The updated was published to support the implementation of the International Health Regulations (IHR) and the health emergency prevention, preparedness, response and resilience capacities. Taking on board the lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic and other recent health emergencies, the benchmarks expanded to reflect closer alignment with , the , , and the framework.
The updated benchmark now includes a critical new technical area, public health and social measures (PHSM). PHSM are interventions implemented by individuals, communities and governments to reduce the risk and scale of epidemic- and pandemic-prone infectious diseases transmission. Examples of PHSM include hand washing, mask-wearing, physical distancing, school and business measures, modifications of mass gatherings and international travel and trade measures. PHSM play a critical role throughout the different stages of health emergencies and act in concert with medical countermeasures. They are often the first and the only intervention available at the onset of an outbreak when effective vaccines and therapeutics are not (yet) available or equitably distributed. This is why the benchmark on PHSM is critical in ensuring that PHSM are systematically integrated into health emergency management plans, policies, financing governance and leadership in all relevant sectors and levels across the health emergency actions.
The published WHO Benchmarks for Strengthening Health Emergency Capacities is accompanied by for countries to quickly develop draft national plans and navigate benchmarks as per their need using the portal. The enables users to refer to proposed activities to progress across five incremental capacity levels, facilitating to reach the sustainable capacity level.