2015
DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(15)60858-3
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Global health security: the wider lessons from the west African Ebola virus disease epidemic

Abstract: The Ebola virus disease outbreak in West Africa was unprecedented in both its scale and impact. Out of this human calamity has come renewed attention to global health security—its definition, meaning, and the practical implications for programmes and policy. For example, how does a government begin to strengthen its core public health capacities, as demanded by the International Health Regulations? What counts as a global health security concern? In the context of the governance of global health, including WHO… Show more

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Cited by 437 publications
(350 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
(51 reference statements)
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“…Investments in public health systems have frequently been driven by efforts to control infectious diseases such as HIV, polio, and malaria. More recently the US-inspired global health security agenda 225 has driven public health systems development in response to concerns relating to emerging infections with pandemic potential and to bioterrorism.…”
Section: Section 7 Strengthening Public Health Systems and Containinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Investments in public health systems have frequently been driven by efforts to control infectious diseases such as HIV, polio, and malaria. More recently the US-inspired global health security agenda 225 has driven public health systems development in response to concerns relating to emerging infections with pandemic potential and to bioterrorism.…”
Section: Section 7 Strengthening Public Health Systems and Containinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This epidemic in the three countries and its introduction to seven other countries illustrates how all countries are connected and that a threat in one country is a threat everywhere. Readiness to detect and respond to outbreaks of infectious disease such as Ebola is the goal of the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA) (17), an initiative supported by countries, government agencies, and international organizations to assist countries with attaining compliance with the International Health Regulations (18) and accelerate progress toward detecting and mitigating infectious disease threats quickly and effectively (19,20). The U.S. government has committed to working in at least 30 countries to implement GHSA, including Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, where CDC has established new country offices to provide direct technical assistance with implementation.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The foundations of the existing system of DAH and ODA were built after the Second World War and decolonization, and were initially framed as 'foreign aid', with recipients in a hierarchical relationship of dependence on donors. Alternative framings have since emerged, including 'cooperation', which implies a more equal relationship based on the principle of mutual benefit; 'national security', based on the argument that infectious diseases or other health threats arising in a foreign country may spread back to the donors' country unless managed at the source; 'global public goods', which emphasizes the responsibility of all states to contribute to the shared benefit of health; 'health diplomacy', which can include the use of DAH to achieve a donor's other foreign policy goals; 'investment', eyeing future commercial relationships to be built between a donor and recipient country; 'restitution', which emphasizes obligations to remedy past and/or ongoing wrongs; 'global solidarity', based on the notion of the emergence of a global society bound together by relationships of interdependence (Commission on Macroeconomics and Health, 2001; Mackintosh et al, 2006;Frenk and Moon, 2013;Heymann et al, 2015;Kickbusch, 2016). Each of these framings implies different institutional arrangements for DAH and is reflected in various reform proposals for the DAH system.…”
Section: Eight Critiques Of the Dah Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%