| 24 Mai 2018
24 May 2018 – GENEVA – The World  Health Organization (WHO) and World Bank Group today launched a new  mechanism to strengthen global health security through stringent  independent monitoring and regular reporting of preparedness to tackle  outbreaks, pandemics, and other emergencies with health consequences.
 
 WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and World Bank Group  President Dr Jim Yong Kim co-led the creation of the Global Preparedness  Monitoring Board, launched today on the margins of the 71st Session of the World Health Assembly.
 
 The Board will be co-chaired by Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, former Prime  Minister of Norway and former WHO Director-General, and Mr Elhadj As Sy,  Secretary General of the International Federation of the Red Cross and  Red Crescent Societies. It will include political leaders, heads of UN  agencies and world-class health experts, serving in their individual,  independent capacities.
 
 “The ongoing Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is a  stark reminder that outbreaks can happen anywhere, at any time,” said  Dr Tedros.
 
 “Part of being prepared is having a means of assessing progress made at  all levels, by all actors, identifying gaps, including in financing, and  making sure all actors are working together, pulling in the same  direction. I’m proud of the work we’ve done together with the World Bank  Group to establish the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board, and  delighted that it will be led by such exceptional global health  leaders,” he added.
 
 “For too long, we have allowed a cycle of panic and neglect when it  comes to pandemics: we ramp up efforts when there’s a serious threat,  then quickly forget about them when the threat subsides,” Dr. Kim said.  “With the GPMB, we’re taking a large step towards breaking that cycle.  The GPMB will help save lives, prevent economic damage, and ensure that  we keep pandemic preparedness at the top of the global agenda.”
 
 “Pandemic preparedness must be as much local as global, and we must  meaningfully engage local communities in preparedness, detection,  response and recovery to disease outbreaks. I warmly welcome the launch  of this Global Preparedness Monitoring Board, and commit to partner with  you all. We all need to be accountable to each other on the promises we  make, and the results we achieve,” said Mr Sy.
 
 Board co-chair Dr Brundtland added: “With the current Ebola outbreak in  the Democratic Republic of the Congo reminding all of us of the West  African outbreak of 2014-15, the importance of being prepared for and  resilient to health crises has never been clearer. Though the last two  years of progress in improving capacity to respond to such events is  encouraging, gaps remain – and it is time to stop talking about them,  and start addressing them. It is in view of this that I welcome the  establishment of the new Global Preparedness Monitoring Board and am  pleased to be co-chairing it. The Board will monitor preparedness  activities on a global scale, and will hold all actors, from private and  public sectors, accountable for building essential public health  capacities, generating sustainable financing and ensuring that necessary  research and development is conducted.”
 The Board will monitor emergency preparedness across national  governments, UN agencies, civil society and the private sector. It will  report annually on adequacy of financing, progress on relevant research  and development, and the strength of health crisis preparedness at the  global, regional and national levels.
 Building on that report, the Board will advocate at the highest levels  for health crisis preparedness. It will ensure that all stakeholders, at  all levels and across all sectors, keep these issues on the political  agenda and are held accountable for making the world better prepared to  respond to outbreaks and emergencies with health consequences.
 
 The UN Secretary-General’s Global Health Crises Task Force, created in  2016 in response to the West Africa Ebola outbreak, recommended in its  mid-2017 final report to the UN General Assembly the need for robust  ongoing monitoring of global health emergency preparedness. In response,  WHO and the World Bank worked together to establish the new monitoring  board. The Board’s Secretariat will be housed at WHO headquarters in  Geneva, Switzerland.









