Contributions From APAN During Disasters

The most important aspect that gets affected during disasters is human connectivity. In this regard, APAN (Asia Pacific Advanced Network) has been very much instrumental in making the lives of the research community better and making it more comfortable

By Dr. Tanushree Mondal

Assistant Director of Medical Education, Government of West Bengal

Contributions From APAN During Disasters

 

First published 21 December 2020  https://www.chdgroup.org/policies/contributions-from-apan-during-disasters/


"The General Manager of APAN, Dr Markus Buchhorn is very hopeful that with the passage of the time, APAN can contribute more and more in this uncharted domain and can make an important difference to the broader community and benefit society through that"

 

APAN (Asia Pacific Advanced Network) is a network that connects research and education networks of various economies to one another and this makes it possible to build appropriate networks.

Among the activities of APAN, some are to provide forums for network engineers to build new applications, operate a fellowship program in support of it, adoption of advanced network technologies and regular updating of links, thereby improving the global cooperation from countries like Europe, North and South America, Africa and Arabian countries as well.

In pretty much every country there are research networks that connect all the Teaching institutions, the college, the hospitals, the museums, the cultural institutions on a common platform, the National Research Education Networks (NREN), either deployed by the Ministries of the respective Governing body or through the Universities. What APAN does is partnering of all the NREN in 3 out of the top 5 leading economies of the world, spanning more than half of the world’s population, including many contributors and link owners in a loose and volunteer-based manner. It stretches from Pakistan in the west to Japan in the east and down to Australia, New Zealand in the south. So, it spans the least developing to the most developed countries, creating multiple freeways.  It hopes to extend its domain more in the pacific Islands one day. These networks are the need of the hour while harnessing resilience against disasters. These networks help in moving large data sets and stand unique in their approach for their Out -of-the -Box Thinking and promulgation of Best Practices wherever and whenever they can.

In the remote past, the Disaster Mitigation Working group of APAN collaborated with the UNESCO under the project Connect Asia and promoted gentle partnerships with economies all around and engaged in case studies, numerical simulations, simulation practices and collaboration models and tools. Their domain was far fletched ranging from floods to droughts, Earthquakes, Tsunami, Fires, Smoke, Typhoons, Dust etc. So, in the face of such a Disaster, APAN stands by establishing multiple paths as a way of robust reconstructive and mitigation activity. APAN has the capability of providing such pathways specially during disasters ex. downloading or else uploading terra byte of data on Climate data in Modelling typhoon in the event of a disaster rapidly, running models with artificial intelligence which is in fact a transformative step in restoring and saving lives in a matter of few minutes. It also means accessing Disaster Response Networks by deploying such networks in places which faced a disaster. For ex. An Ad hoc network or a mesh network in the Philippines to support the responders in the region that replaced the local mobile network. In such a way, these networks deliver information, computing capacity whenever required. Such has also been shown in the clinical context of Covid-19 in 2020 through sharing of data. These information help bring in the necessary resources to the places that require the most, thus building resilience of research and science and technology in the support community. So, when such events occur in the future, these resilient networks come to play forefront with their armamentarium.

APAN conducts two meetings in a year crossing the Asia Pacific regions, the last was the APAN 50 at Hongkong in the year 2020, and the next upcoming is the APAN 51 at Islamabad, where there is a whole lot of knowledge sharing and learning between the researchers, the end-user community, the educators, and with the involvement of all its working group ranging from Agriculture, Earth system and sensing, Astronomy, culture, Disaster Management, Medical wing etc.

Much remains undiscovered when it comes to the contribution that APAN has left on the lives of the educators all around the globe, especially during the time of natural disasters or man-made calamities. Though the objectives of APAN have always been to uplift the education and research globally taking it to the next dimension, but it has unknowingly contributed to the medical world time and again, such as during the SARS outbreak, Bird Flu and most recently during the covid-19 pandemic by building human knowledge networks. During the SARS outbreak, when hospitals were all locked down, NREN community built a video-conferencing and IPV6 infrastructure, for the patients, doctors, visitors, administrators to communicate within and outside their community, helping diagnose and provide utmost care and support to its beneficiaries. So, this is one such model that could be replicated in the recent times, as and when required. APAN over time through its collaborative approaches will scale up better for the welfare of communities.

