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World Health Assembly to focus on ending pandemic

74th session will run from May 24 to June 1


May 21, 2021 00:00:00


The 74th session of the World Health Assembly (WHA) will run from May 24 to June 1 that will stress the urgency of ending the current pandemic and preventing the next one by building a healthier, safer and fairer world, reports UNB.

The Health Assembly is WHO's highest decision-making body and is attended by delegations from all around the world.

This year's session will be held virtually when Covid-19 threatens the health and well-being of everyone on the planet.

Over the past year, the cases of Covid-19 rose to 40 folds to 162 million globally, while the number of deaths has increased 11 times, to more than 3.3 million.

It will also be open to Associate Members, Observers, invited representatives of the UN and other participating inter-governmental organizations, and non-State actors.

The pandemic has hit all the countries hard, but its impact has been harshest on those communities which were already vulnerable, who are more exposed to the disease, less likely to have access to quality healthcare services and more likely to experience adverse consequences (such as loss of income) as a result of measures implemented to contain the pandemic.

"A crisis often brings out the best in people and organisations," said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

From the WHO Strategic Preparedness and Response Plan to our technical guidance, the Solidarity Trial, the UN Supply Chain Task Force, the OpenWHO.org learning platform and initiatives like the Access to Covid-19 Tools Accelerator, including its COVAX partnership, and the Solidarity Response Fund, WHO has given countries effective and evidence-informed tools to prevent infections, save lives and maintain essential health services, he said.

"I'm especially proud of the incredible work that WHO staff have done all over the world in the past 17 months to support countries to put these tools to work."

But the pandemic is far from over and the global response is at a critical phase.

Stark contrasts still undermine progress, with vaccine inequity being one of the most urgent issues, posing a threat to ending the pandemic and to global recovery - over 75 per cent of all vaccine doses have been administered in only 10 countries; the lowest income countries have administered less than ½ a per cent of global doses.

"This year's World Health Assembly will play a vital role in shaping the global health architecture of the future, and in strengthening WHO to fulfil its mission and mandate," added Dr Tedros.

The Assembly's agenda will focus on the health-related Sustainable Development Goals and WHO's Triple Billion targets of one billion more people benefitting from universal health coverage; one billion more better protected from health emergencies.


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