Skip to Main Content
School of Public Health

​
  • Admissions
  • Research
  • Education
  • Practice
​
Search
  • Newsroom
    • School News
    • SPH This Week Newsletter
    • SPH in the Media
    • SPH This Year Magazine
    • News Categories
    • Contact Us
  • Research
    • Centers and Groups
  • Academic Departments
    • Biostatistics
    • Community Health Sciences
    • Environmental Health
    • Epidemiology
    • Global Health
    • Health Law, Policy & Management
  • Education
    • Degrees & Programs
    • Public Health Writing
    • Workforce Development Training Centers
    • Partnerships
    • Apply Now
  • Admissions
    • Applying to BUSPH
    • Request Information
    • Degrees and Programs
    • Why Study at BUSPH?
    • Tuition and Funding
    • SPH by the Numbers
    • Events and Campus Visits
    • Admissions Team
    • Student Ambassadors
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Events
    • Public Health Conversations
    • Full Events Calendar
    • Alumni and Friends Events
    • Commencement Ceremony
    • SPH Awards
  • Practice
    • Activist Lab
  • Careers & Practicum
    • For Students
    • For Employers
    • For Faculty & Staff
    • For Alumni
    • Graduate Employment & Practicum Data
  • Public Health Post
    • Public Health Post Fellowship
  • About
    • SPH at a Glance
    • Advisory Committees
    • Strategy Map
    • Senior Leadership
    • Accreditation
    • Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice
    • Directory
    • Contact SPH
  • Support SPH
    • Big Ideas: Strategic Directions
    • Faculty Research and Development
    • Future of Public Health Fund
    • Generation Health
    • idea hub
    • Public Health Conversations
    • Public Health Post
    • Student Scholarship
    • How to Give
    • Contact Development and Alumni Relations
  • Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Directory
Read More News
NALOXONE nasal spray from the emergency bag, contain medication used in recovery of Opioid drugs overdose. Nasal medications drugs from overdose kit.
drug use

Majority of Medicaid Managed Care Plans Cover Opioid Overdose Reversal Drug Naloxone

Attendees of SPH and MAPC's heat health symposium view a poster on identifying and engaging heat-vulnerable communities.
extreme heat

SPH Partners with MAPC to Host Symposium on Heat Health

Professor Meets with WHO Director-General.

January 3, 2018
Twitter Facebook
Wirtz WHO 400x241 - 1
From left: Richard Horton, Tedros Adhanom Gebreyesus, Veronika Wirtz, and Hans Hogerzeil.

Veronika Wirtz, associate professor of global health, met with Tedros Abhanom Gebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO), to discuss essential medicines access on December 8 at WHO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland.

Wirtz and Hans Hogerzeil, one of Wirtz’s co-chairs on The Lancet Commission on Essential Medicines Policies and the former WHO director for essential medicines and pharmaceutical policies, and Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of The Lancet, met with Tedros to build on the commission’s report released in late 2016, titled “Essential Medicines for Universal Health Coverage.”

“There is a common understanding that access to medicines is a core element of universal health coverage, and that there is great urgency to accelerate progress towards this important Sustainable Development Goal,” Wirtz says. The director-general and his senior leadership team “enthusiastically responded to our ideas and were eager to collaborate,” she says.

WHO defines essential medicines as those that satisfy the priority healthcare needs of the population. The Lancet report examines the progress and challenges in essential medicines’ availability, affordability, quality, and use around the world, and proposes actionable recommendations for the next decade.

In the hourlong meeting, Tedros, Wirtz, Hogerzeil, and Horton discussed the commission’s proposal that the WHO create an independent accountability mechanism to monitor countries’ progress toward achieving universal access to essential medicines. The first meeting to begin developing that accountability mechanism is planned for Spring 2018 at WHO.

“The WHO does not regularly report on progress on medicine access, and could be more effective in responding to public demands for accountability of governments and key stakeholders,” Wirtz says. “The meeting this spring can lay the foundation for an important measurement and accountability framework to promote access to essential medicines globally.”

Read more about The Lancet Commission on Essential Medicines report.

Explore Related Topics:

  • access to medicines
  • WHO
  • Share this story

Share

Professor Meets with WHO Director-General

  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print
  • More
  • Twitter

More about SPH

Sign up for our newsletter

Get the latest from Boston University School of Public Health

Subscribe

Also See

  • About
  • Newsroom
  • Contact
  • Support SPH

Resources

  • Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Directory
  • Boston University School of Public Health
  • 715 Albany Street, Boston, MA 02118
  • © 2021 Trustees of Boston University
  • DMCA
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
© Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
Boston University Masterplate
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.