A preliminary draft for a new convention, agreement, or other international health instrument to strengthen pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response was the focus of a regional meeting facilitated by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) this week in Washington, DC.
During the meeting, representatives from health ministries and foreign affairs in the Americas were briefed on the latest deliberations of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Body (INB) – a process initiated to draft and negotiate a new instrument to be submitted for approval by World Health Organization (WHO) Member States in 2024.
In his opening remarks at the meeting, PAHO Director and WHO Regional Director for the Americas Jarbas Barbosa said the new agreement presents “an opportunity to leave the world and next generations better prepared to face future pandemics.
COVID-19 showed us that no one was well prepared to respond to a public health emergency such as this pandemic," the PAHO Director said, stressing that the lessons from the pandemic should be reflected in the new instrument.
Among these, he cited the importance of transparent, objective, real-time, and evidence-based communication, and equity in access to health technologies, such as personal protective equipment, medicines, and vaccines. "Equitable access to the means of controlling transmission and saving lives is an ethical, moral, and health imperative,he said.
At an extraordinary meeting of the World Health Assembly in December 2021, WHO Member States agreed to launch this process to create a new instrument, underlining a common collaborative commitment to prevent outbreaks that could have an impact such as the COVID-19 pandemic.
Crises are a good time to make changes," the PAHO Director said. Reviewing our current mechanism is everyone’s responsibility, and the new instrument can serve to advance the capacities of countries to respond to a health emergency,” he added.
Dr. Ciro Ugarte, PAHO Director for Health Emergencies, said the meeting initiated by PAHO is “extremely important to promote understanding about the future instrument, enabling Member States to actively participate in the negotiations and dialogue, and on decisions that will be important for all countries and every person on the planet.”
The new accord could complement other initiatives, actions, and measures aimed at making the world safer from pandemics, particularly the 2005 International Health Regulations (IHR).
Dr. Barbosa invited country representatives to seek regional consensus on the new instrument ahead of the fifth round of INB deliberations, set to take place on 3-6 April in Geneva.
Antigua and Barbuda was represented at the meeting by Senior Foreign Service
Officer, Chantal Phillip and acting Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Teri-Ann Joseph.