GLOBAL HEALTH LABGHL 04
Operationalizing the WHO Traditional Medicine Strategy
From Global Vision to National Action
Date
Sunday, 12th October
Time
14:00-15:30 CEST
12:00-13:30 UTC
Room
Hub 2
Co-Host(s)
About the session
At the 78th World Health Assembly in May 2025, Member States formally adopted the WHO Traditional Medicine Strategy 2025–2034, marking a pivotal shift in global health systems thinking. Following this momentum —and building on the dialogue initiated at the World Health Summit Regional Meeting in Delhi —this session convenes high-level stakeholders to explore actionable pathways for implementing the strategy at national and regional levels.
Where the Delhi session highlighted the urgent need for trust, evidence generation, youth engagement, and cross-cultural collaboration, this session takes the next step: unpacking how governments, regulators, clinicians, and communities can translate strategic vision into practice. It focuses on embedding traditional and complementary medicine (T&CM) into existing health systems through strengthened governance, intersectoral coordination, pragmatic regulation, and investment in workforce development.
The session will surface lessons from country experiences —particularly Africa and Europe —while exploring institutional innovation, including integrated hospitals and regulatory models. It will also reflect on the role of the World Health Organization (WHO) in guiding implementation, and how shared knowledge, digital infrastructure, and context-sensitive scientific methods can enable scale.
With an eye on the upcoming WHO Global Traditional Medicine Summit in December 2025, this session serves as a bridge between global policy and grounded action. It invites leaders to move beyond commitments and articulate clear, credible steps to make people-centered, evidence-informed T&CM a fully integrated part of 21st-century healthcare.
Where the Delhi session highlighted the urgent need for trust, evidence generation, youth engagement, and cross-cultural collaboration, this session takes the next step: unpacking how governments, regulators, clinicians, and communities can translate strategic vision into practice. It focuses on embedding traditional and complementary medicine (T&CM) into existing health systems through strengthened governance, intersectoral coordination, pragmatic regulation, and investment in workforce development.
The session will surface lessons from country experiences —particularly Africa and Europe —while exploring institutional innovation, including integrated hospitals and regulatory models. It will also reflect on the role of the World Health Organization (WHO) in guiding implementation, and how shared knowledge, digital infrastructure, and context-sensitive scientific methods can enable scale.
With an eye on the upcoming WHO Global Traditional Medicine Summit in December 2025, this session serves as a bridge between global policy and grounded action. It invites leaders to move beyond commitments and articulate clear, credible steps to make people-centered, evidence-informed T&CM a fully integrated part of 21st-century healthcare.
Speakers
Nessma El-Nabawy
Egyptian Drug Authority (EDA)
General Administration for Registration of Herbal Products | General Manager
Egypt
Video Message
Open
Gilbert Motlalepula Matsabisa
University of the Free State
Faculty of Health Sciences | Director of the Indigenous Knowledge Systems (Health) Lead Programme
South Africa
Open
Nicole Redvers
Western University
Indigenous Planetary Health | Director
Canada
Video Message
Open
Abderrazak Bouzouita
Ministry of Health
Director General
Tunisia
Open
Anja Thronicke
Research Institute Havelhöhe (FIH)
Senior Medical Affairs Manager (Oncology)
Germany
Open
Shyama Kuruvilla
World Health Organization (WHO)
Global Traditional Medicine Centre | Director a.i.
Senior Strategic Advisor in the Office of the Director-General
Open