Værktøj
Skift Land:

Even as bird flu looms, the world is unlearning Covid’s lessons

A cow grazes in a field at a dairy farm.
Despite increasing H5N1 flu concerns, self-interest appears to be trumping the common good as the world negotiates a pandemic treaty. | Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

A post-Covid pandemic treaty was supposed to be a breakthrough. Instead, it looks like a disappointment.

The simmering fears over bird flu should leave no doubt: The health of humans and our fellow animals is inextricably linked.

Covid-19 was likely transmitted from animals to humans, and millions died as a result. The world is now anxiously watching for any sign that H5N1, i.e., the bird flu, could cause another pandemic so soon after the last one.

For years, public health experts have preached the importance of a One Health philosophy: treating the health of the environment, animals, and human beings as a single issue that requires a comprehensive approach because the health of one affects the others. On the ground, however, it remains a work in progress; the slow implementation of livestock surveillance for bird flu is only the latest example of that struggle.

The world’s nations are currently negotiating a pandemic treaty that was supposed to prevent humanity from repeating the mistakes of Covid-19. In particular, the agreement was seen as an opportunity to put those One Health principles into practice.

But we might miss our chance. As the pandemic fades into memory, self-interest appears to be winning out over global cooperation.

What the world could do — and what it seems like it’ll do instead

In December 2021, the World Health Assembly, the governing body of the World Health Organization, announced that it would “draft and negotiate a convention, agreement or other international instrument … to strengthen pandemic prevention, preparedness and response.” The goal was to create a binding international agreement that would compel countries around the world to take steps to prevent future pandemics and, should those efforts fail, to ensure smoother coordination in any future public health emergency.

Negotiators are supposed to largely wrap up their work by Friday, May 10. Representatives from the world’s governments will convene in Geneva on May 27 for the World Health Assembly. The plan is for the pandemic accord to be ratified before the assembly adjourns.

Even with the threat of H5N1 looming, however, it has become clear the world is downsizing its ambitions for the treaty. In place of firm commitments are vague aspirations.

On two important sections — the One Health measures and the establishment of a system to share pathogens between countries — the latest draft text would defer momentous operational decisions until at least 2026.

One Health has been one of the major points of contention: Rich countries want it because it would lead to a significant investment in disease surveillance in poorer countries, where it is easier for threatening pathogens to lurk unnoticed. But poorer countries dislike it for the same reason, arguing it amounts to a massive unfunded mandate placed on them.

“It’s a vital step to reduce future pandemic risks. But achieving this demands substantial and costly changes,” Suerie Moon, co-director of the Global Health Centre (GHC) at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, told Geneva Solutions. “It requires changing how we raise livestock and animals.”

Comparing the text of an October 2023 draft of the treaty and the most recent draft reveals the dwindling ambition. In the earlier version, there were specific commitments that called for stronger animal surveillance, more research and more education for health workers and communities, and a “whole of government” and “whole of society” approach.

In the latest draft, much of that language has been removed. Governments are given more leeway to “promote” and “engage” One Health principles as they see fit.

The problem is — again — money.

No one wants another pandemic. But no one wants to pay up to prevent one.

Poor countries already spend significantly less money on health care than wealthy nations. Historically, long-term economic growth has been the way to increase health expenditures.

If developed nations want developing ones to make new investments now, the middle and low-income countries argue that the rich countries should be willing to help pay for it.

But at the same time they are demanding One Health investments, those rich nations are balking at a proposal that would help the world identify and fight potentially dangerous pathogens.

I wrote about this issue in late February. It’s called pathogen access and benefit sharing (PABS). The idea is that rich countries or the pharma manufacturers should pay for access to pathogens of concern that are identified in developing countries and commit to sharing the benefits derived from that access — i.e., diagnostics and vaccines that are ultimately produced — with those poorer countries. That provision has been a priority for the developing world after the pandemic, when Covid-19 vaccines were slow to reach low-income nations in Africa and the rest of the world.

But the rich countries don’t like it. They, along with the pharmaceutical companies they represent, argue such a system would be too bureaucratic and risk slowing down innovation in a future public health emergency.

Some experts have noted the irony of the US and Europe insisting on unfettered access to pathogens from low-income countries at the same time the US government is facing criticism for being slow to share data about H5N1.

