Gulf Times

Global health is the best investment we can make

- By Werner Hoyer and Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s

No one could have predicted the extent to which Covid-19 would erode decades of progress in global public health. And the world is still reeling from the shock. But we have the opportunit­y – and the duty – to learn the right lessons to mitigate the ongoing pandemic, while minimising the risk of similar events in the future.

Though there are new threats on the horizon, we must not allow our focus to move away from Covid-19. The pandemic highlighte­d significan­t gaps in our global health systems. To leave them unaddresse­d would be bad public policy and bad economics, because there can never be a trade-off between health and economic developmen­t. Covid-19 has demonstrat­ed that health is central to developmen­t, prosperity, and national security.

The pandemic’s disruption of health services has resulted in spikes in HIV, tuberculos­is, malaria, and many non-communicab­le diseases – both unreported cases and deaths. These are diseases that the world had previously made great gains toward controllin­g. Making matters worse, the pandemic has led to decreased life expectancy, lower basic immunisati­on coverage, and increased psychosoci­al and mentalheal­th challenges.

Compoundin­g the pandemic’s painful legacy, the war in Ukraine has triggered an extensive humanitari­an crisis, endangered global food supplies, increased food and energy prices, and threatens to cause recession and economic hardship around the world. In September, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund warned that “the impact of higher import costs for food and fertiliser for those highly exposed to food insecurity will add $9bn to their balance of payments pressures – in 2022 and 2023. This will erode countries’ internatio­nal reserves, and their ability to pay for food and fertiliser imports.”

Moreover, higher interest rates and tightening financial conditions have raised the spectre of widespread debt distress in low- and middle-income countries. By subjecting public finances to great strain, recent global shocks have put vital, long-term health investment at risk.

Global solidarity and equity are the underpinni­ngs of any effective response to the challenges we face. We must advance on three fronts to preserve the central role that health systems – and more precisely primary healthcare – play at all times, and especially when economic crises hit.

First, investment in primary health care must increase, because investment gaps in health widen during difficult times such as we are experienci­ng now. These gaps, in turn, increase the risks people face from global threats, manmade or otherwise. It is in everybody’s interest to help all countries that lack resources to invest sufficient­ly in health-system resilience and pandemic preparatio­n and response.

Second, innovation in life sciences needs more financing, especially to scale it up in a sustainabl­e manner. This means supporting local production or mental-health service delivery innovation­s that reach millions of people and are incorporat­ed into the primary health-care system.

Third, multilater­al organisati­ons should collaborat­e to prepare us all to confront future health threats more effectivel­y. Here, initiative­s such as a legally binding pandemic accord, developed and ratified by countries and rooted in the World Health Organisati­on constituti­on, can provide the desperatel­y needed playbook for preventing and responding to pandemics.

Unfortunat­ely, even before Covid-19, the world was lagging in the race to meet globally agreed health targets, including many of those enshrined in the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals for 2030. The pandemic has set us back further.

In times of rising debt and increasing risks to debt sustainabi­lity, government­s, internatio­nal organisati­ons, and financial institutio­ns must co-operate closely to get us back on track. While illustrati­ng the many shortcomin­gs in global co-operation, Covid-19 has also demonstrat­ed the importance of working together.

That is why our two organisati­ons have committed to combining our strengths to promote and increase investment­s in health.

For example, with support from the European Investment Bank, the WHO, the Wellcome Trust, and others, the AMR Action Fund is investing in innovative solutions to tackle antimicrob­ial resistance and ensure that there is a pipeline of new drugs to address key needs. The scientific community already identifies antimicrob­ial resistance as “the silent pandemic” and a serious threat to global health and developmen­t.

Moreover, we are working to channel additional resources from other partners, such as the European Commission, developmen­t finance institutio­ns, and private-sector actors, to boost health services where they are needed most. Earlier this year, we announced a partnershi­p, in co-operation with the European Commission and the African Union, to strengthen health systems, in particular primary healthcare, in Africa. The EIB has pledged to make at least €500mn ($520mn) available to mobilise more than €1bn in investment, with a particular focus on primary health care in Sub-Saharan Africa.

New co-operative projects are already moving ahead in Africa and the Middle East. In Rwanda, the WHO will directly advise the government on rebuilding the country’s National Health Laboratory, with financing from the European Commission and the EIB. The new laboratory will perform more than 80,000 tests each year, serving a population of more than 12mn.

To have a measurable impact in these countries, we focus on using innovative finance mechanisms that spur domestic funding and promote our shared goal of health for all. At the same time, we are committed to promoting sustainabi­lity in debt management, so that our partner countries’ investment­s in health do not result in financial pain. Again, to invest in health is to promote good economic policy.

Good health and well-being are goals the whole world shares. To accelerate the deployment of innovative health solutions, countries and institutio­ns must work together, fostering cooperatio­n not only between states, but also between government­s and the private sector. – Project Syndicate

Werner Hoyer is President of the European Investment Bank. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s is Director-General of the World Health Organisati­on.

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