The two day G20 Summit under India’s presidency concluded on Sunday at Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi. During the mega summit, the global leaders resolved to build more resilient, equitable, sustainable and inclusive health systems to achieve universal health coverage, enhance pandemic preparedness and strengthen existing infectious diseases surveillance systems.
Issuing a joint declaration, the G20 leaders emphasized on strengthening primary healthcare, health workforce and essential health services to better than pre-pandemic level, ideally within the coming two-three years. Apart from focusing on epidemics like tuberculosis and AIDs, the G20 leaders also recognised the importance of research on long COVID-19.
The global leaders committed to improve access to medical countermeasures and provide more supplies and production capacities in developing countries to develop better for future health emergencies.
Furthermore, the New Delhi Leaders Declaration also underscored the need to promote One Health based approach driven by the quadripartite One Health Joint Plan of Action (2022-2026) and enhance the resilience of health infrastructure. In addition, it also stressed the need to support development of climate-resilient and low-carbon health systems in collaboration with multilateral development banks (MDBs) and assist the work of WHO-led Alliance for Transformative Action on Climate and Health.
The declaration noted implementing and prioritising tackling antimicrobial resistance (AMR) following the One Health approach. It further called for equitable access to safe, effective, quality-assured, and affordable vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics in middle and low income countries. It also upheld the potential role of evidence based traditional and complementary medicine in health.
Stressing on the public health dimension of the world drug problem, global leaders called for strong international counter-narcotics cooperation, free of unnecessary restrictions, involving information sharing, capacity building to prevent production and proliferation of illicit drugs, including synthetic drugs, and precursor chemicals at their origin, in transit and at destination points.
The G20 leaders committed to strengthening the global health architecture for pandemic prevention, preparedness and response through enhanced collaboration between finance and health ministries under the Joint Finance and Health Task Force.
Deliberations on the Framework on Economic Vulnerabilities and Risks (FEVR) and the initial Report for Economic Vulnerabilities and Risks arising from pandemics, created through collaboration between the World Health Organization (WHO), World Bank, IMF, and European Investment Bank (EIB) also took place.