Vanuatu Faces Health Program Cuts Amidst Global Funding Shortfalls
Hızlı Bakış
- Vanuatu's public health director, Jenny Stephens, is lobbying for support as global funding cuts impact malaria, TB, and HIV programs.
- The US withdrawal from the WHO in early 2026 has led to China becoming the largest contributor, raising questions about Beijing's role in filling the funding and leadership gap.
Yapay zekâ özeti
Neden Önemli?
Vanuatu's public health director is seeking support due to global funding cuts affecting vital health programs. The US has withdrawn from the WHO, leading to China becoming its largest financial contributor.
“I’m here to lobby for support,” said Jenny Stephens, Vanuatu’s director of public health.
“We are experiencing the global funding cuts – it’s affecting our programmes like malaria, TB and HIV. We’re already struggling.”
The WHO has estimated that aid cuts have already deprived some 53 million people, in crisis situations, of access to healthcare.
President Donald Trump ordered the US withdrawal from the WHO in January 2025 – a move that took full effect early this year, with last week’s World Health Assembly (WHA) the first to be held without the United States.
China has now emerged as the global health body’s biggest assessed contributor for the first time, replacing the US and raising the question of whether Beijing can not only fill the funding gap left by Washington, but also the leadership void.
Açık Sorular
- Will China's increased funding translate to greater leadership influence within the WHO?
- What specific impacts will the funding cuts have on Vanuatu's malaria, TB, and HIV programs?
- Are other nations stepping up to fill the funding gap left by the US?
- What are the long-term implications of the US absence from the WHO for global health initiatives?