 

 

 

 

News Flash 412: Weekly Snapshot of Public Health Challenges

News Flash Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

News Flash 412

 Weekly Snapshot of Public Health Challenges

 

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News Flash 411: Weekly Snapshot of Public Health Challenges

News Flash Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

News Flash 411 

Weekly Snapshot of Public Health Challenges

 

 

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Covid-19 VIRAT and VRAF Country Assessment Tool: The Need of the Hour by Tanushree Mondal

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Fair Research Contracting – Key to Promoting Solidarity for Science and Development in a post-COVID-19 World

The institutional competence to negotiate and conclude equitable and fair research agreements and contracts usually differs significantly between partners in high income (HIC) compared to those in low-to middle-income (LMIC) countries. Legal expertise for competent research contract negotiation is very limited in LMICs, especially in the public sector. As negotiating contracts and agreements is essential to the ‘business of science’, to becoming globally competitive, and to fair public-private sector engagements, this lack of research contracting expertise in LMICs adds substantially to their continued economic and infrastructural disadvantage

 

By Carel IJsselmuiden, Kirsty Kaiser

COHRED, Switzerland

Abigail Wilkinson, Farirai Mutenherwa

School of Applied Human Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

 

 Fair Research Contracting

Key to Promoting Solidarity for Science and Development in a post-COVID-19 World

 

 

Fair research collaborations are borne from good contracts

Almost all research of any importance is done collaboratively between researchers in more than one organisation, often in more than one country. Typically, research collaborations in global health involve institutions from high income (HIC) and low-to middle-income countries (LMICs). Trust between the collaborating parties is essential for facilitating collaborations and reducing conflicts, for increasing equitability in research collaborations by encouraging fair sharing of outcomes, benefits and costs, and for building up the research institutions and systems in LMICs. This kind of trust can be firmly established through fair agreements and contracts between institutions.

Institutional competence in research contracting is as essential for institutional growth and sustainability as excellent science is for innovation and development. Having or having access to such competence should be a prerequisite for any research institution aiming to solve priority health, equity and development challenges. Many, if not all, renowned research institutions in high-income countries have their own centres of excellence in research contracting[1] and their governments provide support for those who lack such competence. [2]  In contrast, institutions in many LMICs are poorly equipped and lack access to expertise in this area. As negotiating contracts and agreements is essential to the ‘business of science’, to becoming globally competitive, and to fair public-private sector engagements, this lack of research contracting expertise in LMICs adds substantially to their continued economic and infrastructural disadvantage.

The massive health, financial, institutional and political implications of bringing a COVID-19 vaccine to market is the latest example of the crucial importance of having good contracts in place for vaccine research collaborations[3] [4].

Contracting capacity in LMICs

The institutional competence to negotiate and conclude equitable and fair research agreements and contracts usually differs significantly between partners in HICs compared to those in LMICs. Legal expertise for competent research contract negotiation is very limited in LMICs[5], especially in the public sector. As a result, in spite of international commitments to engage researchers in LMICs in COVID-19 research, it is entirely predictable that the increase in social and economic capital that will result from COVID-19 vaccine research will largely accrue to HICs. In fact, LMICs have been seriously under-represented in COVID-19 vaccine research [6] [7]. A recent update from the World Economic Forum suggests that LMICs are still not being included in research opportunities [8].  This is likely due to not having research systems that can handle this kind of research. And so, a vicious circle is born in spite of best intentions.

 

 

Conversely, if ample contracting expertise had been available to LMIC institutions participating in COVID-19 clinical research, for example, then much more institutional and research system strengthening could have resulted from these collaborations, LMICs would have been better prepared to participate in global research in a next pandemic and could have faster provided the solutions appropriate to LMICs where the need for intervention is most needed.[9] 

Turning the tables – enabling LMIC institutions to negotiate and conclude more equitable collaboration agreements

Fair research contracts can address systemic challenges in research capacity development in LMICs, supporting them on the road to becoming knowledge economies.[10]  A more reasonable share in outcomes and benefits can be re-invested in research system development. Fair Research Contracting[11] can help institutions and countries to better understand where they need to improve to become ‘research contracting competent’. If that happens, LMICs research systems can turn the tables – instead of relying on the goodwill of HICs, LMICs can negotiate and conclude collaboration agreement in ways that best suit their development priorities.