“The situation with avian influenza across the United States exemplifies the inherent hypocrisy and vested economic interests around Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness, and Response,” Dr. Christian Walzer, executive director of health at the Wildlife Conservation Society, said in a statement. “While the Global North is demanding transparent and rapid access to pathogen data from the Global South … it seems unwilling to share such information with the world.”

The two issues have become entwined in last-minute horse-trading. Based on the latest reporting, developed countries are trying to force a compromise by dangling PABS in exchange for the One Health provisions.

But as of now, the most likely outcome appears to be, at best, a symbolic commitment to One Health principles and a directive to reach an agreement on more specific provisions in the next two years.

Such a disappointing resolution, even as concerns about bird flu grow, is symptomatic of the world’s struggles to apply the lessons of Covid-19. As the urgency with which the negotiations began continues to fade, self-interest and geopolitical rivalries are standing in the way of making the world safer from pandemics.

Let’s hope we don’t pay the price for that shortsightedness.

This story originally appeared in Today, Explained, Vox’s flagship daily newsletter. Sign up here for future editions.


Læs hele artiklen om: vox.com
NYC-Dublin portal reopens with limited hours, new guardrails to deter shenanigans
“The team will continue making updates as needed to ensure that everyone can continue to enjoy the Portal,” the Flatiron NoMad Partnership and Dublin City Council said in a joint statement on Sunday.
nypost.com
What could have been hangs over Scottie Scheffler after uneven PGA Championship, arrest whirlwind
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Scottie Scheffler’s stressful and adventurous week was almost over. It was time to go home. Finally. The world’s No. 1-ranked player was standing on the 18th green under the searing Kentucky sun waiting for his playing partner, Mark Hubbard, to putt out so he could make his 271st and final stroke of...
nypost.com
Colin Jost cracks awkward joke about wife Scarlett Johansson’s body on ‘SNL’
The joke was delivered during a traditional bit that requires Jost and Weekend Update co-host Michael Che to write offensive jokes for each other.
nypost.com
Ella Steven’s late goal leads Gotham over Red Stars to push unbeaten streak to five
By the time Gotham's 2-1 win against the Chicago Red Stars (5-3-1) ended, it was Ella Stevens that was the center of their celebration against her former team from the past three years.
nypost.com
Ed Dwight, 90, America’s first black astronaut candidate, finally goes to space 60 years later
Ed Dwight, America’s first Black astronaut candidate, finally rocketed into space 60 years later, flying with Jeff Bezos’ rocket company on Sunday.
nypost.com
Knicks fought until there was ‘nothing left to give’ in bitter end to captivating season
By the end, most of the faithful were still in the house, even if they couldn’t wait for the final buzzer to put them all out of their misery. Josh Hart drew his sixth foul, three minutes before the end. The Knicks were down by 17. The season was inching toward the abyss. And still...
nypost.com
Oakland locals blame homeless encampment for city removing traffic lights to stop copper thieves
Oakland, California replaced a traffic light at an intersection with stop signs as locals place blame at a growing nearby homeless encampment.
foxnews.com
‘90 Day Fiancé’ Star “Big” Ed Brown Regrets How He Called Off His Wedding To Liz Woods: “It Was Torture”
"I don't regret calling off the wedding as much as I regret how I did it."
nypost.com
Carlos Rodon feels and looks more at ‘home’ in year 2 with Yankees
Physically, a slimmer Carlos Rodon looks differently this season. With a deeper repertoire, Rodon is pitching differently and no longer so reliant upon his fastball and slider.
nypost.com
Israel continues operation in Rafah amid growing pressure
Israel continued its attacks in Gaza, including in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, despite growing international pressure to limit the scope of the offensive. Imtiaz Tyab has more.
cbsnews.com
Georgetown Visitation closes season with DCSAA girls’ lacrosse title
The Cubs led for much of Sunday’s championship, making the most of their final game as a team.
washingtonpost.com
Hunter Biden Reveals Why He’s Punching Back at Fox News
Photo Illustration by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/GettyOver the last few days, Hunter Biden has lost his bid to delay his federal gun trial, tried to get his tax trial postponed, and learned that the benefactor funding his legal defense is out of cash.But President Joe Biden’s scandal-scarred son is ready for another fight.Three weeks ago, his
