| Literature DB >> 27881085 |
Tim K Mackey1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As the 2014 Ebola virus disease outbreak (EVD) transitions to its post-endemic phase, its impact on the future of global public health, particularly the World Health Organization (WHO), is the subject of continued debate. Criticism of WHO's performance grew louder in the outbreak's wake, placing this international health UN-specialized agency in the difficult position of navigating a complex series of reform recommendations put forth by different stakeholders. Decisions on WHO governance reform and the broader role of the United Nations could very well shape the future landscape of 21st century global health and how the international community responds to health emergencies. DISCUSSION: In order to better understand the implications of the EVD outbreak on global health and infectious disease governance, this debate article critically examines a series of reports issued by four high-level commissions/panels convened to specifically assess WHO's performance post-Ebola. Collectively, these recommendations add increasing complexity to the urgent need for WHO reform, a process that the agency must carry out in order to maintain its legitimacy. Proposals that garnered strong support included the formation of an independent WHO Centre for Emergency Preparedness and Response, the urgent need to increase WHO infectious disease funding and capacity, and establishing better operational and policy coordination between WHO, UN agencies, and other global health partners. The recommendations also raise more fundamental questions about restructuring the global health architecture, and whether the UN should play a more active role in global health governance. Despite the need for a fully modernized WHO, reform proposals recently announced by WHO fail to achieve the "evolution" in global health governance needed in order to ensure that global society is adequately protected against the multifaceted and increasingly complex nature of modern public health emergencies. Instead, the lasting legacy of the EVD outbreak may be its foreshadowing of a governance "shift" in formal sharing of the complex responsibilities of global health, health security, outbreak response, and managing health emergencies to other international structures, most notably the United Nations. Only time will tell if the legacy of EVD will include a WHO that has the full support of the international community and is capable of leading human society in this brave new era of the globalization of infectious diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Ebola virus disease; Global health governance; Global health security agenda; International Health Regulations; WHO reform
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27881085 PMCID: PMC5121963 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-2016-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Select WHO reform recommendations in the literature pre-EVD
| Governance proposal | Description | Citation(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Committee C | Establishment of a new “Committee C” of WHA to debate major health initiatives and engage and coordinate across a broader array of global health stakeholders (including non-state actors.) | Silberschmidt G, Matheson D, Kickbusch I. Creating a committee C of the World Health Assembly. Lancet. 2008 May 3; 371(9623):1483–6. [ |
| World Health Forum | Establishment of a new informal multistakeholder forum to engage non-state actors. This proposal was subsequently rejected by member states and also criticized by civil society actors | Commentary: Hawkes N. Re: “Irrelevant” WHO outpaced by younger rivals. BMJ 2015; 343(aug09 1):d5012–2. WHO website: |
| Splitting WHO | Dividing WHO secretariat functions into two different technical and political stewardship entities, with collaboration in areas that overlap. | Hoffman SJ, Rottingen J-A. Split WHO in two: strengthening political decision-making and securing independent scientific advice. Public Health 2014; 128(2):188–94. [ |
| Revising WHO’s Constitution | Revising WHO’s constitution to fill the gaps in global governance as part of WHO reform process and for broader democratization of the agency. | Hoffman SJ, Rottingen J-A. Dark Sides of the Proposed Framework Convention on Global Health’s Many Virtues: A Systematic Review and Critical Analysis”. |
Characteristics of EVD High-level panels and commissions
| Panel/commission name | Entity | Number of members/recommendations |
|---|---|---|
| WHO Interim Assessment Panel | Established by WHO Executive Board comprised of mix of independent experts | -Date issued: May 2015 |
| Harvard-LSHTM Panel | Establishment by Harvard Global Health Institute and London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine primarily from academia, foundations, think tanks, and NGOs | -Date issued: November 2015 |
| CGHR | Established as an independent commission with National Academy of Medicine as secretariat funded by foundations and agencies. Commission comprised of members from different countries, foundations, and entities. | -Date issued: January 2016 |
| Kikwete Panel | Established by UN Secretary General comprised of political representatives of member states | -Date issued: January 2016 |
| WHO Advisory Group on Reform of WHO’s Work in Outbreaks and Emergencies | Established by the WHO Director General to offer guidance on the organization’s emergency reform process. Group chaired by UN SG Special Envoy on Ebola and various members from UN agencies, NGOs, representatives of government health agencies, and others. | -Date issued: January 2016 |
Note: Julio Frenk served on both the WHO Interim Panel and the CGHR. Lawrence Gostin and Gabriel Leung served on both the Harvard-LSHTM panel and CGHR
Matrix of WHO governance reform recommendations post-EVD
Fig. 1Visualization of Global Health Governance Reform Structures. Attached as separate file