May 18, 2025

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Better health begins with ideas

 

Editors’ Note

On Monday, the World Health Organization (WHO) held the thirteenth meeting of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Body (INB) to continue negotiations over the Pandemic Agreement. The meeting was the first since the United States, previously the WHO’s largest funder, withdrew from the talks. The INB missed a deadline last May to reach consensus on the agreement.  

 

Against that backdrop, the London School of Economics and Political Science’ Clare Wenham discusses her recent study, which questions whether the money governments spend on the INB is worth the Pandemic Agreement. Wenham notes that global health funding is already in short supply and that other WHO treaties have met with mixed results.  

 

Next, President of SJMD Solutions Sunny Jha explains how medical accrediting organizations could help fill the void created by the U.S. withdrawal from the WHO. Jha suggests that although those organizations cannot fully replace U.S. financial contributions, they can leverage their expertise to provide technical support and strengthen health-care systems.  

 

The edition then turns to Latin America. CFR’s global health intern Anya Hirschfeld draws on her conversations with health workers to outline how cultural norms and limited health-care access are driving intimate-partner violence in Peru—where rates are twice the global average.  

 

Community health outreach worker Sara Habibipour wraps up the issue by showcasing how health workers in Bolivia—the country most vulnerable to climate change in South America—are innovating medical delivery to stay ahead of the threats posed by extreme weather events.  

  

Until next week!—Nsikan Akpan, Managing Editor, and Caroline Kantis, Associate Editor 

 

This Week’s Highlights

 

GOVERNANCE

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The Pandemic Treaty’s True Cost 

by Clare Wenham

The Intergovernmental Negotiating Body cost millions that could have better enhanced pandemic preparedness and response 

      

Read this story

 

GOVERNANCE

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The WHO’s Funding Gap: Filling the Medical Diplomacy Void 

by Sunny Jha

Medical accrediting organizations can fill the vacuum created by the U.S. withdrawal from the WHO

      

Read this story

 

Figure of the Week

 

Since the World Health Organization declared mpox a public health emergency in August 2024, fewer than 10% of doses originally pledged to Africa have actually arrived—with a large shipment from Canada landing only in mid-February 2025. 

A bar chart showing which countries and manufacturers have donated mpox vaccines to various African countries
 

Recommended Features

 

GENDER

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Intimate Partner Violence in Peru

by Anya Hirschfeld

The country’s rates of intimate-partner violence are twice the global average

 

Read this story

ENVIRONMENT

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Health Workers Navigate Climate Change in the Bolivian Amazon 

by Sara Habibipour

Bolivia is the country most vulnerable to climate change in South America and the tenth most vulnerable in the world 

      

Read this story

 

What We’re Reading

WHO Chief Urges Pandemic Accord Action After U.S. Withdrawal (South China Morning Post)

 

Trump Wants to Lower the Cost of IVF. A New Executive Order Seeks Ideas to Do That (NPR)

 

Raisins or Not? Pudding Debate Splits Island Nation (BBC)

 

U.S. Aid Void Puts Pressure on Europe, Where Some Also Turn Inward (Washington Post)

 

Urgent CDC Data and Analyses on Influenza and Bird Flu Go Missing as Outbreaks Escalate (KFF Health News)

 

Uganda Discharges Ebola Patients (BBC)

 

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