WORKSHOPWS 01
Strengthening National Health Agencies for Future Pandemics
Date
Sunday, 12th October
Time
11:00-12:30 CEST
09:00-10:30 UTC
Room
Forum 1
About the session
National Public Health Agencies (NPHAs) play a critical role in preventing, detecting, and responding to public health threats. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed critical weaknesses in many NPHAs’ ability to deliver these core functions—often due not to lack of expertise or commitment but to governance and structural constraints that undermine their performance. These included limited legal mandates, rigid bureaucracies, unclear accountability lines, and insufficient autonomy in decision-making, resource allocation, and coordination.
Despite the expansion of NPHAs’ mandates to address emerging issues like antimicrobial resistance, climate-related hazards, and emerging threats, governance models have often not kept pace. In many settings, NPHAs are being restructured or newly established. Yet, there remains little systematic evidence on how governance arrangements affect their effectiveness.
Recognizing this critical gap, the WHO Health Emergencies Programme and the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research launched a multi-country learning program to examine governance and structural arrangements of NPHAs across diverse contexts—from autonomous agencies to line ministries, and from established to newly formed NPHAs.
This session will bring together NPHA leaders, policymakers, and researchers to discuss how governance reforms have and can strengthen the ability of NPHAs to deliver on their mandates in both routine and emergency contexts. It will reflect on findings from applied health policy and systems research (HPSR) conducted in eleven countries to highlight how national leaders, international organizations, and funders can support more effective governance arrangements and translate lessons from recent reforms into actionable strategies across contexts.
Despite the expansion of NPHAs’ mandates to address emerging issues like antimicrobial resistance, climate-related hazards, and emerging threats, governance models have often not kept pace. In many settings, NPHAs are being restructured or newly established. Yet, there remains little systematic evidence on how governance arrangements affect their effectiveness.
Recognizing this critical gap, the WHO Health Emergencies Programme and the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research launched a multi-country learning program to examine governance and structural arrangements of NPHAs across diverse contexts—from autonomous agencies to line ministries, and from established to newly formed NPHAs.
This session will bring together NPHA leaders, policymakers, and researchers to discuss how governance reforms have and can strengthen the ability of NPHAs to deliver on their mandates in both routine and emergency contexts. It will reflect on findings from applied health policy and systems research (HPSR) conducted in eleven countries to highlight how national leaders, international organizations, and funders can support more effective governance arrangements and translate lessons from recent reforms into actionable strategies across contexts.
Speakers
Edson Rwagasore
Rwanda Biomedical Center (RBC)
Head of Public Health Surveillance and Emergency Preparedness and Response
Rwanda
Open
Vernon Lee
Communicable Diseases Agency (CDA)
CEO
Singapore
Open
S. Mahendra Arnold
Ministry of Health
Deputy Director General, Public Health Services
Sri Lanka
Open
Chikwe Ihekweazu
World Health Organization (WHO)
Health Emergencies Programme | Executive Director
Open
Johanna Hanefeld
Robert Koch-Institut (RKI)
Acting Vice President
Germany
Open
Helen Clark
Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research (AHSPR)
Chair of the Board
New Zealand
Open