WHO Seeks $1bn for Global Health Emergency Response

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‎‎The World Health Organisation (WHO) says it is seeking one billion dollars to respond to health emergencies worldwide.

‎‎The organisation disclosed this in a statement on Tuesday, noting that it has launched the 2026 global appeal to ensure that millions living in humanitarian crises and conflicts can access health care.

It also said that in 2025, WHO and partners supported 30 million people funded through its annual emergency appeal.

‎‎”These resources helped deliver life-saving vaccination to 5.3 million children, enabled 53 million health consultations, supported more than 8,000 health facilities, and facilitated the deployment of 1,370 mobile clinics.

‎‎”The 2026 appeal seeks nearly one billion dollars to respond to 36 emergencies worldwide, including 14 Grade Three emergencies requiring the highest level of organisational response.

‎‎”These emergencies span sudden-onset and protracted humanitarian crises where health needs are critical,” it said.

Read Also: WHO Urges Renewed Commitment to End AIDS

‎‎WHO Director-General, Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus, said that the appeal was a call to stand with people living through conflict, displacement and disaster to give them not just services, but the confidence that the world has not turned its back on them

‎“It is not charity. It is a strategic investment in health and security.

“In fact, access to health care restores dignity, stabilises communities, and offers a pathway toward recovery,” Ghebreyesus said.

‎‎He said that the protracted conflicts, the escalating impacts of climate change, and recurrent infectious disease outbreaks are driving increasing demand for health emergency support, while global humanitarian financing continues to contract.

‎‎Ghebreyesus said that in 2025, humanitarian funding fell below 2016 levels, leaving WHO and partners able to reach only one-third of the 81 million people originally targeted to receive humanitarian health assistance.

‎‎”Renewed commitments and solidarity are urgently needed to protect and support the people living in the most fragile and vulnerable settings,” he said.

‎‎Ghebreyesus said that WHO’s priority emergency response areas in 2026 would include Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Myanmar, the occupied Palestinian territory, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, the Syrian Arab Republic, Ukraine and Yemen, as well as ongoing outbreaks of cholera and mpox.

‎‎”As the lead agency for health response in humanitarian settings, WHO coordinates more than 1,500 partners across 24 crisis settings globally, ensuring that national authorities and local partners remain at the centre of emergency response,” he said.

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