This week, World Health Organization (WHO) member states meeting at the World Health Assembly are widely expected to extend negotiations for a new pandemic treaty after talks collapsed last Friday.
The political blowback and disinformation campaign against the treaty have been fierce.
Reps. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) claimed the “WHO agreement may contravene the First Amendment.” It doesn’t. Twenty-four governors wrote to President Biden raising constitutional concerns, none of which hold water.
More about disinformation later. What’s most important is that the risk of the next pandemic looms — just witness the spread of H5N1 avian influenza among dairy cattle and farm workers. We urgently need to shore up international rules to prevent, prepare for and respond to the next pandemic.
The pandemic agreement would, in essence, strike a global social bargain.
The Biden administration wants a transparent exchange of scientific information in real-time, including surveillance data, notification of dangerous outbreaks and sharing pathogen samples and their genomic sequences. Global rules on scientific exchange can help curb outbreaks at their source and detect dangerous variants. More importantly, these data are the lifeblood needed to develop lifesaving diagnostics, vaccines and treatments rapidly.
This global social bargain also requires equitable allocation of medical products made possible by scientific sharing. And without equity, the Global South rightly won’t sign on.
We think of equity as a matter of ethics, and it is. But it is also the most effective way to stop the international spread of novel diseases before they become pandemics. Equity is central to rebuilding trust between the West and the Global South, which was shattered during COVID-19.
The concentration of global vaccine manufacturing capacity in rich countries drives inequities. As we saw with COVID-19, high-income countries pre-purchased vaccines from pharmaceutical companies, causing serious international vaccine shortages.
Building manufacturing capacity in low- and middle-income countries like Brazil, India and South Africa would remove bottlenecks in global supply. But this will require sharing intellectual property, dedicated financing and transferring technology from powerful multinational pharmaceutical companies.
The pandemic treaty would also address the “upstream drivers” of pandemics. Biodiversity loss, climate change and chemical pollution all contribute to the emergence of novel diseases. Up to 75 percent of new or emerging infectious diseases result from “spillovers” from animals to humans. Zoonotic spillovers have caused most global health emergencies, like SARS, Ebola, mpox and most likely COVID-19.
A “one health” approach ensures that governments take action at the interfaces between human, animal and environmental health. This could mean global rules on deforestation, intense farming of animals, overuse of antibiotics and the trade in wild animals, including wet markets.
But all these global public goods are at risk from a worldwide disinformation campaign aimed at derailing the treaty. False claims include the loss of U.S. sovereignty to craft public health policies. Yet, the draft treaty expressly affirms national sovereignty. Also, the WHO director-general does not have the power to require lockdowns or issue mandates for masks or vaccinations.
This year, more than 64 countries are holding elections. Elections in the United States pose a particularly virulent risk to the success of diplomatic negotiations. Recall that President Trump withdrew the U.S. from WHO, only to be reversed by Biden. There’s little doubt that a future Trump administration would torpedo WHO negotiations.
The next pandemic is percolating somewhere — whether in dairy cows here in the United States, in a cave in southern China replete with bats or through the work of nefarious actors using novel technologies like synthetic biology to recreate or enhance dangerous viruses like smallpox.
More than 1 million Americans lost their lives to COVID-19. The next pandemic could be much worse. We urgently need global rules and international cooperation to prevent, prepare for and respond to the next dangerous infectious disease.
Alexandra L. Phelan is an associate professor and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and faculty director (policy) at the Johns Hopkins Institute for Planetary Health.
Lawrence O. Gostin is a distinguished professor of Global Health Law at the O'Neill Institute, Georgetown University Law Center, and director of the WHO Center on Global Health Law.