30/03/2023

The World Health Organization declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern after the number of confirmed cases topped 8,000. The virus has now spread to nearly two dozen countries. It is the sixth time this decade the WHO has declared this type…

There are over 8,000 confirmed cases of the virus spread across nearly two dozen countries
Photo by Naohiko Hatta – Pool/Getty Images
The ongoing coronavirus outbreak is a global health emergency, the World Health Organization determined today. Since it started last month, the viruss spread has reached nearly two dozen countries, sickened thousands, and impacted both travel and business around the world.
The main reason is not because of what is happening in China, but because of what is happening in other countries, said Tedros Adhanom, director general of the WHO, in a press conference today. Our greatest concern is the potential for the virus to spread to other countries with weaker health systems, which are ill prepared to deal with it.
The WHO defines a global emergency formally, a Public Health Emergency of International Concern as an extraordinary event which is determined to constitute a public health risk to other States through the international spread of disease and to potentially require a coordinated international response. This is the sixth declared in the past decade.
Despite the emergency declaration, the WHO is not recommending any restrictions on travel or trade at this time.
The International Health Regulations Committee at the WHO is tasked with examining the evidence around an ongoing public health crisis and recommending that an emergency be declared. The committee met twice last week, and both times were split fifty-fifty on whether to recommend an emergency declaration. At that time, committee members who did not want to declare a global emergency said there werent enough cases outside of China to warrant it.
The committee decided to recommend that an emergency be declared because of an increased number of cases, an increased number of countries affected, and news of questionable measures taken against travelers in some countries, said committee chair Didier Houssin during the press conference.
Declaring a PHEIC gives the director general of the WHO the power to offer recommendations that could prevent the spread of a disease, like travel advisories or restrictions, and allow them to review public health measures in place in affected countries. The recommendations are just recommendations, but theres pressure on countries to follow them.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
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