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Thursday, 15 May, 2025
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Global pandemic accord to be adopted

The pandemic treaty reached by World Health Organisation (WHO) member states in April and which took more than three years to negotiate will be presented to the World Health Assembly for adoption next week.

The legally binding document, which aims to create a unified response to the next pandemic, is proof that nations can still stand together despite rising geopolitical tensions, said co-chair of the talks Precious Matsoso last week.

In a plenary address to the annual Board of Healthcare Funders conference in Cape Town, she said the treaty was “a strong signal that together we stand to gain if there is global solidarity”, and “a clear indication that multilateralism is not in ICU”, reports Business Day.

Matsoso, a former Health director-general, is adjunct professor at Sunway University in Malaysia.

“The WHO has 194 countries. And when one member state withdraws, another 193 remain. They still continue to work together and their voices still matter,” she said, referring to US President Donald Trump’s executive order in February withdrawing the US from the WHO and ending its involvement in the negotiations. It is not expected to ratify the treaty.

The pandemic treaty is the second legally binding instrument agreed to by WHO nations since the organisation was formed in 1948, after the framework convention on tobacco control, brought into effect in 2005, which sought to create a global response to the harm it causes.

Matsoso described the agreement as future-proof.

The accord aims to deal with many of the failures that played out at the height of the pandemic, in which a handful of rich nations hoarded vaccines, tests and treatments when the products were in short supply

“It will create a rule-based system for health threats and ensure there is equity – one of the problems that this continent in particular experienced at that time,” she added.

A key aspect of the treaty obliges rich nations to share information, including genetic sequences, on novel pathogens. They will also be obliged to share interventions such as vaccines and diagnostics. Signatory nations will be required to develop their own pandemic prevention strategies, including measures to limit the risks of diseases passing from animals to humans.

Negotiations on the pandemic treaty were conducted despite the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza and the emergence of mpox, Matsoso said. Talks began in February 2022, the month Russia invaded Ukraine, and negotiators “were able to compromise for the sake of humanity”, she pointed out.

 

Business Day PressReader article – Pandemic treaty ‘a sign of nations collaborating’ (Open access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

Global call for more pathogen research to prepare for next pandemic

 

Pandemic treaty talks extended for a year

 

IP clause sows division over WHO’s draft pandemic accord

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