Pandemic preparedness and response: exploring the role of universal health coverage within the global health security architecture

health

[ad_1]

  • 1.

    10 proposals to build a safer world together. Strengthening the global architecture for health emergency preparedness, response and resilience. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2022.

  • 2.
    • The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response

    COVID-19: make it the last pandemic. May, 2021.

  • 3.

    SDG indicators. Goal 3, target 3.8.

  • 4.

    Political declaration of the high-level meeting on universal health coverage. Oct 18, 2019.

  • 5.

    State of commitment to universal health coverage: synthesis 2021.

  • 6.
    • Lal A
    • Erondu NA
    • Heymann DL
    • Gitahi G
    • Yates R

    Fragmented health systems in COVID-19: rectifying the misalignment between global health security and universal health coverage.

    Lancet. 2021; 397: 61-67

  • 7.
    • Haldane V
    • De Foo C
    • Abdalla SM
    • et al.

    Health systems resilience in managing the COVID-19 pandemic: lessons from 28 countries.

    Nat Med. 2021; 27: 964-980

  • 8.

    Report of the Review Committee on the functioning of the International Health Regulations (2005) during the COVID-19 response. April 30, 2021.

  • 9.

    IOAC interim report on WHO’s response to COVID-19. Feb 29, 2020.

  • 10.

    Draft report of the Member States Working Group on strengthening WHO preparedness and response to health emergencies to the special session of the World Health Assembly. Nov 12, 2021.

  • 11.
    • G20 High Level Independent Panel on Financing the Global Commons for Pandemic Preparedness and Response

    A global deal for our pandemic age. June, 2021.

  • 12.

    New budget and strategy for ACT-A.

    Lancet. 2021; 398: 1677

  • 13.

    High-level meeting on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response. July 29, 2022.

  • 14.

    WHO Director-General’s opening remarks at the President of the UN General Assembly meeting on IPPPR. July 28, 2021.

  • 15.

    Opinion: global health security must be tied to health systems. Devex, June 17, 2021.

  • 16.
    • Spicer N
    • Agyepong I
    • Ottersen T
    • Jahn A
    • Ooms G

    ‘It’s far too complicated’: why fragmentation persists in global health.

    Global Health. 2020; 16: 60

  • 17.

    Coronavirus: Boris Johnson calls for global pandemic early warning system. The Independent, Sept 26, 2020.

  • 18.

    COVID-19 continues to disrupt essential health services in 90% of countries. April 23, 2021.

  • 19.

    The cost of inaction: COVID-19-related service disruptions could cause hundreds of thousands of extra deaths from HIV. May 11, 2020.

  • 20.
    • Mustafa S
    • Zhang Y
    • Zibwowa Z
    • et al.

    COVID-19 preparedness and response plans from 106 countries: a review from a health systems resilience perspective.

    Health Policy Plan. 2022; 37: 255-268

  • 21.
    • Sturmberg JP
    • Tsasis P
    • Hoemeke L

    COVID-19—an opportunity to redesign health policy thinking.

    Int J Health Policy Manag. 2022; 11: 409-413

  • 22.

    Up to 180 000 health workers may have died from COVID-19. UN News, Oct 21, 2021.

  • 23.

    COVID-19: countries dump vaccines as demand slumps and sharing proves difficult.

    BMJ. 2021; 374: n1893

  • 24.
    • Abdalla SM
    • Maani N
    • Ettman CK
    • Galea S

    Claiming health as a public good in the post-COVID-19 era.

    Development (Rome). 2020; 63: 200-204

  • 25.
    • Marten R
    • Yangchen S
    • Campbell-Lendrum D
    • Prats EV
    • Neira MP
    • Ghaffar A

    Climate change: an urgent priority for health policy and systems research.

    Health Policy Plan. 2021; 36: 218-220

  • 26.
    • Barkley S
    • Marten R
    • Reynolds T
    • et al.

    Primary health care: realizing the vision.

    Bull World Health Organ. 2020; 98 (): 727

  • 27.
    • Meier BM
    • Bueno de Mesquita J
    • Sekalala S

    The pandemic treaty as a framework for global solidarity: extraterritorial human rights obligations in global health governance. Bill of Health, Oct 13, 2021.

  • 28.

    Addressing COVID-19 vulnerabilities: how do we achieve global health security in an inequitable world.

    Glob Public Health. 2021; 16: 1198-1208

  • 29.
    • Pereira RHM
    • Vieira Braga CK
    • Mendes Servo L
    • et al.

    Geographic access to COVID-19 healthcare in Brazil using a balanced float catchment area approach.

    Soc Sci Med. 2021; 273: 113773

  • 30.
    • Kanter GP
    • Segal AG
    • Groeneveld PW

    Income disparities in access to critical care services’.

