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CA Topic

Amendment in International Health Regulations (IHR)

Brief Context

Context Recently, the amended International Health Regulations (IHR) officially entered into force, marking a historic milestone in global health governance. Key Highlights in Recent Amendments Introduction of ‘Pandemic Emergency’ Classification: Pandemic Emergency applies when a communicable disease spreads widely across multiple States, overwhelms health systems, and causes major social and economic disruption requiring rapid, coordinated international action.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS2/Health

Context

  • Recently, the amended International Health Regulations (IHR) officially entered into force, marking a historic milestone in global health governance.

About International Health Regulations (IHR)

  • Historical Background:
    • International Sanitary Conference (Paris, 1851): to address cholera spreading along European trade routes; focused on quarantine rules and information exchange;
    • International Sanitary Regulations (1951): The establishment of the World Health Organization (WHO) in 1948 eventually consolidated the fragmented conventions and treaties related to maritime health and aerial navigation.
  • International Health Regulations (IHR), 1969: It narrowed its scope to three diseases: cholera, plague, and yellow fever.
    • Vaccination certificates and quarantine rules remained central.
    • IHR is a legally binding framework for 196 States Parties, including all 194 WHO Member States.
  • IHR, 2005: The SARS outbreak of 2003 exposed gaps in the older framework.
    • In response, the 2005 revision expanded coverage to any public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC). Key features included:
      • 24-hour notification of events to WHO;
      • Development of national ‘core capacities’;
      • Establishment of 24/7 communication channels;
  • The latest amendments—adopted by consensus at the 77th World Health Assembly in 2024 that reflects lessons learned from COVID-19 and decades of evolving public health policy.
    • The World Health Organisation (WHO) acts as the Secretariat of the IHR, facilitating coordination but not enforcing compliance. It provides technical guidance, alerts, and support during health emergencies.
Amendment Process
Article 55: It allows proposals from States Parties or the WHO Director-General.
1. Adoption requires a majority decision in the World Health Assembly (WHA).Countries may reject or reserve provisions under Articles 61–62.
Institutional Mechanisms:
1. Emergency Committee (Article 48): It advises the WHO Director-General on whether an event qualifies as a PHEIC or a Pandemic Emergency, guiding temporary recommendations.
2. Review Committee (Article 50): It evaluates amendments, standing recommendations, and other technical questions.

Key Highlights in Recent Amendments 

  • Introduction of ‘Pandemic Emergency’ Classification: Pandemic Emergency applies when a communicable disease spreads widely across multiple States, overwhelms health systems, and causes major social and economic disruption requiring rapid, coordinated international action.
    • It goes beyond the existing Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). The new classification enables:
      • Earlier international alerts;
      • Stronger coordination among countries;
      • Enhanced access to medical countermeasures;
  • Establishment of National IHR Authorities: The amendments mandate the creation of National IHR Authorities in each member country, to streamline implementation.
    • It aims to coordinate across ministries — including health, transport, trade, and security, unlike the Focal Point (a communication hub), to implement the IHR.
    • For India: It means a formal designation by the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, supported by updated legislation, expanded disease surveillance, stronger laboratories, and safeguards for personal data during emergencies.
  • Equity and Solidarity at the Core: The revised IHR emphasizes equity and solidarity, particularly in access to vaccines, diagnostics, and treatments. Provisions have been added to:
    • Strengthen financing mechanisms;
    • Promote fair distribution of medical products;
    • Support low- and middle-income countries during global health crises;
  • Monitoring and Evaluation: Compliance relies on Joint External Evaluations (JEE), where international experts collaborate with national authorities to assess readiness in surveillance, labs, workforce, and communication.
    • These reviews help countries identify weaknesses and investment priorities.

Source: TH