GENEVA – Under the banner "Reshaping global health: a shared responsibility," the 79th World Health Assembly (WHA) convened this week, marking a pivotal moment in the trajectory of international public health governance. As delegates from across the globe gathered in Geneva, the atmosphere was defined by a mixture of sobering reflection on past crises and an urgent drive toward structural reform.
The assembly, which serves as the supreme decision-making body of the World Health Organization (WHO), saw Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus present his comprehensive report on the organization’s work. The address served as a clarion call, framing the current era not merely as a post-pandemic recovery phase, but as a critical window to cement the gains made in global health security while addressing the systemic fractures exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) Impasse
The most significant administrative development to emerge from the Assembly pertains to the ongoing negotiations regarding the WHO Pandemic Agreement, specifically the Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) system.
The PABS Annex is widely viewed as the "linchpin" of the broader Pandemic Agreement. Its objective is to establish a transparent, fair, and equitable mechanism for the sharing of biological samples and genetic sequence data of pathogens with pandemic potential. In return, the system mandates that developing nations—who often provide the raw data—receive guaranteed, affordable access to the resulting medical countermeasures, such as vaccines, diagnostics, and therapeutics.
Despite extensive negotiations throughout the past year, Member States have yet to reach a final consensus on the legal architecture of the PABS Annex. Recognizing the complexity of these negotiations, the Assembly resolved to continue the drafting process under the Intergovernmental Working Group (IGWG), as mandated by Article 12 of the Agreement.
A Timeline for Resolution
The stakes for these negotiations are high. Adoption of the PABS Annex is a prerequisite for the formal opening of the WHO Pandemic Agreement for signature. To maintain momentum, the Assembly has set a clear, albeit ambitious, timeline:
- July 6–17, 2026: The seventh meeting of the IGWG will convene to resume technical negotiations on the Annex.
- Late 2026: Member States are considering a potential dedicated special session of the Assembly to finalize the text.
- May 2027: If a special session is not utilized, the final outcome of the negotiations is slated for formal consideration at the Eightieth World Health Assembly.
This extension reflects the deep-seated complexities of balancing sovereign rights, intellectual property concerns, and the moral imperative of equitable health access.
Committee A: Navigating Health Emergencies and Conflict
While the Pandemic Agreement took center stage, Committee A focused on the immediate, tangible realities of public health emergencies. Delegates conducted a rigorous review of the implementation of the International Health Regulations (IHR 2005), the legal instrument that governs global disease surveillance and reporting.
The Committee also turned its attention to the increasingly perilous intersection of conflict and healthcare. Discussions regarding the Middle East dominated significant portions of the agenda, with a focus on the protection of health facilities, medical personnel, and the sanctity of healthcare delivery in high-intensity conflict zones.
A landmark moment for the Committee was the adoption of a draft decision concerning the health emergency in Lebanon. This move signals a growing willingness among Member States to mobilize the WHO’s emergency apparatus to address the acute health burdens caused by regional instability, underscoring the organization’s role as a responder on the front lines of human-made crises.
A Decade of Lessons: The Evolution of the WHO Health Emergencies Programme
On the sidelines of the WHA, the organization commemorated the tenth anniversary of the WHO Health Emergencies Programme (WHE). This milestone provided an opportunity for a strategic roundtable, where global leaders reflected on a decade of institutional adaptation—a period that spanned the West African Ebola outbreak, the Zika crisis, and the unprecedented disruption of COVID-19.
From Reactive to Proactive: A Strategic Pivot
Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, Executive Director of the WHE, opened the session by noting that the evolution of the program has been a "baptism by fire." He argued that the architecture of global health is no longer allowed to be static; it must be as dynamic as the pathogens it seeks to track.
Dr. Tedros characterized the COVID-19 pandemic as the "ultimate stress test" for humanity. He noted that while the crisis exposed profound weaknesses in trust, global solidarity, and supply chain equity, it also acted as a catalyst for rapid scientific innovation. The development of mRNA vaccine platforms and the acceleration of diagnostic technologies are the direct, tangible results of this pressurized environment.
Dr. Mike Ryan, former Executive Director of the WHE, offered a sobering historical analysis. He posited that the international community has historically operated on a cycle of "panic and neglect"—reacting with intense fervor to threats like SARS and Ebola, only to allow funding and political interest to wane once the immediate danger receded. The challenge, Ryan emphasized, is to break this cycle by embedding preparedness into the bedrock of national health systems.
Expert Perspectives: Integrating Intelligence and Equity
The roundtable highlighted three pillars essential for future resilience:
- Epidemic Intelligence: Professor Johanna Hanefeld of the Robert Koch Institute advocated for the integration of AI-driven analytics with "human intelligence." She stressed that high-tech tools are useless without the foundational trust required for communities to report outbreaks early and adhere to public health guidance.
- Sustainable Financing: Dr. Daniela Garone of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) offered a sharp critique of current funding models. She warned that reliance on reactive, emergency-based funding streams prevents the long-term planning necessary for effective preparedness. "Sustainable, flexible, and unconditional funding is the only way to ensure that we are ready for the next ‘Disease X,’" she stated.
- End-to-End Countermeasures: Dr. John-Arne Røttingen of the Wellcome Trust emphasized that scientific discovery is insufficient if it remains locked behind barriers of access. He called for an "end-to-end" approach where research, development, and distribution are treated as a single, unified chain of responsibility.
Global Perspectives: Implementation on the Ground
The session also provided a platform for national health ministers to demonstrate how these high-level discussions translate into local capacity.
Ethiopia’s Minister of Health, Dr. Mekdes Daba Feyssa, shared how the "stress test" of COVID-19 served as a catalyst for the modernization of her nation’s health infrastructure. Investments in oxygen generation, laboratory diagnostic capacity, and a surge-ready workforce have already demonstrated their value in responding to subsequent, smaller-scale outbreaks.
Similarly, Dr. Pierre Somsé, Minister of Health for the Central African Republic, highlighted the efficacy of the Universal Health and Preparedness Review (UHPR). By aligning technical data with political commitment and community-led initiatives, the Central African Republic is moving toward a more holistic model of health security that prioritizes the most vulnerable populations.
Implications for the Future of Global Governance
The 79th World Health Assembly has sent a clear signal: the era of fragmented, reactive global health policy is drawing to a close. The ongoing negotiations of the PABS Annex represent a test of the international system’s ability to prioritize equity over narrow national interests.
The convergence of the Pandemic Agreement negotiations, the strengthening of the IHR, and the institutional maturity of the WHO Health Emergencies Programme suggests a transition toward a more integrated, legally binding framework for global health.
However, the road ahead remains fraught with political obstacles. The delay in finalizing the PABS Annex underscores the difficulty of reconciling the diverse interests of 194 Member States. As the IGWG prepares for its July meeting, the global community will be watching closely. The question is no longer whether we have the scientific capability to prevent future pandemics, but whether we possess the political courage to build a truly shared, equitable, and resilient system of responsibility.
As the Assembly concludes its general discussions, the message is unequivocal: the lessons of the last decade must not remain on the pages of reports. They must be transformed into the sustained investment, legislative reform, and collaborative spirit that the next century of global health demands.
