UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres has called for global solidarity to stop infectious diseases.
In his video message for the International Day of Epidemic Preparedness, which falls on 27 December, Guterres said that building global solidarity would "give every country a fighting chance to stop infectious diseases in their tracks."
COVID-19 continues to demonstrate how quickly "an infectious disease can sweep across the world," pushing health systems to the brink and upending daily life for all of humanity, the UN Chief added.
"It also revealed our failure to learn the lessons of recent health emergencies like SARS, avian influenza, Zika, Ebola and others," he said.
"And it reminded us that the world remains woefully unprepared to stop localised outbreaks from spilling across borders and spiraling into a global pandemic," he added.
Noting that infectious diseases remain "a clear and present danger to every country," Guterres maintained that COVID-19 would not be the last pandemic for humanity, Xinhua news agency reported.
Even as the world responds to this health crisis, he spelled out the need to prepare for the next one.
"This means scaling-up investments in better monitoring, early detection and rapid response plans in every country -- especially the most vulnerable," he said.
"It means strengthening primary healthcare at the local level to prevent collapse... ensuring equitable access to lifesaving interventions, like vaccines for all people and ... achieving universal health coverage."
The first International Day of Epidemic Preparedness, marked on 27 December, 2020, was called for by the UN General Assembly to advocate the importance of the prevention of, preparedness for and partnership against epidemics.
(This story was published from a syndicated feed. Only the headline and picture has been edited by FIT)
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