearly 60 «like-minded» countries including Canada, Thailand, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia, and Australia, urging them to support ROC’s participation in the World Health Organization.[193][194]

In November 2020, the word «Taiwan» was blocked in comments on a livestream on the WHO’s Facebook page.[195]

World Health Assembly and Executive Board[edit]

WHO headquarters in Geneva

The World Health Assembly (WHA) is the legislative and supreme body of the WHO. Based in Geneva, it typically meets yearly in May. It appoints the director-general every five years and votes on matters of policy and finance of WHO, including the proposed budget. It also reviews reports of the executive board and decides whether there are areas of work requiring further examination.

The Assembly elects 34 members, technically qualified in the field of health, to the executive board for three-year terms. The main functions of the board are to carry out the decisions and policies of the Assembly, to advise it, and to facilitate its work.[196] As of June 2023, the chair of the executive board is Dr. Hanan Mohamed Al Kuwari of Qatar.[197]

Director-General[edit]

The head of the organization is the director-general, elected by the World Health Assembly.[198] The term lasts for five years, and directors-general are typically appointed in May, when the Assembly meets. The current director-general is Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who was appointed on 1 July 2017.[199]

Global institutions[edit]

Apart from regional, country, and liaison offices, the World Health Assembly has also established other institutions for promoting and carrying on research.[200]

  • International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)[201]

Personnel[edit]

The WHO employs 7,000 people in 149 countries and regions to carry out its principles.[202] In support of the principle of a tobacco-free work environment, the WHO does not recruit cigarette smokers.[203] The organization has previously instigated the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in 2003.[204]

Goodwill Ambassadors[edit]

The WHO operates «Goodwill Ambassadors»; members of the arts, sports, or other fields of public life aimed at drawing attention to the WHO’s initiatives and projects. There are currently five Goodwill Ambassadors (Jet Li, Nancy Brinker, Peng Liyuan, Yohei Sasakawa and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra) and a further ambassador associated with a partnership project (Craig David).[205]

On 21 October 2017, the director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus appointed the then Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe as a WHO Goodwill Ambassador to help promote the fight against non-communicable diseases. The appointment address praised Mugabe for his commitment to public health in Zimbabwe. The appointment attracted widespread condemnation and criticism in WHO member states and international organizations due to Robert Mugabe’s poor record on human rights and presiding over a decline in Zimbabwe’s public health.[206][207] Due to the outcry, the following day the appointment was revoked.[208]

Medical Society of the World Health Organization[edit]

Since the beginning,[209] the WHO has had the Medical Society of the World Health Organization. It has conducted lectures by noted researchers and published findings, recommendations.[210][211][212][213][214][215][216][217][excessive citations] The founder, Dr. S. William A. Gunn[218] has been its president.[219] In 1983, Murray Eden was awarded the WHO Medical Society medal, for his work as consultant on research and development for WHO’s director-general.[220]

Financing and partnerships[edit]

The WHO is financed by contributions from member states and outside donors. In 2020-21, the largest contributors were the Germany, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, United States, United Kingdom and European Commission.[221] The WHO Executive Board formed a Working Group on Sustainable Financing in 2021, charged to rethink WHO’s funding strategy and present recommendations.[222] Its recommendations were adopted by the 2022 World Health Assembly,[223] the key one being to raise compulsory member dues to a level equal to 50% of WHO’s 2022-2023 base budget by the end of the 2020s.[224]

Top 10 contributors (biennium 2020–2021; updated until Q4-2021) in millions of US$

No. Contributor Assessed contributions Voluntary contributions specified Core voluntary contributions Total
(biennium)
Share Source
1 Germany 58 953 1,011 14.4% [225]
2 United States of America 232 448 681 9.7% [226]
3 Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation 592 592 8.4% [227]
4 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 44 367 120 531 7.6% [228]
5 GAVI Alliance 371 371 5.3% [229]
6 European Commission 310 310 4.4% [230]
7 Japan 82 122 204 2.9% [231]
8 China 115 63 178 2.5% [232]
9 World Bank 158 158 2.2% [233]
10 Rotary International 152 152 2.2% [234]
Others 530 2,306 144 2,980 42.4%
Total 957 5,824 264 7,031 100.0% [235]
  • Assessed contributions are the dues the Member States pay depending on the states’ wealth and population
  • Voluntary contributions specified are funds for specific programme areas provided by the Member States or other partners
  • Core voluntary contributions are funds for flexible uses provided by the Member States or other partners

Past[edit]

