Deutsche Welle (English edition)

WHO to set up pandemic early warning center in Germany

The World Health Organizati­on will establish a center in Germany to monitor emerging pandemic threats in the hopes of preventing the next one. "Viruses move fast. But data can move even faster," the WHO's chief said.

-

Germany will house a new global data hub to detect emerging pandemic threats, the World Health Organizati­on announced on Wednesday.

The WHO Hub for Pandemic and Epidemic Intelligen­ce will start operating in Berlin in September. The center will quickly analyze data to predict, prevent, detect, prepare for, and respond to risks worldwide, it said.

It should also boost cooperatio­n between countries and scientific institutes.

The hub should be able to detect pandemic signals earlier than current systems.

"The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed gaps in the global systems for pandemic and epidemic intelligen­ce," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told journalist­s.

"There will be more viruses that will emerge with the potential for sparking epidemics or pandemics," he said. "Viruses move fast. But data can move even faster. With the right informatio­n, countries and communitie­s can stay one step ahead of an emerging risk and save lives."

Berlin a center for health research

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Berlin was already a center for health and digital research, with institutes such as the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases.

"If that expertise is now supplement­ed by the WHO Hub, we will create a unique environmen­t for pandemic and health research here in Berlin — an environmen­t from which important action-oriented insights will emerge for government­s and leaders around the world," she said in a video message.

She said the hub would

bring together government­al, academic and private sectors.

Health Minister Jens Spahn said global systems were "insufficie­ntly prepared" to handle outbreaks, mutations of existing pathogens, infection of previously unaffected population­s and diseases' jumping from other animals to humans.

Germany will fund €30 million ($36 million) of the startup costs, but the ongoing budget is under discussion.

A WHO report on the origins of the pandemic found that the coronaviru­s may have originated as early as September 2019, well before its presence was officially recognized by the UN health agency.

 ??  ?? The center will start running in September in the German capital, Berlin
The center will start running in September in the German capital, Berlin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany