GENEVA – The 79th World Health Assembly (WHA79) convened this week under the rallying theme, "Reshaping global health: a shared responsibility," as delegates from across the globe gathered to navigate a volatile landscape of infectious disease threats, humanitarian emergencies, and the urgent need for a cohesive international response framework.
In his keynote address, World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus set a somber but determined tone. Reflecting on the state of global health, he underscored that the international community stands at a pivotal juncture where the lessons of the past decade must be codified into binding, equitable, and sustainable mechanisms.
The Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) Mandate
The most significant administrative development to emerge from the Assembly is the decision by Member States to extend negotiations on the Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) system. This system is a cornerstone of the broader WHO Pandemic Agreement, designed to ensure that in the event of a future pandemic, the world does not repeat the inequities of the COVID-19 era.
The Mechanism of Equity
The PABS Annex, mandated under Article 12 of the Pandemic Agreement, seeks to create a predictable, transparent, and fair framework for the sharing of biological samples of potential pandemic pathogens. In return, countries that contribute this data are promised guaranteed access to a portion of the resulting medical countermeasures—such as vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics—at affordable prices.
The complexity of these negotiations lies in balancing national sovereignty with the necessity of global public health data transparency. During the past year, the Intergovernmental Working Group (IGWG) has labored to reconcile these competing interests. With the Assembly’s decision to continue drafting, the process remains the primary focus of international health diplomacy. Member States are now slated to resume these critical discussions at the seventh meeting of the IGWG, scheduled for July 6–17, 2026.
The Road to 2027
The stakes of this negotiation cannot be overstated; the adoption of the PABS Annex is a prerequisite for the opening of the WHO Pandemic Agreement for formal signature. Recognizing the urgency, delegates agreed that the outcome of these negotiations must be presented for final consideration either at a dedicated special session later in 2026 or, at the latest, during the Eightieth World Health Assembly in May 2027.
Crisis in the Field: Committee A and the Realities of Conflict
While high-level policy negotiations occurred in plenary sessions, Committee A faced the visceral realities of contemporary health emergencies. The committee’s agenda was dominated by the implementation of the International Health Regulations (IHR 2005) and a sobering review of the Independent Oversight and Advisory Committee’s findings regarding the WHO Health Emergencies Programme.
Protecting the Frontline
A significant portion of the discourse focused on the protection of healthcare infrastructure and personnel in conflict-affected regions. The Assembly addressed the catastrophic impact of ongoing violence in the Middle East, with delegates calling for the universal protection of medical neutrality. The adoption of a draft decision concerning the health emergency in Lebanon served as a poignant reminder of the organization’s role in navigating active war zones to deliver life-saving interventions.
The reports reviewed by Committee A highlighted a disturbing trend: the increased targeting of health facilities and the disruption of supply chains in conflict settings. Delegates reaffirmed that the safety of health workers is not merely a moral imperative but a functional necessity for maintaining any semblance of public health stability in volatile regions.
A Decade of Lessons: The Evolution of the Health Emergencies Programme
Coinciding with the 79th Assembly was the tenth anniversary of the WHO Health Emergencies Programme (WHE). On the margins of the main event, a strategic roundtable of global leaders and public health luminaries engaged in a retrospective analysis of the last decade, specifically focusing on the "ultimate stress test"—the COVID-19 pandemic.
From Reactive to Proactive
Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, Executive Director of the WHE, opened the session by noting that the organization’s current operational model was forged in the fire of successive crises, ranging from the West African Ebola outbreak to the global COVID-19 crisis.
"We have spent years reacting to the alarms sounded by emerging pathogens," said Dr. Mike Ryan, former Executive Director of the WHE. "The fundamental shift we are now witnessing is the transition from a reactive, crisis-management-based model to a proactive, surveillance-led, and community-embedded system."
Key Pillars of Future Resilience
The roundtable identified three critical domains that must be overhauled to ensure future global health security:
- Epidemic Intelligence and AI: Professor Johanna Hanefeld of the Robert Koch Institute argued that while advanced analytics and artificial intelligence offer unprecedented speed in detecting outbreaks, these tools are only as effective as the national systems that support them. "Data is useless without trust," she noted, emphasizing that public compliance with health mandates is tethered to the perceived legitimacy of national governments.
- Sustainable, Flexible Financing: Dr. Daniela Garone of Médecins Sans Frontières warned against the "boom-and-bust" cycle of global health funding. Current reliance on emergency-specific grants, which often evaporate once a crisis hits the headlines, must be replaced by sustainable, flexible, and long-term financing models that allow for permanent preparedness infrastructure.
- End-to-End Countermeasures: Dr. John-Arne Røttingen of the Wellcome Trust articulated the need for a comprehensive "end-to-end" approach. It is not enough to innovate in the laboratory; scientific breakthroughs must be integrated into supply chains, regulatory frameworks, and distribution networks to ensure that the Global South is not left at the back of the queue when the next pandemic strikes.
Country Perspectives: Success Stories and Challenges
The roundtable also featured testimonies from nations that have successfully integrated lessons from the pandemic into their national health systems.
Ethiopia’s Minister of Health, Dr. Mekdes Daba Feyssa, highlighted that the trauma of the COVID-19 era served as a catalyst for systemic reform. "We leveraged the crisis to secure massive investments in oxygen generation, cold-chain storage for vaccines, and the professionalization of our frontline workforce," she stated. This infrastructure has already proven its worth in addressing smaller, localized outbreaks that might otherwise have spiraled into national emergencies.
In the Central African Republic, Minister Dr. Pierre Somsé spoke to the success of the Universal Health and Preparedness Review (UHPR). By aligning technical, political, and community-level actors, the nation has moved beyond siloed health interventions to a more holistic approach that considers health security as a component of broader national development.
Implications: A Shared Responsibility
The 79th World Health Assembly concludes with a clear, albeit challenging, mandate. The overarching message is that while the world possesses the technical and scientific capability to mitigate future pandemics, it currently lacks the political infrastructure to ensure that these capabilities are deployed equitably.
The final consensus among delegates was that the COVID-19 pandemic revealed the high cost of isolationism. The ongoing negotiations regarding the PABS Annex are not merely bureaucratic exercises; they are the bedrock upon which the next decade of global health cooperation will be built.
As the WHO moves toward the 2027 Eightieth World Health Assembly, the international community faces a narrow window to codify these reforms. Failure to reach an agreement on the PABS Annex could result in a fragmented global response system, leaving the most vulnerable populations exposed to the next inevitable, and potentially more lethal, biological threat.
The task ahead is to convert the rhetorical commitment of "shared responsibility" into tangible, legally binding actions that protect health for all, regardless of geography or economic status. The path forward, as noted by the Assembly, requires a fundamental shift in how nations view their role in the global health ecosystem: from stakeholders in a system to guardians of a shared, fragile future.