At the beginning of the 21st century, the WHO’s work involved increasing collaboration with external bodies.[236] As of 2002, a total of 473 nongovernmental organizations (NGO) had some form of partnership with WHO. There were 189 partnerships with international NGOs in formal «official relations» – the rest being considered informal in character.[237] Partners include the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation[238] and the Rockefeller Foundation.[239]

As of 2012, the largest annual assessed contributions from member states came from the United States ($110 million), Japan ($58 million), Germany ($37 million), United Kingdom ($31 million) and France ($31 million).[240] The combined 2012–2013 budget proposed a total expenditure of $3,959 million, of which $944 million (24%) will come from assessed contributions. This represented a significant fall in outlay compared to the previous 2009–2010 budget, adjusting to take account of previous underspends. Assessed contributions were kept the same. Voluntary contributions will account for $3,015 million (76%), of which $800 million is regarded as highly or moderately flexible funding, with the remainder tied to particular programmes or objectives.[241]

According to The Associated Press, the WHO routinely spends about $200 million a year on travel expenses, more than it spends to tackle mental health problems, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined. In 2016, Margaret Chan, director-general of WHO from January 2007 to June 2017,[242] stayed in a $1000-per-night hotel room while visiting West Africa.[243]

The biggest contributor used to be the United States, which gives over $400 million annually.[244] U.S. contributions to the WHO are funded through the U.S. State Department’s account for Contributions to International Organizations (CIO). In April 2020, U.S. President Donald Trump, with backing by members of his party,[245] announced that his administration would halt funding to the WHO.[246] Funds previously earmarked for the WHO were to be held for 60–90 days pending an investigation into the WHO’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in respect to the organization’s purported relationship with China.[247] The announcement was immediately criticized by world leaders including António Guterres, the secretary general of the United Nations; Heiko Maas, the German foreign minister; and Moussa Faki Mahamat, African Union chairman.[244] During the first two years of the pandemic, American funding of the WHO declined by a quarter, although it is expected to increase during 2022 and 2023.[248]

On 16 May 2020, the Trump Administration agreed to pay up to what China pays in assessed contributions, which is less than about one-tenth of its previous funding. Biennium 2018–2019 China paid in assessed contributions US$75,796K, in specified voluntary contributions US$10,184K, for a total US$85,980K.[249][250]

WHO Public Health Prizes and Awards[edit]

World Health Organization Prizes and Awards are given to recognize major achievements in public health. The candidates are nominated and recommended by each prize and award selection panel. The WHO Executive Board selects the winners, which are presented during the World Health Assembly.[251]

World headquarters and offices[edit]

The seat of the organization is in Geneva, Switzerland. It was designed by Swiss architect Jean Tschumi and inaugurated in 1966.[252] In 2017, the organization launched an international competition to redesign and extend its headquarters.[253]

Gallery of the WHO headquarters building[edit]

  • Stairwell, 1969

    Stairwell, 1969

  • Internal courtyard, 1969

    Internal courtyard, 1969

  • Reflecting pool, 1969

    Reflecting pool, 1969

  • Exterior, 1969

    Exterior, 1969

  • From southwest, 2013

    From southwest, 2013

  • Entrance hall, 2013

    Entrance hall, 2013

  • Main conference room, 2013

    Main conference room, 2013

Country and liaison offices[edit]

The World Health Organization operates 150 country offices in six different regions.[254] It also operates several liaison offices, including those with the European Union, United Nations and a single office covering the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. It also operates the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France, and the WHO Centre for Health Development in Kobe, Japan.[255] Additional offices include those in Pristina; the West Bank and Gaza; the US-Mexico Border Field Office in El Paso; the Office of the Caribbean Program Coordination in Barbados; and the Northern Micronesia office.[256] There will generally be one WHO country office in the capital, occasionally accompanied by satellite-offices in the provinces or sub-regions of the country in question.

The country office is headed by a WHO Representative (WR). As of 2010, the only WHO Representative outside Europe to be a national of that country was for the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya («Libya»); all other staff was international. WHO Representatives in the Region termed the Americas are referred to as PAHO/WHO Representatives. In Europe, WHO Representatives also serve as head of the country office, and are nationals except for Serbia; there are also heads of the country office in Albania, the Russian Federation, Tajikistan, Turkey, and Uzbekistan.[256] The WR is a member of the UN system country team which is coordinated by the UN System Resident Coordinator.

