Miyamoto Tetsuya, Fujita Masami, Hachiya Masahiko, Yokobori Yuta, Komada Kenichi, Murakami Hitoshi
Bureau of International Health Cooperation, National Center for Global Health and Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
School of Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nagasaki University, Nagasaki, Japan.
Glob Health Med. 2025 Apr 30;7(2):112-126. doi: 10.35772/ghm.2025.01018.
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response (PPPR) in global health. This review first examined global health governance (GHG) for PPPR, identifying its core-satellite structure. Key GHG functions include rule-setting, resource mobilization, medical countermeasures (MCMs) supply, surveillance and data/pathogen sharing with rapid response, and One Health. Major gaps exist in global collaboration, enforcement of the International Health Regulations (IHR), and the World Health Organization's (WHO) capacity. The most urgent issue is pathogen access and benefit-sharing (PABS). Second, the PPPR capacity across world regions were assessed using two public datasets: eSPAR and GHS Index. Sub-Saharan Africa requires urgent support to strengthen most PPPR aspects, while epidemiological and laboratory surveillance, infection prevention and control (IPC), and regulatory functions need improvement in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in various regions outside Europe. Japan, with its strong PPPR capacity, is well-positioned to assist. Lastly, the review explored the link between PPPR and health systems strengthening (HSS). PPPR must be firmly integrated into HSS to ensure resilience, equity, inclusiveness, continuity of care, and sustainability. Core health system components - service delivery, workforce, health information systems, MCMs access, and governance - along with communication and trust-building, effectively contribute to PPPR. However, pandemic exceptionalism and the over-securitization of PPPR and health security may hinder coordination. The enhanced GHG for PPPR, led by the empowered WHO, should effectively facilitate and coordinate technical assistance to LMICs to strengthen their PPPR capacities and promote PPPR-HSS integration by bringing together the often-divided health security and HSS communities.
新冠疫情凸显了全球卫生领域大流行防范、准备和应对(PPPR)的重要性。本综述首先审视了PPPR的全球卫生治理(GHG),确定了其核心-卫星结构。关键的全球卫生治理职能包括规则制定、资源调集、医疗对策(MCMs)供应、监测以及快速响应中的数据/病原体共享,还有“同一健康”理念。全球合作、《国际卫生条例》(IHR)的执行以及世界卫生组织(WHO)的能力方面存在重大差距。最紧迫的问题是病原体获取与惠益分享(PABS)。其次,利用两个公共数据集eSPAR和全球卫生安全(GHS)指数评估了世界各地区的PPPR能力。撒哈拉以南非洲地区在加强大多数PPPR方面急需支持,而欧洲以外各地区的低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)在流行病学和实验室监测、感染预防与控制(IPC)以及监管职能方面需要改进。日本PPPR能力较强,处于有利的援助地位。最后,本综述探讨了PPPR与卫生系统强化(HSS)之间的联系。PPPR必须坚定地融入卫生系统强化之中,以确保恢复力、公平性、包容性、医疗服务的连续性和可持续性。卫生系统的核心组成部分——服务提供、劳动力、卫生信息系统、MCMs获取以及治理——连同沟通和信任建设,有效地促进了PPPR。然而,大流行例外论以及PPPR和卫生安全的过度安全化可能会阻碍协调。由得到授权的WHO牵头加强PPPR的全球卫生治理,应有效促进和协调对低收入和中等收入国家的技术援助,以加强其PPPR能力,并通过将往往分裂的卫生安全和卫生系统强化群体聚集在一起,促进PPPR与卫生系统强化的整合。