World in no better place to fight
pandemics than before COVID - review panel
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[May 18, 2022]
By Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) - The world is no better
prepared for a new pandemic threat than it was when coronavirus emerged
in 2019, and may actually be in a worse place given the economic toll,
according to a review panel set up to evaluate the global response.
A lack of progress on reforms such as World Health Organization funding
and international health regulations means the world is as vulnerable as
ever, the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response said
in its report.
The report authors, led by former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark
and former president of Liberia Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, acknowledged some
progress, but said the process was going far too slowly.
"We have right now the very same tools and the same system that existed
in December 2019 to respond to a pandemic threat. And those tools just
weren't good enough," Clark told reporters.
"If there were a new pandemic threat this year, next year, or the year
after at least, we will be largely in the same place ... maybe worse,
given the tight fiscal space of many, if not most, countries right now."
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The World Health Organization logo is pictured at the entrance of
the WHO building, in Geneva, Switzerland, December 20, 2021.
REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
Wednesday's report from the body set
up by the World Health Organization comes ahead of next week's World
Health Assembly in Geneva, the WHO's annual decision-making forum,
which is expected to address some of the issues raised.
While the body welcomed some steps forward,
including moves to establish a separate global health security fund
within the World Bank, it warned that global interest was waning and
the years it will take to set up other instruments – including a
potential pandemic treaty, an international agreement to improve
preparedness - were too long.
The panel called for a high-level meeting at the U.N. General
Assembly and independent health threats council led by
heads-of-state to galvanise some action.
"Only the highest-level political leadership has the legitimacy to
bring multiple sectors together in this way," Sirleaf said in a
statement.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Editing by Alison Williams)
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