The country office consists of the WR, and several health and other experts, both foreign and local, as well as the necessary support staff.[254] The main functions of WHO country offices include being the primary adviser of that country’s government in matters of health and pharmaceutical policies.[257]

Regional offices[edit]

Map of the WHO’s regional offices and their respective operating regions:

  Africa; HQ: Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo

  Western Pacific; HQ: Manila, Philippines

The regional divisions of WHO were created between 1949 and 1952, following the model of the pre-existing Pan American Health Organization,[258] and are based on article 44 of the WHO’s constitution, which allowed the WHO to «establish a [single] regional organization to meet the special needs of [each defined] area». Many decisions are made at the regional level, including important discussions over WHO’s budget, and in deciding the members of the next assembly, which are designated by the regions.[259]

Each region has a regional committee, which generally meets once a year, normally in the autumn. Representatives attend from each member or associative member in each region, including those states that are not full members. For example, Palestine attends meetings of the Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office. Each region also has a regional office.[259] Each regional office is headed by a director, who is elected by the Regional Committee. The board must approve such appointments, although as of 2004, it had never over-ruled the preference of a regional committee. The exact role of the board in the process has been a subject of debate, but the practical effect has always been small.[259] Since 1999, regional directors serve for a once-renewable five-year term, and typically take their position on 1 February.[260]

Each regional committee of the WHO consists of all the Health Department heads, in all the governments of the countries that constitute the Region. Aside from electing the regional director, the regional committee is also in charge of setting the guidelines for the implementation, within the region, of the health and other policies adopted by the World Health Assembly. The regional committee also serves as a progress review board for the actions of WHO within the Region.[citation needed]

The regional director is effectively the head of WHO for his or her region. The RD manages and/or supervises a staff of health and other experts at the regional offices and in specialized centres. The RD is also the direct supervising authority – concomitantly with the WHO Director-General – of all the heads of WHO country offices, known as WHO Representatives, within the region.[citation needed]

The strong position of the regional offices has been criticized in WHO history for undermining its effectiveness and led to unsuccessful attempts to integrate them more strongly within ‘One WHO’.[258] Disease specific programmes such as the smallpox eradication programme[261] or the 1980s Global Programme on AIDS [262] were set up with more direct, vertical structures that bypassed the regional offices.

Regional offices of WHO

Region Headquarters Notes Website
Africa Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo AFRO includes most of Africa, with the exception of Egypt, Sudan, Djibouti, Tunisia, Libya, Somalia and Morocco (all fall under EMRO).[263] The regional director is Matshidiso Moeti, a Botswana national. (Tenure: 2015 – present).[264] AFRO
Europe Copenhagen, Denmark EURO includes all of Europe (except Liechtenstein), Israel, and all of the former USSR.[265] The regional director is Hans Kluge, a Belgian national (Tenure: 2020 – present).[266] EURO
South-East Asia New Delhi, India North Korea is served by SEARO.[267] The regional director is Poonam Khetrapal Singh, an Indian national (Tenure: 2014 – present).[268] SEARO
Eastern Mediterranean Cairo, Egypt The Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office serves the countries of Africa that are not included in AFRO, as well as all countries in the Middle East except for Israel. Pakistan is served by EMRO.[269] The regional director is Ahmed Al-Mandhari, an Omani national (Tenure: 2018 – present).[270] EMRO
Western Pacific Manila, the Philippines WPRO covers all the Asian countries not served by SEARO and EMRO, and all the countries in Oceania. South Korea is served by WPRO.[271] The acting regional director is Zsuzsanna Jakab, a Hungarian national and the current WHO Deputy Director-General (Tenure: 2023 – present).[272] WPRO
The Americas Washington, D.C., United States Also known as the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), and covers the Americas.[273] The WHO regional director is Carissa F. Etienne, a Dominican national (Tenure: 2013 – present).[274] AMRO

See also[edit]

  • Alliance for Healthy Cities, an international alliance
  • Global mental health
  • Health promotion
  • Health Sciences Online, virtual learning resources
  • Healthy city
  • High 5s Project, a patient safety collaboration
  • International Labour Organization
  • List of most polluted cities in the world by particulate matter concentration
  • Open Learning for Development, virtual learning resources
  • Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction- HRP
  • The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health
  • Timeline of global health
  • United Nations Interagency Task Force on the Prevention and Control of NCDs
  • WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
  • WHO Guidelines for drinking-water quality
  • WHO Pesticide Evaluation Scheme
  • World Hearing Day

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External links[edit]

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  • «Covid-19: WHO Really Calls the Shots,» video by the Swiss Government Information Service, 2021

15:31 29.10.2021
(обновлено: 15:38 29.10.2021)

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Действующий гендиректор ВОЗ пойдет на второй срок

Действующий гендиректор ВОЗ пойдет на второй срок — РИА Новости, 29.10.2021

Действующий гендиректор ВОЗ пойдет на второй срок

Действующий генеральный директор Всемирной организации здравоохранения Тедрос Адханом Гебрейесус стал единственным кандидатом на выборах нового гендиректора… РИА Новости, 29.10.2021

