GENEVA – The 79th World Health Assembly (WHA) convened this week under the poignant banner, “Reshaping global health: a shared responsibility,” marking a critical juncture in the history of international cooperation. As Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus delivered his address to Member States, the proceedings were dominated by a singular, urgent imperative: finalizing the architecture for the next century of pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response.
While the Assembly celebrated achievements in public health, including the recognition of exemplary tobacco control initiatives, the atmosphere was defined by the rigorous and often complex negotiations surrounding the WHO Pandemic Agreement, specifically the contentious Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) system.
The Mandate: A Shared Responsibility in a Fragmented World
In his opening remarks, Dr. Tedros emphasized that the post-COVID-19 era is not a return to the status quo, but a moment of profound transformation. The “shared responsibility” theme is not merely diplomatic rhetoric; it is a recognition that the security of one nation is inextricably linked to the biological surveillance and health infrastructure of another.
The Assembly serves as the supreme decision-making body of the World Health Organization, and its 79th iteration has been tasked with bridging the gap between political ambition and operational reality. As delegates began their general discussions, the primary focus remained on the unfinished business of the Pandemic Agreement—the lynchpin of global health security for the coming decades.
The PABS Impasse: Navigating the Path to Equity
The most significant legislative hurdle identified during the Assembly is the development of the Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) Annex. This framework is intended to ensure that when a new pathogen with pandemic potential is identified, information and samples are shared rapidly, and in return, the resulting medical countermeasures—vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics—are distributed equitably across the globe.
A Continued Mandate for Negotiation
The World Health Assembly reached a strategic decision to extend the drafting and negotiation phase of the PABS Annex under the Intergovernmental Working Group (IGWG). Mandated by Article 12 of the proposed Pandemic Agreement, the IGWG has been directed to prioritize this work as a matter of global security.
The complexity of the PABS system lies in the delicate balance between sovereign rights over genetic data and the global public health necessity of rapid data sharing. Member States have acknowledged that the current draft, while robust in principle, requires further refinement to gain universal consensus. Consequently, negotiations are set to resume during the seventh meeting of the IGWG, scheduled for July 6–17, 2026.
The Timeline for Adoption
The stakes for the PABS Annex cannot be overstated; its adoption is a prerequisite for the opening of the WHO Pandemic Agreement for formal signature. To maintain momentum, Member States have agreed to submit the finalized outcomes of these negotiations for consideration by the Eightieth World Health Assembly in May 2027. However, the door remains open for a dedicated special session of the Assembly later in 2026 should significant progress be achieved, signaling the urgency that the WHO leadership places on this mechanism.
Committee A: Addressing Active Crises and Regulatory Oversight
While the Pandemic Agreement occupies the long-term strategic horizon, Committee A has been tasked with the immediate, often volatile, reality of ongoing public health emergencies.
Implementation of the IHR (2005)
Delegates conducted a deep dive into the status of the International Health Regulations (IHR). The discussion centered on the report concerning the implementation of the IHR (2005), which provides the legal framework for how countries report and respond to public health threats of international concern. The report highlighted both the resilience of national health systems and the persistent gaps in transparency and reporting speed that were cruelly exposed during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Conflict and Healthcare Security
Perhaps the most emotive session involved the health impacts of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. With a focus on the protection of healthcare facilities and medical personnel—who are increasingly becoming casualties of modern warfare—delegates deliberated on the practical steps needed to uphold International Humanitarian Law within health settings.
The Committee officially adopted a draft decision concerning the health emergency in Lebanon. This move underscores the WHO’s commitment to maintaining a presence and providing life-saving interventions in environments where the infrastructure for health has been decimated by kinetic conflict.
A Decade of Reflection: The Evolution of the WHE
On the sidelines of the main assembly, a high-level strategic roundtable marked the tenth anniversary of the WHO Health Emergencies Programme (WHE). This event served as a "lessons learned" laboratory, looking back at the trajectory of global health response since the mid-2010s.
The "Ultimate Stress Test"
Dr. Tedros characterized the COVID-19 pandemic as the "ultimate stress test" for global health institutions. The consensus among the experts in attendance was that the crisis revealed a dangerous paradox: the world possessed the scientific knowledge to stop the virus, but lacked the political and logistical equity to implement that knowledge effectively.
Dr. Mike Ryan, former Executive Director of the WHE, offered a sobering historical perspective. He noted that for too long, global health systems have operated in a cycle of "panic and neglect." After SARS, Ebola, and MERS, the world promised to build stronger, more proactive systems, yet the response to COVID-19 showed that many of these promises were abandoned once the immediate threat subsided. The goal now is to move from reactive crisis management to proactive, system-wide resilience.
Transforming the Future: Three Pillars of Reform
The roundtable identified three critical areas for transformation, supported by leading voices in global health:
- Epidemic Intelligence (Professor Johanna Hanefeld): The integration of Artificial Intelligence and advanced genomic sequencing is creating a new era of intelligence. However, as Professor Hanefeld noted, technology is only as effective as the public trust that supports it. Without transparent communication and robust national health systems, data analytics will fail to translate into containment.
- Sustainable Financing (Dr. Daniela Garone): Representing Médecins Sans Frontières, Dr. Garone challenged the reliance on "emergency funding," which she argued is inherently reactive and inefficient. She advocated for a shift toward sustainable, flexible, and long-term financial commitments that allow for preparedness rather than just desperate, late-stage response.
- End-to-End Countermeasures (Dr. John-Arne Røttingen): The Wellcome Trust’s representative emphasized that scientific innovation—such as mRNA technology—must be coupled with an "end-to-end" strategy. This means that the research phase must already incorporate plans for manufacturing, distribution, and equitable access, ensuring that medical breakthroughs do not remain locked behind patent walls or national borders.
Country Perspectives: From Theory to Practice
The theoretical discussions were grounded by practical testimonies from ministers of health who have been on the front lines of recent crises.
Ethiopia’s Minister of Health, Dr. Mekdes Daba Feyssa, provided a compelling case study on how the COVID-19 pandemic forced a paradigm shift in her nation. By investing heavily in laboratory infrastructure, oxygen production, and workforce training, Ethiopia has not only survived the pandemic but has emerged with a stronger, more capable public health infrastructure that is now better equipped to handle endemic diseases and routine outbreaks.
Similarly, Dr. Pierre Somsé, Minister of Health of the Central African Republic, highlighted the efficacy of the Universal Health and Preparedness Review (UHPR). By aligning technical health data with political and community engagement, the CAR is demonstrating that even in resource-limited settings, integrated governance is the most effective tool for building long-term resilience.
Implications and Conclusion
The 79th World Health Assembly has made it clear that the world is currently in a "window of opportunity." The memory of COVID-19 is still fresh enough to drive political will, yet the global community remains divided on the mechanics of sharing both the burdens and the benefits of future preparedness.
The path forward is clear but arduous. The extension of the PABS Annex negotiations indicates that Member States are unwilling to compromise on the fundamental principles of equity, even if it delays the formal adoption of the Pandemic Agreement. The message from the Assembly is one of tempered optimism: the architecture for a safer world is being built, but it requires sustained investment, a move away from reactive funding, and, above all, the political courage to prioritize global health over narrow, national interests.
As the Assembly concludes its plenary sessions, the world watches with anticipation. The decisions made in Geneva this month will not only dictate how we respond to the next virus but will define the very nature of international solidarity in the 21st century. The challenge, as noted by the leadership at the WHE anniversary, is to translate the rhetoric of "shared responsibility" into the reality of a world that is fundamentally prepared, universally equitable, and inherently more resilient.
