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International Health Regulations

    Overview

    The International Health Regulations (IHR) (2005) play a key role in shaping the way the world prepares for and responds to emergencies. An international legal instrument, IHR (2005) provides a unique global framework to protect people from health emergencies of any type, whereby its 196 States Parties commit to reporting public health emergencies of international concern and to strengthening national preparedness and response systems.

    In the words of the IHR, the scope is:

    "to prevent, protect against, control and provide a public health response to the international spread of disease in ways that are commensurate with and restricted to public health risks, and which avoid unnecessary interference with international traffic and trade."

    The IHR (2005) are central within the WHO Health Emergencies Programme (WHE) to guide countries towards achieving common approaches and capacity standards. WHO supports countries to monitor, evaluate, strengthen and test their core capacities to cope with crises.

    WHO response

    In the WHO Regional Office for Europe, a great deal of work focuses on the interlinkage between health emergencies and health systems. By strengthening the core capacities of the IHR (2005), countries are improving their health system resilience. Equally, development of responsive health systems is an integral part of IHR (2005) implementation. This virtuous circle means countries can continually “build back better” as they prevent, prepare, respond to and recover from emergencies.

    WHO/Europe is focusing on priority countries to support improvement of their IHR capacities and health system strengthening. This is part of WHO’s stated aim of protecting a billion additional people from health emergencies and thereby progressing towards key targets including the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), as well as G7 and G20 commitments.

    Approach

    The International Health Regulations (IHR) (2005) are legally binding upon each State Party’s government as a whole, rather than upon a single ministry, agency, office or sector. This means a multisectoral approach is central to the IHR (2005), with collaboration among all relevant national sectors to detect, assess and respond to a variety of potential public health emergencies of international concern.

    The all-hazard approach means that sectors involved in country-level IHR implementation include those responsible for: public health; food safety; veterinary medicine; emergency management; environment; international borders, ports, airports and ground crossings; customs; economy and trade; agriculture (including animal health); radionuclear safety and chemical safety; industry; and transportation.

    Information sharing arrangements and collaboration between these sectors are essential, both on a routine basis and during emergencies; they allow the IHR to meet the goal of preventing, protecting against, controlling and responding to the international spread of disease while avoiding unnecessary interference with international traffic and trade.

    Our work

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    Strengthening national legislation around the International Health Regulations (IHR)

    Strengthening national legislation around the International Health Regulations (IHR)

    Overview

    The International Health Regulations (IHR) (2005) are aimed at helping the international community prevent and respond to a variety of acute public health threats that have the potential to cross borders and threaten health worldwide. The IHR require States Parties to put in place an appropriate legal framework to enable efficient and effective implementation.

    National legislation encompasses a broad range of legal, administrative and other governmental instruments that may facilitate the implementation of the IHR by States Parties. These include:

    • legally binding instruments: constitutions, legislation, decrees, acts, orders, ordinances and regulations;
    • non-legally binding instruments: guidelines, standards, operating rules and procedures; and
    • other types of instruments that may not clearly belong to the previous categories: governmental protocols, resolutions and actions, and intersectoral, interdepartmental, interministerial or intergovernmental agreements.

    Due to the comprehensive scope of the IHR and its all-hazard approach (focusing on all serious public health risks that may spread across international borders), national legislation may cover the following areas:

    • international traffic (travellers, transport and trade);
    • capacities specific to points of entry (ports, airports and ground crossings);
    • public health communications and assessments across relevant ministries, departments and levels;
    • National IHR Focal Points;
    • domestic and international communications and collaboration (for example reporting public health events to WHO and collaborating in assessment and response);
    • surveillance and response; and
    • emergency preparedness.

    Analysing and potentially revising or adopting new legislation in this context can be a complex and challenging task. Since the IHR's entry into force in 2007, WHO has been supporting States Parties in their efforts to incorporate the IHR into national legislation and providing guidance concerning their practical implementation.

    Publications

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    Exercise JADE 2024: report

    In November 2024, the WHO Health Emergencies Programme for the WHO Regional Office for Europe conducted a functional simulation exercise called the Joint...

    Strengthening the health security agenda in Ukraine: policy brief

    Ukraine is navigating significant challenges, including the ongoing war with the Russian Federation and the aftermath of the coronavirus disease pandemic,...