thedailybeast.com
Unconfirmed sighting of mountain lion in Griffith Park evokes memories and majesty of L.A.'s favorite big cat, P-22
The National Park Service, which has reviewed video footage of the sighting, is taking the claim seriously, according to spokesperson Ana Beatriz Cholo.
latimes.com
‘Friends’ star Courteney Cox says Matthew Perry ‘visits me a lot,’ still feels sense he is ‘around, for sure’
"Friends" star Courteney Cox still feels the presence of her late co-star, Matthew Perry, who she spent ten years with on the show.
foxnews.com
New York City school spending has gone insane
New York City is spending billions more on its public schools despite falling enrollment, notes a new Citizens Budget Commission report, headed to a jaw-dropping $39,304 per-pupil in Fiscal Year 2025.
nypost.com
Xander Schauffele sets scoring record at PGA Championship for first major win
Xander Schauffele makes a 6-foot birdie putt on final hole to beat Bryson DeChambeau by one stroke and win the PGA Championship for first major title.
latimes.com
Filip Chytil’s ‘adrenaline’ high left him wanting more in Rangers postseason
Now that the Rangers are on to the Eastern Conference Final, where they’ll play the Panthers beginning on Wednesday at the Garden, Filip Chytil is yearning for another opportunity to get back into the action.
nypost.com
90-Year-Old Man Breaks Space Travel Record: 'Everybody Needs to Do This'
Ed Dwight, a 90-year-old former Air Force Captain, was on the Blue Origin spaceflight that launched from Texas on Sunday.
newsweek.com
L.A. County Sheriff's Department asking for public's help in finding New York man missing in Malibu
The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department is asking for the public's help in finding a New York man missing since Saturday in Malibu.
latimes.com
Bruce Nordstrom, Who Helped Lead His Family’s Retail Empire, Dies at 90
Though he was the company’s president, he opted for joint leadership with family members as they made Nordstrom, starting as a string of shoe stores, into an international fashion retail brand.
nytimes.com
Xander Schauffele Wins PGA Championship With Incredible Birdie On Final Hole
The world's No. 3 golfer, Xander Schauffele, preserves his first career major at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky.
newsweek.com
May 19, 2024 - Israel-Gaza news
An Israeli airstrike on a refugee camp in central Gaza has killed at least 35 people, including seven children, according to hospital officials. Meanwhile, Israeli war cabinet divisions are spilling into the open.
edition.cnn.com
Shohei Ohtani gets winning hit in Dodgers' walk-off victory
Shohei Ohtani singled in the bottom of the 10th inning to lead the Dodgers to a walk-off victory over the Reds.
latimes.com
Pass the Restoring Mental Health Act — now
The bill would try to end the "EDP revolving door," wherein Emotionally Disturbed Persons get committed for treatment after some incident — then handed a few bills and rapidly released.
nypost.com
Pacers troll Spike Lee after they eliminate Knicks from NBA playoffs in Game 7
ESPN couldn’t help but show a disheartened superfan Spike Lee sitting courtside as his Knicks were en route to a Game 7 loss to the Pacers, and Indiana’s social media team had some fun with the clip after the game. 
nypost.com
Graduates at Boston University Chant 'USA' as Anti-Israel Protesters Disrupt Ceremony
Graduates at Boston University responded to several of their peers disrupting the commencement ceremony by showing their patriotic side. The post Graduates at Boston University Chant ‘USA’ as Anti-Israel Protesters Disrupt Ceremony appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Cuban spies behind sale of American secrets around the world
Former U.S. Ambassador Victor Manuel Rocha spent decades spying for Cuba. Before Rocha there was Ana Montes, a Pentagon analyst who spent 17 years spying for Cuba.
cbsnews.com
Saying goodbye to season 56 — and to a man who made 60 Minutes better for 35 years
Tonight, 60 Minutes says thank you to Frank Devine: a senior producer who's retiring after making our show better for 35 years. And thank you to viewers for watching our 56th season.
cbsnews.com
Papa Francisco: Transcripción de la entrevista con 60 Minutos, en español
En una rara entrevista, el Papa Francisco responde a preguntas sobre conflictos globales, migrantes en los Estados Unidos, abuso sexual en la iglesia y más durante una conversación con Norah O'Donnell.
cbsnews.com
Former NFL All-Pro running back David Johnson announces retirement
Former NFL All-Pro running back David Johnson is hanging up his cleats.
nypost.com
Central US faces ‘particularly dangerous situation’ from potential derecho with 100-mph winds, giant hail
