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  • The World Health Organization

  • The History and Legacy of the UN’s Top International Public Health Agency
  • By: Charles River Editors
  • Narrated by: Colin Fluxman
  • Length: 1 hr and 34 mins
  • 4.0 out of 5 stars (4 ratings)

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The World Health Organization

By: Charles River Editors
Narrated by: Colin Fluxman
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Publisher's summary

April 7 is World Health Organization Day, in honor of the day that the World Health Organization held the first World Health Assembly in 1948. International health conferences had been held nearly a century before this date, and international health organizations had been established in the half century prior to the creation of the World Health Organization, but 1948 marked the year that a formal institution was created to direct and implement a concerted and truly global effort to investigate, prevent, control, and cure disease.

As the world recovered from the Second World War, which included the reconstruction of Europe, the emergence of the United States as a world superpower, the spread of communism in large parts of the world, and the end of European colonial empires, the World Health Organization had to respond to these economic and political challenges in order to coordinate international health policy.

Since the inception of the World Health Organization (WHO), the nature of public health issues has evolved greatly. An initial focus on preventing the spread of communicable diseases led to addressing poor health outcomes as a result of poverty, population growth, lifestyle changes, and globalization, which meant that diseases could spread around the world faster than ever before.

The WHO has also had to adopt mechanisms to respond rapidly to major outbreaks of disease which can lead to negative economic outcomes and severe strains on health care systems in the affected regions. Economic and political changes over the last 72 years have altered the WHO’s global authority, its funding model, and the manner in which it carries out its mandate.

Although medical science has advanced greatly since the WHO was established, newly emerging diseases have tested the WHO’s ability to understand the epidemiology of these diseases and to combat them. The WHO has withstood various criticisms over the years, but today, it is still the agency of the United Nations that works with partners to lead global health responses.

The World Health Organization: The History and Legacy of the UN’s Top International Public Health Agency examines how the WHO came about, and the kind of work it has done over the past 70 years.

©2020 Charles River Editors (P)2020 Charles River Editors
  • Unabridged Audiobook
  • Categories: History
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Straightforward and Informative

Everyone should know a bit more about how these big global organizations function because it might help us understand our own small world a little bit better. After all, if you can’t think globally in a globalized world, then you can’t make sense of your own small world—and that’s just alienating. It is all the more alienating in the middle of a global pandemic where the World Health Organization would have played a stronger role in coordinating global action if it had not been undermined by Trump.

This book will not tell you about how Trump undermined the world’s foremost public health institution and deepened the most significant public health crisis of our lifetimes. But it will tell you a lot about the role the World Health Organization was supposed to play in making it better. If more people understood it, perhaps we would not be in the crisis in which we find ourselves in today.

~ Theo Horesh, author of The Holocausts We All Deny

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