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ЖЕНЕВА, 29 окт — РИА Новости, Елизавета Исакова. Действующий генеральный директор Всемирной организации здравоохранения Тедрос Адханом Гебрейесус стал единственным кандидатом на выборах нового гендиректора ВОЗ, которые должны состояться в мае 2022 года.В сообщении, распространенном пресс-службой ВОЗ в пятницу, отмечается, что прием заявок кандидатур на пост нового главы организации завершился 23 сентября. Действующий гендиректор ВОЗ Тедрос Адханом Гебрейесус стал единственным кандидатом.Его имя предложили 28 стран-членов организации, в том числе Австрия, Бахрейн, Барбадос, Ботсвана, Острова Кука, Дания, Эстония, Хорватия, Финляндия, Франция, Германия, Греция, Венгрия, Индонезия, Ирландия, Казахстан, Кения, Люксембург, Мальта, Нидерланды, Оман, Португалия, Руанда, Словакия, Испания, Швеция, Тонго и Тринидад и Тобаго.Назначение нового гендиректора ВОЗ состоится в мае 2022 года, во время 75й сессии Всемирной ассамблеи здравоохранения.

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Действующий гендиректор ВОЗ пойдет на второй срок

Действующий гендиректор ВОЗ стал единственным кандидатом на выборах нового главы структуры

ЖЕНЕВА, 29 окт — РИА Новости, Елизавета Исакова. Действующий генеральный директор Всемирной организации здравоохранения Тедрос Адханом Гебрейесус стал единственным кандидатом на выборах нового гендиректора ВОЗ, которые должны состояться в мае 2022 года.

В сообщении, распространенном пресс-службой ВОЗ в пятницу, отмечается, что прием заявок кандидатур на пост нового главы организации завершился 23 сентября. Действующий гендиректор ВОЗ Тедрос Адханом Гебрейесус стал единственным кандидатом.

Его имя предложили 28 стран-членов организации, в том числе Австрия, Бахрейн, Барбадос, Ботсвана, Острова Кука, Дания, Эстония, Хорватия, Финляндия, Франция, Германия, Греция, Венгрия, Индонезия, Ирландия, Казахстан, Кения, Люксембург, Мальта, Нидерланды, Оман, Португалия, Руанда, Словакия, Испания, Швеция, Тонго и Тринидад и Тобаго.

Назначение нового гендиректора ВОЗ состоится в мае 2022 года, во время 75й сессии Всемирной ассамблеи здравоохранения.

Врачи в отделении реанимации и интенсивной терапии - РИА Новости, 1920, 24.10.2021

Глава ВОЗ оценил возможность победить пандемию коронавируса

Владимир Астапкович / РИА Новости

Представители Всемирной организации здравоохранения Ханс Клюге, глава Европейского регионального бюро ВОЗ, и Мелита Вуйнович, глава офиса ВОЗ в России примут участие в Петербургском международном экономическом форуме, который пройдет со 2 по 5 июня. Об этом сообщается на портале Росконгресса.

Соответствующее подтверждение получено оргкомитетом ПМЭФ. Ожидается, что Ханс Клюге выступит с докладом в рамках деловой программы ПМЭФ-2021. «Тема здравоохранения прочно вошла в деловую повестку Петербургского международного экономического форума как полноценное, самостоятельное социальное направление. С 2019 года тематические мероприятия «Здорового общества» проходят на всех площадках Фонда Росконгресс, а 2020 год не стал исключением: эксперты ВОЗ регулярно принимали участие в онлайн-сессиях, инициируемых Фондом. Безусловно, постоянная вовлеченность и участие руководства Всемирной организации здравоохранения на столь крупных международных мероприятиях — это возможность представить опыт по борьбе с пандемией, проанализировать наиболее эффективные меры, которые были предприняты во всемирной системе здравоохранения», — отметил советник президента России, ответственный секретарь оргкомитета Петербургского международного экономического форума Антон Кобяков.

Согласно последним прогнозам Всемирной организации здравоохранения, пандемия коронавируса завершится в начале 2022 года. Глава Европейского регионального бюро ВОЗ Ханс Клюге ранее заявил, что худший сценарий позади и к 2022 году отпадет необходимость в ограничениях. Оргкомитет ПМЭФ приложит все усилия для проведения мероприятия с учетом мер безопасности по предупреждению распространения коронавируса. Эти меры тщательно проработаны с Роспотребнадзором с учетом требований ВОЗ.

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