WHO’s Cholera Vaccine Restart Highlights Global Health Failures and Risks to U.S. Security
After a nearly four-year halt due to vaccine shortages, WHO’s resumption of cholera prevention reveals ongoing global mismanagement—with implications for American health security and border safety.
The World Health Organization’s recent announcement that preventive cholera vaccination programs are restarting globally after a near four-year suspension raises critical questions about international health governance—and how such failures ripple into American interests.How Did We Let a Preventable Crisis Spiral?The global oral cholera vaccine stockpile, managed by WHO alongside GAVI and UNICEF, dwindled alarmingly from nearly 70 million doses in 2022 to just 35 million amid surging demand. This shortage forced countries facing outbreaks to shift from preventive to purely reactive measures—a costly strategy that allowed cholera cases and deaths to climb worldwide.This pattern is no anomaly. It illustrates a...
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