STATEMENT OF THE INTER-PARLIAMENTARY
UNION’S
ADVISORY GROUP ON HEALTH REGARDING THE CURRENT
OUTBREAK OF CORONAVIRUS (COVID -19)
INTRODUCTION
The World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19 as a global pandemic on
March 11, 2020.
The COVID-19
has spread over
212 countries and territories
around
the world. As of 27 July 2020, the number of confirmed cases is
16,114,449
and 646,641
deaths were
recorded.
On May 19, 2020, the Seventy-third World Health Assembly called on all Member States
to address the COVID-19 pandemic on the following terms:
•
•
Enact a
“whole-of-government”
and
“whole-of-society”
response to the
pandemic through an action plan that includes immediate and long-term actions.
Implement national action plans that contain context-specific measures which are
comprehensive, proportionate, time bound, gender responsive, and sensitive to
vulnerable groups.
•
Ensure that any restrictions on movement of people, medical equipment and
medicines are limited and temporary, with provision of exceptions for
humanitarian and health workers.
•
•
Guarantee access to safe water, sanitation, hygiene, and infection prevention and
control.
Afford the necessary domestic financing and development assistance to maintain
the functioning of health systems, which is indispensable for an effective public
health response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
•
Inform the population in a reliable and comprehensive manner on the ongoing
COVID-19 pandemic, including authorities’ response, in addition to tackling
misinformation and disinformation.
•
•
•
•
•
Make sure that access to safe testing, treatment and care for COVID-19 is
provided, with particular attention to those groups who are prone to higher risk.
Provision of personal protective equipment, psychosocial support, training, and
other necessary commodities to all relevant frontline health workers.
Use of digital technologies to address the pandemic comprehensively, with
attention to privacy, personal data, and security concerns.
Present timely, accurate, detailed public health information on the pandemic to
WHO, per the International Health Regulations (2005).
Share knowledge, lessons learned, experiences, best practices, data, materials,
and commodities with both WHO and other countries.
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