The WHO, established in 1948, is the UN’s specialized agency responsible for global public health coordination. During the COVID-19 pandemic, its actions were criticized for lack of timeliness, transparency, and independence.
Positive Role of WHO during the Pandemic
Early Alerts: Declared COVID-19 a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) in January 2020.
Technical Guidance: Issued scientific protocols, travel advisories, and surveillance guidelines to member states.
Global Solidarity Mechanisms: Launched the Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator (ACT-A) and COVAX Facility to ensure equitable vaccine distribution.
Information Sharing: Provided daily situation reports and facilitated exchange of data among countries.
Support to Developing Nations through logistics, diagnostics, and training.
Research and development about the virus – transmission, mutation, and vaccination.
Criticisms and Limitations
Delayed Declaration of Pandemic: Accused of underestimating the early outbreak in Wuhan and relying too heavily on China’s official data.
Political Influence: inadequate scrutiny of China’s early containment measures.
Weak Enforcement Powers: WHO lacks authority to compel nations to share data or enforce health regulations under the International Health Regulations (2005).
Vaccine Inequity: Despite COVAX, vaccine access remained highly unequal.
Funding Dependence: Over 80% of WHO’s budget comes from voluntary contributions.
Confusion among public and healthcare professionals due to inconsistencies in communication
Way Forward
Strengthen the International Health Regulations (IHR) for faster response and accountability.
Establish a Global Health Emergency Council for coordinated crisis action.
Financial autonomy to reduce donor dependency.
To ensure future global health security, WHO must evolve into a more independent, transparent, and empowered institution, capable of acting decisively in the face of global emergencies.