Live
- Almonds are a key to faster muscle recovery after exercise: Study
- No govt faced so much criticism than Revanth-led Cong in 11 months: Kavitha
- Balineni signed SECI agreement, says Chevireddy
- Infant kidnapped from Niloufer Hospital rescued, cops arrest 3
- Sunny Leone reflects on challenges and preparations for ‘Shero’
- Hyderabad Saree Festival 2024 kicks off in a grand manner
- Speed up Veligonda project works, CPM urges govt
- 10 career opportunities with a public policy degree
- TG Medical Council cracks whip on fake doctors
- TTD takes up mammoth waste management exercise
Just In
G20 Health Ministers accept weakness of healthcare systems
G20 Health Ministers held a teleconference to analyse the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, which they said "has highlighted systemic weaknesses" in thee healthcare systems, agreeing on the need to share their knowledge and experience to improve their countries' response to and preparation for the ongoing crisis.
Riyadh: G20 Health Ministers held a teleconference to analyse the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, which they said "has highlighted systemic weaknesses" in thee healthcare systems, agreeing on the need to share their knowledge and experience to improve their countries' response to and preparation for the ongoing crisis.
In a statement issued on Sunday from Riyadh at the close of the virtual gathering, the Ministers acknowledged that the pandemic has brought "socio-economic impacts" to their nations and "addressed the need to improve the effectiveness of global health systems by sharing knowledge and closing the gap in response capabilities and readiness", reports Efe news.
The Ministers said that the pandemic has shown the vulnerabilities of the global community's ability to prevent and respond to the threat of pandemics.
Saudi Arabia holds the temporary presidency of the G20 and its Health Minister, Tawfiq al-Rabia said at the beginning of the meeting that all the participating officials, as his counterparts, have "opened their eyes" and found large gaps in the healthcare systems and countless opportunities to improve that infrastructure and those procedures. He called on G20 members to continue their commitment to support the entity's working groups concerned with health, which meet monthly, and on the ministers to meet again in July and in October with an eye toward presenting "effective responses" that can be approved by the G20 heads of state and government at the organization's November general meeting.
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and other officials from the world body participated in Sunday's teleconference, with Tedros telling the ministers that the pandemic will not be "over" when nations begin lifting their quarantines. A press conference had originally been scheduled for after the close of the teleconference, however that was cancelled without explanation.
Russian Health Minister Mikhail Murashko emphasized three points in his speech during the conference: supporting the efforts of the WHO, thinking about the need to improve the global response mechanism to deal with this kind of challenge and confronting the worldwide problem of access to medical supplies.
Murashko said that "the pandemic will allow (us) to think about the modernisation of healthcare systems, above all to deal with these challenges" in the future.
Although preparing for the future and being more coordinated in their nations' response to such a crisis was one of the main issues dealt with at the teleconference, the participants did not come to any concrete agreements on how to achieve a better joint response.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com