 

References

[1] https://www.ucl.ac.uk/research-services/research-contracts/what-research-contract-and-why-do-i-need-one

[2] The Lambert Toolkit. https://www.gov.uk/guidance/university-and-business-collaboration-agreements-lambert-toolkit

[3] Global coalition to accelerate COVID-19 clinical research in resource-limited settings. COVID-19 Clinical Research Coalition. (2020). https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)30798-4/fulltext

[4] Borderless collaboration is needed for COVID-19—A disease that knows no borders. Mohamed et al. (2020). https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/infection-control-and-hospital-epidemiology/article/borderless-collaboration-is-needed-for-covid19a-disease-that-knows-no-borders/CDC82720199AC7BE4654F123DB79508E

[5] Improving international research contracting. Sack et al. (2009). https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2704040/

[6] Consolidation in a crisis: Patterns of international collaboration in early COVID-19 research. Fry et al. (2020). https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0236307

[7] Scientific globalism during a global crisis: research collaboration and open access publications on COVID-19. Lee & Haupt. (2020). https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10734-020-00589-0

[8] COVID-19: Collaboration is the engine of global science – especially for developing countries. Kituyi. (2020). World Economic Forum. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2020/05/global-science-collaboration-open-source-covid-19/

[9] The need for COVID-19 research in low- and middle-income countries. Gupta et al. (2020). https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41256-020-00159-y

[10] Fair Research Contracting.  A Self-Assessment Tool for Institutions. https://frcweb.cohred.org/wp-content/uploads/COHRED_SCNAT-FRC-Self-Assessment-Guide_V1.pdf

[11] Fair Research Contracting. http://frcweb.cohred.org (accessed 11 Dec 2020)

Covid-19 VIRAT and VRAF Country Assessment Tool

The issue of deployment of Covid-19 vaccines will be a big issue once it hits the market. Find a talk here on the Vaccine Introduction Readiness Assessment Tool (VIRAT), comprehensively referred to as the VIRAT/VRAF (Vaccine Readiness Assessment Framework) 2.0, whereby a workstream was constituted with the joint collaboration from partner agencies - like WHO, UNICEF, GAVI, World Bank, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Country Offices - and it was named the COVAX Country Readiness and Delivery Workstream

By Dr Tanushree Mondal

Associate Professor and Assistant Director of Medical Education, Government of West Bengal 

Covid-19 VIRAT and VRAF Country Assessment Tool

The Need of the Hour

 

This year 2020 has revealed a whole lot of secrets, and among those, one of the most salient was the Covid-19 pandemic. This not only took the lives of many innocent people, but at the same time, put the society at stake. With no vaccines around to offer protection, the pandemic seemed to surge its claws. Much had been said and researched about this deadly virus and its vaccine, yet no conclusive results are out yet. However, the countries are getting ready to combat the situation when the vaccine enters the Industry. The issue of deployment of such vaccines will be a big issue once it hits the market. This section talks of the Vaccine Introduction Readiness Assessment Tool, comprehensively referred to as the VIRAT/VRAF (Vaccine Readiness Assessment Framework) 2.0 [1]. This tool has been implemented in many countries post Covid like Sudan, Niger and many other countries.

A Workstream was constituted with the joint collaboration from partner agencies like WHO, UNICEF, GAVI, World Bank, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Country Offices and it was named the COVAX Country Readiness and Delivery Workstream [2].

Now what is so special about this tool?

This is a tool that is intended to help all the countries and their Ministries to:

  1. Assess the readiness to introduce COVID-19 vaccines which is the talk of the town
  2. Build a road map for vaccine introduction
  3. Avoid Data Duplications and minimize burden on the country’s resources
  4. Identify and analyze the gaps and prioritize actions in order to ensure enhanced readiness
  5. Identify opportunities for financial support through various partner organizations.

Now this tool measures ten key areas such as: Planning Coordination, Budgeting, Regulation, Prioritization and Covid-19 Surveillance, Service Delivery, Training & Supervision, Monitoring Evaluation, Vaccine and Cold Chain Logistics Infrastructure, Safety Surveillance, and last but not the least, Demand Generation and Communication. The tool does not end here, as it is supplemented by fifty more qualitative as well as quantitative indicators. All these information are entered into an Excel file.

The Excel Sheet has five different components, namely:

  1. General indications for use- It describes the timing and intervals to implement critical pre-planning activities. It also enables with activity and areas dashboards to give a graphic illustration of the progress achieved.
  2. National readiness  (Figure 1)
  3. Readiness dashboard activity (Figure 2)
  4. Readiness dashboard areas and
  5. Reference Page- It contains list of planning and technical documents like guidelines, guiding principles etc.

                                                                                                                                                      Figure 1

                                                                        Figure 2

The Supply Chain activities encompass a wide range of areas like strengthening national logistics working group, mapping key roles and responsibilities for vaccine deployment, mapping potential port(s) of entry, point(s) of storage and fallback facilities, assessing dry storage and cold chain capacity at all levels, establishing contractual agreements for vaccine introduction, provision of standard operating procedures for collection and disposal of medical wastes, updating vaccine stock management tools and establishing security arrangements to ensure integrity of the new vaccine.