    Health Aff (Millwood). 2020; 39: 1362-1367

  • 31.

    The politics of civil society in confronting HIV/AIDS.

    Int Aff. 2006; 82: 285-295

  • 32.

    The global and domestic politics of health policy in emerging nations.

    J Health Polit Policy Law. 2015; 40: 3-11

  • 33.
    • Patel KCR
    • Ali S
    • Hanif W
    • Khunti K

    Learning lessons from COVID-19 to reduce global health inequity. BMJ Opinion, Aug 13, 2021.

  • 34.
    • Abdalla SM
    • Allotey P
    • Ettman CK
    • et al.

    Global equity for global health. G20 Insights, Sept 23, 2021.

  • 35.
    • Malik SM
    • Barlow A
    • Johnson B

    Reconceptualising health security in post-COVID-19 world.

    BMJ Glob Health. 2021; 6: e006520

  • 36.
    • Shroff ZC
    • Marten R
    • Vega J
    • Peters DH
    • Patcharanarumol W
    • Ghaffar A

    Time to reconceptualise health systems.

    Lancet. 2021; 397: 2145

  • 37.
    • Assefa Y
    • Gilks CF
    • van de Pas R
    • Reid S
    • Gete DG
    • Van Damme W

    Reimagining global health systems for the 21st century: lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic.

    BMJ Glob Health. 2021; 6: e004882

  • 38.
    • Galvani AP
    • Parpia AS
    • Pandey A
    • et al.

    Universal healthcare as pandemic preparedness: the lives and costs that could have been saved during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2022; 119 ()

  • 39.
    • Carlson CJ
    • Albery GF
    • Phelan A

    Preparing international cooperation on pandemic prevention for the Anthropocene.

    BMJ Glob Health. 2021; 6: e004254

  • 40.
    • Bariş E
    • Silverman R
    • Wang H
    • Zhao F
    • Pate MA

    Walking the talk: reimagining primary health care after COVID-19. Washington, DC: World Bank, 2021.

  • 41.
    • Rawaf S
    • Allen L
    • Dubois E
    • et al.

    2018. Technical series on primary health care. Primary health care: closing the gap between public health and primary care through integration. World Health Organization, 2018.

  • 42.

    Advancing the right to health: the vital role of law. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2016.

  • 43.
    • Burgess RA
    • Osborne RH
    • Yongabi KA
    • et al.

    The COVID-19 vaccines rush: participatory community engagement matters more than ever.

    Lancet. 2021; 397: 8-10

  • 44.
    • Haider N
    • Yavlinsky A
    • Chang Y-M
    • et al.

    The Global Health Security index and Joint External Evaluation score for health preparedness are not correlated with countries’ COVID-19 detection response time and mortality outcome.

    Epidemiol Infect. 2020; 148: e210

  • 45.

    Global health governance at a crossroads.

    Glob Health Gov. 2011; 3: 1-37

  • 46.

    Multisectoralism, participation, and stakeholder effectiveness: increasing the role of nonstate actors in the global fund to fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria.

    Glob Gov. 2009; 15: 169-177

  • 47.
    • Pham PN
    • Vinck P
    • Weinstein HM

    Human rights, transitional justice, public health and social reconstruction.

    Soc Sci Med. 2010; 70: 98-105

  • 48.

    Health systems for health security: a framework for developing capacities for International Health Regulations, and components in health systems and other sectors that work in synergy to meet the demands imposed by health emergencies. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2021.

  • 49.
    • Lee CT
    • Katz R
    • Eaneff S
    • Mahar M
    • Ojo O

    Action-based costing for national action plans for health security: accelerating progress toward the International Health Regulations (2005).

    Health Secur. 2020; 18: S53-S63

  • 50.

    ‘Zero Draft’ report on WHO reform punts pandemic treaty forward—amidst signals of US warming to initiative. Health Policy Watch, Oct 28, 2021.

  • 51.

    Anchoring universal health coverage in the right to health: what difference would it make? Policy brief. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2015.

  • 52.
    • Chattu VK
    • Singh B
    • Kaur J
    • Jakovljevic M

    COVID-19 vaccine, TRIPS, and global health diplomacy: India’s role at the WTO platform.

    Biomed Res Int. 2021; 2021: 6658070

  • 53.
    • Chattu VK
    • Dave VB
    • Reddy KS
    • et al.

    Advancing African Medicines Agency through global health diplomacy for an equitable pan-African universal health coverage: a scoping review.

    Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021; 18: 11758

  • 54.
    • Hodgson T
    • Habibi R
    • Meier BM
    • Davis S

    Human rights must guide a pandemic treaty. OpinioJuris, Nov 22, 2021.

