HomeHeadlines That MatterWHO chief warns US aid cuts could cost millions of lives

WHO chief warns US aid cuts could cost millions of lives

GENEVA, Switzerland (AFP) — The World Health Organization chief on Monday urged Washington to reconsider its sharp cuts to global health funding, warning that the sudden halt threatened millions of lives.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that disruptions to global HIV programmes alone could lead to “more than 10 million additional cases of HIV and three million HIV-related deaths”.

“We ask the US to reconsider its support for global health,” he told reporters.

Besides triggering the US pullout from the WHO after returning the White House in January, US President Donald Trump decided to freeze virtually all US foreign aid, including vast assistance towards boosting health worldwide.

The sudden about-face by the country that has traditionally given most by far has sent the entire humanitarian community into a tailspin.

Tedros warned that the cuts to direct funding for countries through the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) would have a huge impact.

The years-long battles against a long line of diseases, from HIV to measles to polio, would suffer immensely, he said.

– ‘Severe disruptions’ –
“There are now severe disruptions to the supply of malaria diagnostics, medicines and insecticide-treated bed nets due to stock-outs, delayed delivery or lack of funding,” Tedros said.

“Over the last two decades, the US has been the largest bilateral donor to the fight against malaria, helping to prevent an estimated 2.2 billion cases and 12.7 million deaths,” he said.

“If disruptions continue, we could see an additional 15 million cases of malaria and 107,000 deaths this year alone, reversing 15 years of progress.”

For HIV, the situation was similar, he said.

The halt to nearly all funding for the US anti-HIV initiative called PEPFAR had already caused “an immediate stop to service for HIV treatment, testing and prevention in more than 50 countries”, Tedros said.

“Eight countries now have substantial disruptions to antiretroviral therapy and will run out of medicines in the coming months,” he said.

“Disruptions to HIV programmes could undo 20 years of progress, leading to more than 10 million additional cases of HIV and three million HIV-related deaths.”

The WHO chief also pointed to the impact on the fight against tuberculosis, warning that nine countries had already reported “failing procurement and supply chains for TB drugs, jeopardising the lives of people with TB”.

– ‘At risk’ –
“Over the past two decades, US support for TB services has helped to save almost 80 million lives,” Tedros said, adding that “those gains, too, are at risk”.

At the same time, on vaccines, he highlighted that the WHO’s Global Measles and Rubella Network of more than 700 laboratories, which was funded solely by the United States, “faces imminent shutdown”.

“This comes at the worst possible time, when measles is making a comeback,” he said, noting that measles vaccines in the past 50 years had saved nearly 94 million lives.

“The actions right now are life-threatening,” WHO vaccine chief Kate O’Brien told journalists.

“What we’re seeing now is just laying the groundwork for hundreds of thousands of deaths that will happen on an annual basis in excess.”

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