
009- Apr 16, 2025
“A Treaty of Preparedness: Healing the Future Before It Hurts”

🧬 Thematic Focus
Category: Health & International Relations | WHO | Pandemic Governance
🩺 Key Highlights
- Historic Accord: After three years of negotiation, the WHO finalized only its second international treaty in 75 years, aimed at pandemic preparedness.
- The first was the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (2003).
- Origins:
- Initiated post-COVID-19 in 2021.
- Driven by global inequities in vaccine access and uncoordinated crisis response.
- Core Goals:
- Prevent confusion and hoarding of resources in future pandemics.
- Improve global coordination, equity, and readiness.
- Treaty Features:
- Medicines & PPE Access:
- Manufacturers to give 10% of PPE to WHO + sell 10% at low cost.
- WHO gains global supply chain visibility.
- Technology Sharing:
- Mutually agreed sharing of health technology with low-income nations.
- Supports local vaccine & drug production.
- PABS (Pathogen Access and Benefit-Sharing):
- A global system for rapid data sharing to start early drug development.
- Medicines & PPE Access:
- Negotiation Challenges:
- Dispute over mandatory vs. voluntary tech transfers.
- Pharma concerns: Innovation risks vs. public health needs.
- Final agreement: voluntary sharing if mutually agreed.
- Global Implications:
- Victory for multilateralism and international solidarity.
- Ensures early warning, quicker response, and shared responsibility.
- US Position:
- Did not join final talks due to prior WHO exit decision.
- Set to officially exit WHO in 2026, hence not bound by the treaty.
🧠 Concept Explainer
Why a Pandemic Treaty Now?
COVID-19 taught the world a bitter truth — health insecurity anywhere is a threat everywhere. This treaty shifts from panic-driven reaction to protocol-based preparedness, laying the groundwork for a science-backed, equity-oriented global health order.
📜 GS Paper Mapping
- GS Paper II: International Institutions – WHO, Health Diplomacy
- GS Paper III: Disaster Management – Biological Disasters, Pandemic Readiness
- Essay Paper: Global Ethics in Crisis Response
💭 A Thought Spark — by IAS Monk
“The next pandemic cannot be cured by syringes alone — but by trust, time-sharing, and the tender stitching of global resolve.”