Solidarity and cooperation must define the battle against COVID-19

Solidarity and cooperation must define the battle against COVID-19
An employee from a disinfection service company wipes moisture from his goggles as he sanitizes a shopping district in Seoul, South Korea, on Thursday. (REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji)
An employee from a disinfection service company wipes moisture from his goggles as he sanitizes a shopping district in Seoul, South Korea, on Thursday. (REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji)
Published 28 February 2020
Poonam Khetrapal Singh

The Jarkarta Post / ANN

 

The approach of the World Health Organization Southeast Asia region to health security is guided by a simple yet powerful logic: When we work together we are protected together. Never has this been more important. The outbreak of COVID-19 is a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) and provides significant challenges to countries in the region. We must stand together and work as one to face the outbreak down.

The region’s member states are leading from the front. In recent weeks, both India and Thailand have tested laboratory samples from neighboring countries. Ensuring all COVID-19 cases are detected early is critical to achieving the region’s number one priority: preventing and controling local transmission. Across the region, the International Health Regulations (IHR) are guiding action and promoting cooperation and transparency, including through the regional IHR knowledge network. Countries must continue to report and share information on suspected cases early and provide detailed reports on confirmed cases.

Solidarity must define our onward battle. The benefits are many. 

First, by working together countries promote efficiency. Each country in the region has different strengths and faces different risks. By continuing to share knowledge and resources, countries will build surge capacity – a crucial asset that will help them prepare for all possibilities, including community transmission. The latest information suggests that the virus may be more transmissible than early data suggested. All countries must strengthen their readiness to respond.

Second, by working together countries promote trust. Trust between countries allows national decision-makers to be confident that the public health measures they take are based on sound information, reflect ground realities and anticipate emerging trends. Measures that are unnecessary can spread panic and fear. Measures that are inadequate can spread virus and disease. As the outbreak unfolds, it is imperative that countries adopt and sequence their actions to protect the most vulnerable first. They must allocate resources accordingly.

Third, by working together countries promote knowledge. Detailed case reporting will help us all learn more about COVID-19 and how it can be prevented and treated. Earlier this month, the WHO gathered 400 of the world’s leading experts for discussions on top research and innovation priorities. Based on those discussions, the WHO is developing a research and innovation roadmap that will help scientists and donors across the world strengthen our medical armory.

We must all look out for one another. An important way to do this is by accessing and sharing high-quality information that empowers our friends, families, colleagues and communities to stay healthy. Regular hand-washing, coughing or sneezing into one’s elbow, avoiding close contact with people with flu-like symptoms, and thoroughly cooking meat and eggs are all highly recommended for day-to-day protection against a range of germs.

If you are traveling, an alcohol-based hand rub will help keep your hands clean. Limiting contact between your hands and eyes, nose and mouth will reduce transmission pathways. Avoiding close contact with people suffering from a fever or cough is always a good idea, as is informing crew members if you become sick.  

Community concerns related to COVID-19 are understandable. There is much that we do not yet know but that we are working to find out. As we learn more, the WHO will continue to provide member states and the public with high-quality information through regular situation reports and through our social media accounts. I encourage you to access them regularly, in addition to the advice of your national health authority. 

We must be very clear: False rumors and misinformation can facilitate transmission and cost lives. They are our common enemy. The WHO is working with member states and partners region-wide to bust myths, promote knowledge and empower communities. As we continue to tackle the outbreak, I urge all people in the Southeast Asia region to adopt what has become a rallying point across the world: facts, not fear; rationality, not rumors; solidarity, not stigma.

The WHO is committed to ensuring solidarity and cooperation continue to be among the region’s key weapons in the battle against COVID-19. For many years these values have been built into the region’s health security architecture, from the Southeast Asia Regional Health Emergency Fund to the Delhi Declaration on Emergency Preparedness and Response. Though COVID-19 may very well test that architecture, its foundations are solid and must now meet the task at hand. Together we must fight. Together we must win.