The central US is bracing for what could be a potentially dangerous end to the weekend as forecasters track the threat of severe weather on Sunday, including the potential for a derecho that could sweep across portions of Kansas and Oklahoma with destructive wind gusts higher than 100 mph and baseball-sized hail. This comes on the heels of another
nypost.com
Composer Tan Dun spreads his wings as an audience unmutes their phones
Composer Tan Dan and five visiting musicians joined the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra at Strathmore Music Center on Saturday
washingtonpost.com
Hochul Visits an Ancestral Home, 3,000 Miles From the Governor’s Mansion
After meeting the pope and the mayors of Rome, London and Dublin, Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York paused to reconnect with her past.
nytimes.com
Images show spectacle of Indonesian volcano eruption as authorities evacuate 7 nearby villages
Multiple eruptions from Indonesian volcano Mount Ibu led to authorities evacuating seven villages within a four-mile radius of the geologic activity on Sunday.
foxnews.com
Sean "Diddy" Combs apologizes after video of alleged attack is released
Sean "Diddy" Combs apologized after video of him allegedly assaulting his ex, Cassie, in 2016 was aired by CNN. Kenny Choi reports.
cbsnews.com
Search underway for Iranian president following apparent helicopter crash
A helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi apparently crashed amid foggy conditions. A search is underway for the president and several other government officials who were onboard. Ian Lee reports.
cbsnews.com
Xander Schauffele walks it off with 18th-hole birdie to win PGA Championship
Xander Schauffele needed birdie on the 18th hole to win the PGA Championship, and that's exactly what he did to edge out Bryson DeChambeau by one stroke at Valhalla Golf Club.
foxnews.com
Biden calls for cease-fire in Morehouse commencement address
Speaking at Morehouse College's commencement ceremony on Sunday, President Biden called for a cease-fire in Gaza. Nikole Killion has more.
cbsnews.com
Xander Schauffele fends off Bryson DeChambeau to win PGA Championship for first major title
He avoided a playoff with Bryson DeChambeau -- who had a scorching final round -- by making a birdie putt on the 18th hole to win the PGA Championship at 21-under at Valhalla on Sunday.
nypost.com
"CBS Weekend News" headlines for Sunday, May 19, 2024
Here's a look at the top stories making headlines on the "CBS Weekend News" with Nancy Chen.
cbsnews.com
Pacers shock Knicks with historic Game 7 offensive onslaught, move on to Eastern Conference Finals
The Indiana Pacers had one of the best shooting performances in the last 25 years in the playoffs, and it came in Game 7 to defeat the New York Knicks, 130-109.
foxnews.com
I’m a celebrity trainer — these are my 3 favorite pre-workout snacks
The proof is in the pudding.
nypost.com
Morehouse defends students, faculty who turned their backs during Biden speech: ‘We are proud’
Morehouse College is praising its students after several graduates sat with their backs turned to President Biden as he delivered his commencement address at the school Sunday.
foxnews.com
RFK Jr. lists voting address at Westchester home — that’s in foreclosure and neighbors have never seen him
The independent candidate claims his voting address is 84 Croton Lake Road In Katonah, though he is not the owner of the million-dollar property-in-arrears, does not show up in resident searches for it, and some longtime neighbors -- and even local authorities -- were shocked at the notion it's his home.
nypost.com
Police: Illinois Teen Killed by Drunk Driver Weeks Before Graduation
An Illinois teen was killed just weeks before his high school graduation at the hands of an alleged drunk driver who was speeding at over 120 mph, police said. The post Police: Illinois Teen Killed by Drunk Driver Weeks Before Graduation appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Rangers are nearly at full health in rare playoff luxury before facing Panthers
With several players — who have either been serving as healthy scratches or working their way back from significant injuries — champing at the bit to get in the lineup, the Blueshirts have the rare luxury of personnel options to sort through in the next few days.
nypost.com
Opinion: Diddy’s ‘Apology’ is Only Happening Because He Got Caught
Photo Illustration by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/GettyAnother day, another pathetic move from disgraced hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs.On Sunday morning, Diddy posted a public apology video via Instagram following the release of a surveillance video which showed him physically attacking his then-girlfriend Cassie Ventura in 2016.“I take full
thedailybeast.com
Jessica Biel chops off her hair in dramatic transformation: ‘Brought back the f–k ass bob’
The actress took to social media to reveal she traded her long hair in for a bob, which husband Justin Timberlake seems to love.
nypost.com