The UN World Health Organization (WHO) warned on Monday that cuts to international aid and persistent funding gaps are undermining the global health system.
This is occurring as the risk from pandemics, drug-resistant infections and fragile health services are on the rise, said the WHO Director-General .
Addressing the WHO Executive Board in Geneva, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus stressed the impact of workforce reductions last year due to "significant cuts to our funding," which have had significant consequences.
"Sudden and severe cuts to bilateral aid have also caused huge disruptions to health systems and services in many countries," he told health ministers and diplomats, describing 2025 as "one of the most difficult years" in the agency's history.
While WHO had managed to keep its lifesaving work going, Tedros said the funding crisis exposed deeper vulnerabilities in global health governance, particularly in low and middle-income countries struggling to maintain essential services.
What's on the agenda?
The WHO Executive Board has a sweeping agenda covering pandemic preparedness, immunisation, antimicrobial resistance, mental health and health emergencies in conflict zones.
Key issue: Members are also reviewing budget pressures, governance reform and formal withdrawal notifications from the United States and Argentina.
Why it matters: The discussions come as global health risks rise, even as international cooperation and predictable financing are under strain.
What's next: Outcomes from this week's meeting will be forwarded to the World Health Assembly in May, shaping WHO's direction amid mounting geopolitical and public health pressures.