Intergovernmental Negotiating Body to draft and negotiate a WHO convention, agreement or other international instrument on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response

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Seventy-seventh World Health Assembly
Provisional agenda item 13.4
Intergovernmental Negotiating Body to draft and negotiate a
WHO convention, agreement or other international instrument
on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response
Constituency Statement
May 2024
Before I start reading the constituency statement, these are the non-state actors
co-signing the statement:
• FDI World Dental Federation
• FIP International Pharmaceutical Federation
• ICN International Council of Nurses
• WMA World Medical Association
• World Physiotherapy
• The International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP)
Five of the organisations supporting this statement are part of the World Health
Professions Alliance, representing over 41 million dentists, nurses, pharmacists,
physiotherapists and physicians around the world, and has a Memorandum of
Understanding with WHO.
We congratulate the INB on the hard work over the last two years and the
improvements made to Article 7 concerning the health and care workforce, for
which initial agreement was reached in the draft WHO Pandemic Agreement
submitted by the INB to the Assembly. In the final draft treaty text, we appreciate
the inclusion of the following:
• decent work
• addressing mental health
• prevention and mitigation of violence
• eliminating inequalities, such as unequal remuneration and barriers faced
by women
• meaningful consultation and empowerment of health and care workers, and
• ethical international recruitment.
We also welcome the emphasis on maintaining essential health care services at all
times, which must include oral health and ensure treatment continuity for life-
threatening communicable and non-communicable diseases.
We regret that the INB has not been able to reach consensus on the entire draft
agreement. The drafting period has been a window of opportunity, galvanised by
the last pandemic, in which we need to act before the next pandemic occurs. We
urge them to continue and complete the negotiation process as soon as possible,
so that momentum will not be lost and we will not be caught unprepared, again.
Of the issues still under negotiation, we are particularly concerned about Pathogen
Access and Benefit Sharing. We highlight the importance of health equity in these
negotiations, which should be the beating heart of the pandemic accord. Rapid
access to pathogen samples will benefit the health workforce by speeding up
response times and reducing the impact of the next pandemic, thereby reducing
the strain on health and care workers. Fair and equitable distribution of vaccines,
diagnostics and treatments in the event of a pandemic will lower infection rates
and caseloads, lowering the burden on the health workforce in all regions of the
world. We encourage Member States to set up strong and truly equitable terms on
access and benefit sharing for everybody’s sake: we are only safe when we are all
safe.