With such a great initiative undertaken by the Workstream, we can hope for a better future ahead and thereby combat with our challenges that came alongside with the pandemic. 

————————

Essential Reading

[1]- COVID-19 vaccine introduction readiness assessment tool https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-Vaccine-introduction-RA-Tool-2020.1 

[2]- The country readiness and delivery workstream https://www.who.int/initiatives/act-accelerator/covax/covid-19-vaccine-country-readiness-and-delivery/act-accelerator-country-readiness-and-delivery-for-covid-19-vaccines

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News Flash Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

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Weekly Snapshot of Public Health Challenges

 

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News Flash Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

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News Flash Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

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Rebuilding Trust and Compassion in a Covid-19 World

‘The greatest challenge in our path to building more equal, inclusive and sustainable economies and societies, underscored in Survival: One Health, One Planet, One Future, lies with making a fundamental paradigm or mindshift  from seeing the world through a strictly  human-centric lens to taking a wider more inclusive eco-centric view – ensuring the needs of humans are compatible with the needs of our ecosystems.’

By George Lueddeke PhD

Chair, International One Health for One Planet Education Initiative

(1 HOPE)

Rebuilding Trust and Compassion in a Covid-19 World

 

 

‘A life on our planet’

In his latest book, A Life on Our Planet: My Witness Statement and a Vision for the Future ,  well-known naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough doesn’t mince his words and conveys a stark and unequivocal message to the world: either we address existential issues now or face  the devastating consequences of an inhospitable  planet with  temperatures possibly exceeding 4 degrees Celsius on average beyond today’s temperatures by the turn of this century.

Tracing the natural state of the planet from the 1950s to 2100, the author highlights that in the past two generations alone animal populations have more than halved; humans have cut down up to 15 billion trees per year, and a warming earth has led to Arctic summer ice reducing by 40% in 40 years. In short, we are on a course of self-destruction as the basic elements of life – especially the oxygen we breathe – are gradually being drained away from our planet. Several years ago, Marco Lambertini, Director General of  WWF international, reminded us in the Living Planet Report-2014 that

‘These are the living forms that constitute the fabric of the ecosystems which sustain life on earth and the barometer of what we are doing to our planet, our only home. We ignore their decline at our peril.’  

Without major global interventions, Sir Attenborough’s forecast for the next eight decades makes for grim reading including the effects of decimating the biodiversity in the Brazilian rain forest by the 2030s, thawing frozen permafrost releasing methane into the atmosphere in the 2040s, creating acidic coral reefs and crashing fish populations by 2050s alongside threatening global food security. Because of human folly (avarice?) we are now in the midst of the sixth mass extinction phase. The last one occurred about 60 million years ago when a meteor wiped out the dinosaurs. The difference between the last one and now (anthropocene period) is that we are entirely responsible for the fragile state of the planet and ensuring its sustainability. 

Covid-19: A ‘supernova in human history’  

‘Covid-19 is a tragic infection that is killing hundreds of thousands of people around the world, but it is also far more than that. It is a supernova in human history: an expanding, all-encompassing set of events and responses to them that touch every aspect of the human condition, simultaneously worsening and improving human health in myriad ways, through immediate and delayed paths.’ (Vinay Prasad & Jeffrey S. Flier, STAT, 14 May 2020) 

While not unexpected, as key reports made clear in 2016 and 2017, it was the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board World at Risk Report in 2019 whose chair, Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, formerly Prime Minister of Norway and Director-General of the World Health Organization, advanced the main reason for the slowness in responding to an impending global crisis as  “a cycle of panic and neglect.”

Leadership complacency – prioritising military security over health security – has been consistently demonstrated in high level political meetings for many years where the former is deemed a much more important than the latter – at least until Covid-19 came along. Cited  in Survival: One Health, One Planet, One Future,  globally, military spending in 2019 (US$) was  $1.9  trillion –   about  $719  billion in US alone –  while only about c $6 billion are allocated for  peaceful purposes through the UN – which for some in Washington is already too much. Prioritising intervention over prevention may also explain why on average only about 5 per cent of global budgets are allocated to public health measures, where the ratio of returns on investments are about 22:1, while responding to illness and disease generally receives around 95 per cent of health budgets (nationally and globally).

In financial terms the high cost of responding to Covid-19 is unprecedented – estimated at between US $5-$7 trillion. There is no question that many lives could have been saved had countries – especially the US and the UK – been better prepared as the virus affects society as a whole – including particularly those in the front line of infection defence: healthcare workers. Response to the pandemic has not been helped, as Dr. Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of The Lancet, observed in his latest book  given ‘the blizzard of misinformation — the ‘infodemic’ — that has blanketed the crisis’ not ‘just quacks and conspiracy theorists promulgating false information’ but with populism making a mockery of democratic processes.’

Across all regions but perhaps especially the USA, Brazil, India, Mexico and the UK , the pandemic has one largely unspoken truth: ‘Covid is a class issue.’  The most vulnerable are those who live mainly in working class districts with high levels of deprivation’ with many people ‘who suffer from chronic health conditions’ with higher rates of obesity and diabetes 2. They are likely more prone ‘to catch the disease’ and ‘to die from it.’

Understandably, with close to 58 million global Covid cases and  about 1.4 million deaths (most – c. 253,000 in the US), a crucial  question on everyone’s mind concerns the availability of a vaccine that is safe and effective. To this end, recent announcements by leading vaccine developers such as Pfizer Inc. / BioNTech,  the US-based Moderna  and the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine, which can be kept in normal fridges,  are very encouraging as their data from phase 3 trials offer  roughly 90 per cent protection.  It is conceivable that vaccinations could have a positive effect globally mid- 2021, perhaps earlier.

Toward a new global “normal”

A vaccine that works cannot come soon enough for the global community. However, while a game-changing moment for society, it does not address the root causes that contributed to its devastating impact and that must be addressed to mitigate future pandemics.  In particular, Covid-19  magnified the continuing inequality across the globe and raises questions about the most powerful organism that has ‘primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security – the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). The UNSC was created after World War II to address the failings of the League of Nations in maintaining world peace. The organ consists of five permanent members – France, US, Britain, China, Russia – the great powers or their successor states that were the victors of World War II and ten elected members (2 years).

Despite the fact that the world has changed dramatically in the past seven decades, major regions such as Africa, India, southeast Asia, Brazil, collectively representing over 5 billion people out of a world population of c.7.8 billion, continue to be excluded as permanent members. The current restriction on changing permanent membership is unjustifiable arguably on  legal (UN Charter) and definitely on moral (democratic/humanitarian) grounds. As one example, the UK and France each represent only about 1 per cent of the world’s population while Russia’s population is rapidly declining. In light of Covid-19 and other pressing issues (e.g, population growth, food security), the urgency to include direct representation on the UNSC from the global South and East could not be greater.

Recalling economist John Kenneth Galbraith’s observation in The Age of Uncertainty  that ‘not even the most accomplished ideologue will be able to tell the difference between the ashes of capitalism and the ashes of communism,’ we must concede that military might should no longer be a key criterion to gain UNSC permanent membership. Oppositional beliefs – political and social- need to be replaced by collectively agreeing that planet sustainability – tackling climate change, biodiversity and zoonotic pandemics through global collaboration – that transcends socio-economic, geopolitical and environmental differences – we will be able to better ensure the ecological integrity of the planet while also striving toward peace and prosperity for all.

To reinforce this aspiration – it is estimated that more than 3 billion people – existing and new poor- will be impacted by Covid-19 by 2021!  The time to act is now as the next global crisis may not provide the opportunity to do so. As former NASA astronaut Colonel Ron Garan (USAF) reminded us in his book on taking an orbital perspective , we must ‘stop behaving as if we have a limitless world’ and agree to bring to ‘the forefront the long-term and global effects of every decision.’

The time ‘to pandemic-proof the world is short.’ Sir Simon Fraser, former permanent undersecretary of the UK Foreign Office, cited in a Times essay, asserts that to do so will require a ‘diplomatic reboot’ – rebuilding relationships across the world especially by the USA – ‘which came perilously close… to a breakdown of its constitutional system ’ and the destruction of democracy. He also challenges Europe and China in terms of  creating a safer ‘post- pandemic world’  as a way forward. His reasoning is that the pandemic provides an opening for dialogue – possibly based on the notion that no one is a winner when the planet shuts down and much less so if permanently! In short, after years of global disruptions to the world order, Sir Fraser’s advice is to encourage leading nations to re-engage with each other and talk about how the post-pandemic world can be made safer, just and peaceful for this generation and others to follow. The best platform for doing so is a reformed UNSC.

Update: the UN-2030 sustainable development goals (SDGs)

As shown below, the seventeen SDGs or Global Goals, adopted by 193 nations in September 2015, are the UN’s framework and strategy to ‘move toward more equitable, peaceful, resilient, and prosperous societies—while living within sustainable planetary boundaries.’

Figure 1

However, even before Covid-19,  progress had been slow with many of the goals not reaching their targets, confirmed by the The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2020.  Prepared by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs in collaboration with experts and international agencies, it also warns of the regressive impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

Since early 2020 most SDGs have suffered an epochal  reversal including, as summarised in The Lancet Public Health editorial,  SDG 1-poverty; SDG2-hunger; SDG 3-healthy lives and well-being for all ‘with 70 countries have halted childhood vaccination programmes, and in many places, health services for cancer screening, family planning, or non-COVID-19 infectious diseases have been interrupted or are being neglected’; SDG 4- to achieve inclusive and equitable access to education—will likely not be achieved ‘with a projection that more than 200 million children will still be out of education by 2030’; SDG 5- while progress has been made  in terms of ‘gender equality goals, with fewer girls being forced into early marriage and more women entering leadership roles,’ during the Covid-19 outbreak, ‘domestic violence’  increased ‘by 30% in some countries.’  SDG 6- Access to water and sanitation ‘remains a major health issue. 2.2 billion people remain without safe drinking water and the COVID-19 crisis has highlighted lack of access to sanitation for billions’; SDG 7-9, and SDG 11-15- environmental sustainability – ‘Most countries are not meeting their commitments to limit greenhouse gas emissions.’

In addition,  ‘We are in danger of missing targets to improve urban environments by reducing the number of people living in slums, increasing access to public transport, and reducing air pollution and SDG 10- while ‘income inequality has been falling in some countries,’ as mentioned previously,  Covid-19 and a global economic recession  ‘could push millions back into poverty and exacerbate inequalities’ impacting ‘the most susceptible groups hardest’ and undermining SDG 10- reduced inequalities.  As has always been the case, ‘reaching the SDGs will be impossible without international cooperation.’ However, with a ‘trend toward hardening of national borders’ threatening SDG 16 – to promote peace and safety from violence and undermining SDG 17 to strengthen international partnerships will make achieving the SDGs by 2030 very difficult and will require ‘a major realignment of most countries’ national priorities toward long-term, cooperative, and drastically accelerated action.’

The economy serving society

In his opening remarks at a virtual press encounter to launch the Report on the Socio-Economic Impacts of COVID-19,  António Guterres, UN Secretary-General, was crystal clear  about what it will take to achieve the SDGs post Covid-19:

“Everything we do during and after this crisis must be with a strong focus on building more equal, inclusive and sustainable economies and societies that are more resilient in the face of pandemics, climate change, and the many other global challenges we face.”

Although he is irrefutably right about the needed direction of travel, the greatest challenge in our path tobuilding more equal, inclusive and sustainable economies and societies,’ underscored in Survival: One Health, One Planet, One Future, lies with making a fundamental paradigm or mindshift  from seeing the world through strictly a human-centric lens to taking a wider more inclusive eco-centric view – ensuring the needs of humans are compatible with the needs of our ecosystems.

Several years ago, Edward Lucas, then senior editor at The Economist, admiringly shifted responsibility for our lives from the economy to people, eloquently reminding us that For a start, we need to accept that business and finance are the servants of our civilization, not its masters.’  While well-intentioned, his exhortation has fallen short given the times we are experiencing. Climate change, biodiversity and zoonotic pandemics are conveying a new reality: regardless of our role or perceived self-importance in our society, we are no longer in charge but must cede this responsibility to the biosphere and environmental boundaries that are now placed  upon us as shown in Figure 2, interconnecting  the Biosphere, Society  while transitioning to the circular Economy supported by the UN-2030 SDGs.

Figure 2

 

In a talk on the “Shared Responsibility to Recover Better from COVID-19,” Achim Steiner, administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), outlined two major steps to “on-track” the SDGs :

• The first will focus on mitigating the worst effects of the backslide in the SDGs currently underway — and doing “whatever it takes” to protect the most vulnerable peoples around the world;

• The second is setting-up the fiscal and financial conditions for a hard “economic re-set” that is driven by new sources of productivity — including green and digital engines of growth.

National policy responses to Covid-19

In an opinion  piece for the Climate and Clean Air Coalition, entitled “An Inclusive, Green Recovery is Possible: The Time to Act is Now,” Angel Gurria, Secretary General of the OECD (Organisation for Co-operation and Economic Development) set out his rationales for an inclusive, low-emissions and resilient recovery in the post-Covid world.  