  • 55.
    • Rizvi SS
    • Douglas R
    • Williams OD
    • Hill PS

    The political economy of universal health coverage: a systematic narrative review.

    Health Policy Plan. 2020; 35: 364-372

  • 56.
    • Erondu NA
    • Martin J
    • Marten R
    • Ooms G
    • Yates R
    • Heymann DL

    Building the case for embedding global health security into universal health coverage: a proposal for a unified health system that includes public health.

    Lancet. 2018; 392: 1482-1486

  • 57.
    • Greer SL
    • Jarman H
    • Falkenbach M
    • Massard da Fonseca E
    • Raj M
    • King EJ

    Social policy as an integral component of pandemic response: learning from COVID-19 in Brazil, Germany, India and the United States.

    Glob Public Health. 2021; 16: 1209-1222

  • 58.

    Policy Brief 93, May 2021. A new WHO international treaty on pandemic preparedness and response: can it address the needs of the Global South? Geneva: South Centre, May, 2021.

  • 59.
    • Labonté R
    • Wiktorwicz M
    • Packer C
    • Ruckert A
    • Wilson K
    • Halabi S

    A pandemic treaty, revised International Health Regulations, or both?.

    Global Health. 2021; 17: 128

  • 60.

    Postcolonial and decolonial dialogues.

    Postcolonial Stud. 2014; 17: 115-121

  • 61.
    • Rackimuthu S
    • Narain K
    • Lal A
    • et al.

    Redressing COVID-19 vaccine inequity amidst booster doses: charting a bold path for global health solidarity, together.

    Global Health. 2022; 18: 23

  • 62.

    Review of the World Bank Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility (PEF) pandemic bond with reform proposals.

  • 63.
    • Røttingen J-A
    • Hvideberg H
    • Tölö E
    • Sarda B
    • Aylward B

    Financing global health security fairly. Center for Global Development, April 21, 2021.

  • 64.

    Global common goods for health: towards a new framework for global financing.

    Glob Policy. 2020; 11: 628-635

  • 65.

    Meeting report of the Working Group on Sustainable Financing. May 9, 2022.

  • 66.

    Universal health coverage from multiple perspectives: a synthesis of conceptual literature and global debates.

    BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2015; 15: 17

  • 67.
    • Global Financing Facility

    Beating the DRUM in lower-income countries: domestic resource use and mobilization for SDG3.

  • 68.
    • Bitton A
    • Fifield J
    • Ratcliffe H
    • et al.

    Primary healthcare system performance in low-income and middle-income countries: a scoping review of the evidence from 2010 to 2017.

    BMJ Glob Health. 2019; 4: e001551

  • 69.
    • Deussom R
    • Lal A
    • Frymus D
    • et al.

    Putting health workers at the centre of health system investments in COVID-19 and beyond.

    Fam Med Community Health. 2022; 10: e001449

  • 70.
    • Hipgrave DB
    • Kampo A
    • Pearson L

    Health systems in the ACT-A.

    Lancet. 2021; 397: 1181-1182

  • 71.
    • Community and civil society representatives to the ACT-A health systems connector pillar

    RE: HSRC strategy update and civil society participation. Oct 27, 2021.

  • 72.
    • Lal A
    • Ashworth HC
    • Dada S
    • Hoemeke L
    • Tambo E

    Optimizing pandemic preparedness and response through health information systems: lessons learned from Ebola to COVID-19.

    Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2022; 16: 333-340

  • 73.

    Human rights for health across the United Nations.

    Health Hum Rights. 2019; 21: 199-204

  • 74.
    • Bali S
    • Dhatt R
    • Lal A
    • Jama A
    • Van Daalen K
    • Sridhar D

    Off the back burner: diverse and gender-inclusive decision-making for COVID-19 response and recovery.

    BMJ Glob Health. 2020; 5: e002595

  • 75.

    Action on health systems, for universal health coverage and health security.

  • 76.
    • Kluge H
    • Martín-Moreno JM
    • Emiroglu N
    • et al.

    Strengthening global health security by embedding the International Health Regulations requirements into national health systems.

    BMJ Glob Health. 2018; 3: e000656

  • 77.
    • Heymann DL
    • Chen L
    • Takemi K
    • et al.

    Global health security: the wider lessons from the west African Ebola virus disease epidemic.

    Lancet. 2015; 385: 1884-1901

  • 78.

    Health systems neglected by COVID-19 donors.

    Lancet. 2021; 397: 83

  • 79.

    Building health systems resilience for universal health coverage and health security during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond: WHO position paper. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2021.

  • 80.

    From worlds apart to a world prepared: Global Preparedness Monitoring Board report 2021. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2021.

  • [ad_2]

    Source link

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *