By Kazeem Akolawole
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has urged countries to take urgent action to protect, support and expand the health workforce as a strategic priority.
In a statement to commemorate its 75th Anniversary, WHO advocated that investments in education, skills and decent jobs for health need to be prioritized to meet the rapidly growing demand for health.
The statement further noted that it will help in averting the projected shortage of 10 million health workers by 2030; primarily in low – and middle-income countries.
“The history of WHO demonstrates what is possible when nations come together for a common purpose,” said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.
He further noted that “We have much to be proud of but much work to do to realize our founding vision of the highest attainable standard of health for all people. We continue to face vast inequities in access to health services, major gaps in the world’s defences against health emergencies, and threats from health-harming products and the climate crisis.
“We can only meet these global challenges with global cooperation.”
The statement disclosed that a global education programme on basic emergency care targeting 25% of nurses and midwives from 25 low- and middle-income countries by the end of 2025 was also recently announced by WHO.
This 25x25x25 emergency care programme, the statement explained, will provide nurses and midwives with the skills and competencies to make a major difference in saving lives and reducing disabilities.
According to the WHO, looking forward to the next 75 years and close to the turn of the next century, a renewed commitment to health equity will be the key to addressing future health challenges.
“In the shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO’s roadmap to recovery includes an urgent paradigm shift towards promoting health and well-being and preventing disease by addressing its root causes and creating the conditions for health to thrive.
“WHO is urging countries to provide health by prioritizing primary health care as the foundation of universal health coverage. The COVID-19 pandemic has shown that protecting health is fundamental to our economies, societies, security and stability,” the statement noted.
In what can be seen as presenting its scorecard, the WHO said, “over the past seven and a half decades, there has been extraordinary progress in protecting people from diseases and destruction, including smallpox eradication, reducing the incidence of polio by 99%, saving millions of lives through childhood immunization, declines in maternal mortality and improving health and well-being for millions more.”
It therefore assured that, learning from the worst pandemic in recent history, WHO stands ready to support the countries of the world as they negotiate a pandemic accord, the revision of the International Health Regulations and other financial, governance and operational initiatives to prepare the world for future pandemics.
Over the past five years, WHO has invested in science and digital health, creating a Science Division led by the organization’s first chief scientist. This has come at a time when science is under sustained attack every day. Countries must protect the public from misinformation and disinformation. The future of health depends on how well we power health through science, research, innovation, data, digital technologies, and partnerships.