“…governments have a unique chance for a green and inclusive recovery that they must seize – a recovery that not only provides income and jobs, but also has broader well-being goals at its core, integrates strong climate and biodiversity action, and builds resilience. Stimulus packages need to be aligned with ambitious policies to tackle climate change and environmental damage. Only such an approach can deliver win-win-win policies for people, planet and prosperity.”

On a policy level, the Secretary-General offers three key enabling actions to further national green agendas, including the need to

  • align ‘the short-term emergency responses to the achievement of long-term economic, social and environmental objectives and international obligations (the Paris Climate Agreement, the SDGs)’;
  • prevent ‘lock-in of high-emissions activities’ while focusing ‘support on the most vulnerable countries’; and
  • ensure the systematic integration of ‘environmental and equity considerations into the economic recovery’.

Operationalising these aspirations may prove to be more difficult as silo decision-making is still very much alive across many agencies and departments. Devi Sridar, chair of global public health at the University of Edinburgh, in an article, cited previously,  on fighting the next pandemic focuses on  Covid-19 and laments  that while viruses are global, ‘our response has not been. And it needs to be.’ As she notes, ‘WHO does not do agriculture: for that you need the FAO (Food and Agricultural Organisation). Neither does it do ecology: there your acronym of choice is UNEP (the United Nations Environment Programme)’.

In the same article, Kate Jones, professor of ecology and biodiversity at University College London (UCL) agrees saying that ecology, public health, and the economy need to be integrated ‘combining knowledge on climate, demographics and human behaviour.’ This interagency collaboration, she emphasises, is essential in order to prevent spillovers (e.g., ‘deforestration, urbanisation, unregulated wet markets’) and necessitates ‘fundamental changes in society’ especially the need ‘to think of the longterm costs of doing things in a short-term way.’

The One Health and Well-Being concept

As previously cited, Marco  Lambertini, Director General of WWF International, in the introduction to the Living Planet Report-2014  posed two fundamental questions –‘What kind of future do we want? And, ‘Can we justify eroding our natural capital and allocating nature’s resources so inequitably?’ Our response to the second might help to inform the first. In exploring future possibilities he suggests two avenues to pursue, first, by us all, and, secondly, by policy-makers ‘not only to preserve biodiversity and wild places, but just as much about safeguarding the future of humanity.’

‘We need a few things to change. First, we need unity around a common cause. Public, private and civil society sectors need to pull together in a bold and coordinated effort. Second, we need leadership for change. Sitting on the bench waiting for someone else to make the first move doesn’t work. Heads of state need to start thinking globally; businesses and consumers need to stop behaving as if we live in a limitless world.’

While not labelling the term as such, the Director General may have been alluding to the One Health concept that recognises the fundamental interconnections of humans, animals, plants and their shared environment.  The concept goes back as far as physician Hippocrates, considered the first epidemiologist in the 5th century BCE, Dr Rudolph Virchov and social medicine in the 19th century, and the forerunner of the One Health term, Dr Calvin Schwabe’s “one medicine” concept at UCL Davis in the 1980s.

Regardless of  definition  One Health  involves collaboration across sectors that have a direct or indirect impact on the health and well-being of the planet and species while optimising resources.  After a flurry of meetings and symposia in the early decades of the 20th century and continuing to the present, the One Health & Well-Being approach (philosophy?) has been endorsed by many organisations across the globe including the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), One Health Commission, One Health Initiative, European Commission, World Bank, World Health Organization (WHO), Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), World Organization for Animal Health (OIE), Future Africa, The Lancet One Health Commission, various universities, Non-Government Organisations (NGOs), and many other organisations.

Rebuilding trust and compassion in a Covid-19 world

 Janine Aguilera, a student at the London School of Economics (LSE), in a blog  explored the economic and social implications of trust in a post-Covid-19 world.  Measures taken by the 2020 Edelman Trust Barometer , she says, reveal ‘a marked disappointment with the private sector’s performance during the crisis.’ She deduced two key 21st century attributes necessary to instill trust: ‘competence (delivering on promises) and ethical behaviour (doing the right thing and working to improve society).’ Referencing the Edelman study, involving 11 countries, including the UK, US, China and India, none of the four institutions measured by the study – government, business, Non-Governmental Organisations (NGO) and the media – are seen as both competent and ethical, thereby ‘contributing to a loss of society’s legitimacy.’ Unsurprisingly, the media in particular is cited as spreading ‘uncertainty and negative expectations towards the future.’

