AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed the health security capacities of six countries (Indonesia, Cambodia, Vietnam, Dominican Republic, Ghana, and South Korea) in implementing WHO International Health Regulations.
  • Data was collected from various sources, including health security indices, and a SWOT analysis was conducted to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats affecting health security in these nations.
  • Key findings highlighted strong early warning systems and immunization opportunities but also revealed weaknesses in legal frameworks and human resources, as well as threats like biosafety issues and communication challenges during public health emergencies.

Article Abstract

Objectives: The study aimed to analyze the core capacities to implement World Health Organization International Health Regulations (IHR) in 6 countries: Indonesia, Cambodia, Vietnam, the Dominican Republic, Ghana, and the Republic of Korea.

Methods: Secondary data from relevant databases and reports, including the electronic State Party Self-Assessment Annual Reporting mechanism and global health security index, were used to assess health security in these countries. Descriptive statistics summarized the basic features of the scores, and a strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) analysis was subsequently performed to identify factors affecting health security scores while highlighting key similarities and differences between countries.

Results: Early warning and event management emerged as the primary strength in most countries. Common opportunities included international commitments and immunization programs. In contrast, many countries shared weaknesses related to the policy, legal, and normative frameworks for IHR implementation, as well as challenges in human resources, chemical event management, and radiation emergency preparedness. Recurring threats involved issues such as biosafety, biosecurity, dual-use research and the culture of responsible science, infection control practices, coordination between public health and security authorities, laboratory supply chain vulnerabilities, and communication with healthcare workers during public health emergencies.

Conclusion: In order to counter future global health threats, countries should prioritize enhancing surveillance capacity (early warning and event management) as well as the immunization indicator (vaccination rates for human and animal diseases, including the national vaccine delivery system).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.24171/j.phrp.2024.0314DOI Listing

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