WHO emergencies team faces funding crunch as health crises multiply
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[May 30, 2024]
By Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) - The World Health Organization's emergencies
department is facing “existential threats” as multiplying health crises
have left it so short of cash that it needed emergency funds to pay
staff salaries at the end of last year, an independent report said.
It will likely have to ask for funding again to cover salaries up to
June, the document, released ahead of the WHO’s annual meeting in Geneva
this week, said.
In 2023, the department responded to 72 emergencies. They included
earthquakes in Turkey and Syria, conflict in Sudan, Ukraine and Gaza,
and a large global cholera outbreak.
The report, by an independent oversight committee, said that countries
need to strengthen their own preparedness efforts and the WHO must
improve the way it transfers responsibilities to national authorities to
cope with the increased demands.
It also recommends new guidelines for the WHO's role in managing
long-lasting humanitarian emergencies, rather than the acute disease
outbreaks that the department also deals with.
“More numerous natural disasters and conflicts in fragile states pose
existential threats” to the performance of the emergencies program, the
document reads.
Without increased capacity in countries, the WHO's emergencies program
"will be obliged to cut back critical activities”, it adds.
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Palestinians wounded in Israeli fire lie on beds as they receive
treatment at Al-Aqsa hospital in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza
Strip, May 14, 2024. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed/ File Photo
The WHO has a system of grading
emergencies, with its highest level of alert being a “public health
emergency of international concern”, or PHEIC. Only polio remains at
this level; WHO declared the end of the emergency for both COVID-19
and mpox in 2023.
However, the agency also responds to increasing numbers of other
emergencies, from conflict to floods and infectious disease
outbreaks.
Last year, while the WHO's overall budget was “relatively well
funded”, the emergencies program had a “critical” funding gap of
$411 million, or around a third of its entire budget, the report
said.
WHO member states have taken steps to reform WHO's funding and
member states are set to discuss the report on Thursday.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; editing by Giles Elgood)
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