The author acknowledges that ‘a strong sense of purpose and ESG (environmental, social and governance), risk awareness and trustworthiness’ are requisites for building trust. One optimistic sign is that the study found that ‘most investors under 30 would prefer that their investments have a positive social or environmental impact.’ Consistent with One Health key principles and values, the study also confirmed that ‘an effective recovery from a global crisis entails a global response’ based on ‘trust and cooperation’ – ‘delivering on promises’ and ‘doing the right thing and working to improve society,’ recommended for consideration by decision-makers in Figure 3.

Figure 3

TEN PROPOSITIONS FOR GLOBAL SUSTAINABILITY

  What if?

However, addressing the propositions for global sustainability  presents a formidable challenge as democracy – the right to choose leaders in free and fair elections, freedom of the press, and respecting the rule of law – continues to be in decline globally. According to Freedom House, a non-partisan Washington think tank, ‘Countries that suffered setbacks in 2019 outnumbered those making gains by nearly two to one, marking the 14th consecutive year of deterioration in global freedom.’

These losses are attributable to a combination of factors.  Nonetheless, UCLA professor Jared Diamond in his seminal book, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Survive, proffered that the main reason for democratic erosion stems from countries that are ‘environmentally stressed, overpopulated or both.’ With people blaming their governments for being unable to solve their problems,’ he says, these nations drift ‘from liberal democratic ideals’ to authoritarianism as is the case for India and the US, the two largest global democracies. Failing to ‘to set strong examples’ these nations, Mike Abramowitz, president of Freedom House, observes, are making the world even more unsafe while undermining the freedoms so vital for the future of our planet – including a lack of empathy and compassion, disregard for truthfulness while subverting human rights – all symptomatic of a much more serious disease.

For Professor Diamond the assumptions that nations can advance their ‘own self-interests at the expense of others’ or that ‘the elite can remain unaffected by the problems of society around them’ is both outdated and morally indefensible. Based on his comprehensive study of the history of humanity, he infers that two choices determine whether societies fail or survive: ‘long-term planning and willingness to reconsider core values.’

With the latter in mind, education, formal and non-formal, remains our best defence against intolerance, armed conflicts, corruption, extremism and racism  while developing the transformative values necessary to rebuild society for a sustainable future.  Although science and technology are imperative for addressing climate change, biodiversity, and zoonotic diseases, and a host of other existential issues, human behaviour – how we relate to each other and to the planet – continues to be the principal reason for the state of the world today and must be given top priority as we are in the midst of the Earth’s six extinction phase.  Unlike previous generations, among other social observers, Sir Simon Rattle, music director of the London Symphony Orchestra, has also made the case that the  wellbeing and success of our young people is depended on the most important attributes this century: imagination and creativity. These traits clearly belong in the realm of the arts and the humanities –music, literature, drama, design, media, to name a few – which in our education systems need to cohese harmoniously with efforts to integrate the One Health & Well-Being concept and the UN-2030 SDGs (1 HOPE Figure 4) alongside the more quantitative sciences to help build a sustainable society.

Figure 4

In Development Alternatives- To choose our future, Dr. Ashok Khosla, chairman of the Development Alternatives Group, raises their importance of  cultural education and societal transformation to a new level. In his publication, written even before Covid-19, he calls for urgent change to ‘our current attitudes to virtually all aspects of society and the economy – consumption patterns and wellbeing, technology and production systems, enterprise and distributive justice.’  Gaining a better understanding of the factors that are placing our world at high risk might also lead us to adopting a kinder and more compassionate stance in our human relationships.

Above all, staying human and becoming ‘better humans,’ to which Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chair of the World Economic forum (WEF) aspires, could enable us, as Dr. Khosla avows, to place ‘the poorest and marginalised at the centre of economic and social attention.’ In addition, it might also ensure ‘that the restoration and regeneration of natural systems become the boundary conditions that must not be transgressed, not just for future generations but also for those of today.’

© 2020 GR Lueddeke


INVITATION

At  the end of  the article  PEAH is pleased to add an invitation link below to a relevant webinar series involving the University of Pretoria, Future Africa, 1 HOPE, The Lancet One Health Commission and UNICEF

https://mailchi.mp/aera/future-africa-1hope-webinar-series-13035495?e=42858b6c0f

 

 

                       

 

 

 

 

PEAH News Flash 407

News Flash Links, as part of the research project PEAH (Policies for Equitable Access to Health), aim to focus on the latest challenges by trade and governments rules to equitable access to health in resource-limited settings

News Flash 407

 

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