The Global Health Security Agenda in an Age of Biosecurity (original) (raw)

Historically, the Oval Office has been a leader in global health assistance. From the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) under the Bush Administration, to the Global Health Initiative launched by President Obama in 2009. However, unlike PEPFAR and PMI, the Global Health Initiative met an untimely end with the launch of a bold new global health measure by the Obama Administration: the Global Health Security Agenda (GHS Agenda). The GHS Agenda aims to “accelerate progress toward a world safe and secure from infectious disease threats” through a US-led diplomatic collaboration with 30 countries, international organizations, nongovernmental organizations, and public/private entities. The intertwining of global health and security follows a line of international agreements, including the revised International Health Regulations (2005), aimed at improving surveillance and response to public health emergencies of international concern. By mid-2012 however, only 22% of WHO member states had implemented the required core competencies. The GHS Agenda aims to address these global deficiencies in infectious disease preparedness. In doing so, the United States faces formidable obstacles including America’s lack of legal legitimacy in setting global norms, as well as the same domestic coordination difficulties that resulted in the dissolution of the Global Health Initiative, and the potential impediment of passing the President’s budget through a hostile Congress. While the securitization of global health has its criticisms, it also has the potential to be transformative, succeeding where international organizations have not always been able to, building a safer and healthier world.

Sign up for access to the world's latest research.

checkGet notified about relevant papers

checkSave papers to use in your research

checkJoin the discussion with peers

checkTrack your impact

Global Health Security Agenda and the International Health Regulations: Moving Forward

Biosecurity and Bioterrorism: Biodefense Strategy, Practice, and Science, 2014

The launch of the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA) in February 2014 capped over a decade of global efforts to develop new approaches to emerging and reemerging infectious diseases-part of the growing recognition that disease events, whether natural, accidental, or intentional, threaten not just public health, but national, regional, and global security interests. In 2005, the United States, along with other Member States of the World Health Organization (WHO), adopted the revised International Health Regulations [IHR (2005)]. The IHR (2005) conferred new responsibilities on WHO and the global health community to coordinate resources for capacity building and emergency response, and on the now-196 States Parties to develop the core capacities required to detect, assess, report, and respond to potential public health emergencies of international concern. Both GHSA and the IHR aim to elevate political attention and encourage participation, coordination, and collaboration by multiple stakeholders, while leveraging previously existing commitments and multilateral efforts. GHSA and the IHR (2005) are platforms for action; how efforts under each will complement each other remains unclear. Mechanisms that measure progress under these 2 overlapping frameworks will aid in focusing resources and in sustaining political momentum for IHR implementation after 2016.

Progress and Opportunities for Strengthening Global Health Security

Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2017

I n today's interconnected world, an infectious disease outbreak that is not rapidly detected and controlled at its source can become a costly global health threat, both in lives lost and economic turmoil (1,2). Every year, thousands of outbreaks occur worldwide, many of which involve pathogens with pandemic potential. Since 2009, the World Health Organization (WHO) has declared public health emergencies of international concern for outbreaks

The Jigsaw Puzzle of Global Health Security

Global Health Governance, 2019

This paper traces the uneven and recent history of 'global health security' (GHS) as a conceptual space that emerged in the 1990s, and questions how it is undergoing transformation today. It argues that GHS has shifted-from at one time exclusively referring to revisions occurring to international public health norms (the International Health Regulations), to now marking a complex arena where multiple actors debate and reconsider what counts as both 'preparedness' and measurable health systems strengthening 'action'. This shift is explored here in three ways: (1) by focusing on early landmarks of conceptual change occurring in the idea of 'global health security' across the 2000s; (2) by evincing these changes through a case-study on the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA); and (3) by highlighting some of the effects that this change introduces in thinking about-and acting on behalf of-GHS. These changes that have taken place over the last decade have far-reaching effects on both global health policy and project development.

Loading...

Loading Preview

Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.