India’s Proposal for a South-East Asia Surveillance Network

PWOnlyIAS

March 15, 2025

India proposed the creation of a South-East Asia Network for Transboundary Collaborative Surveillance to strengthen health emergency response.

About the Proposal for South-East Asia Surveillance Network

  • The proposal was presented at the regional meeting on multisource collaborative surveillance organized by WHO South-East Asia Region (SEARO).
  • Aim:  To enhance multi-source surveillance and facilitate cross-border collaboration among the 11 SEARO member nations.
  • Objective
    • Strengthen real-time health data sharing and multi-sectoral collaboration in the region.
    • Enhance disease detection, monitoring, and response to epidemics and pandemics.
    • Promote evidence-based decision-making during complex health emergencies.
  • Implementation Framework
    • Use WHO’s Regional Manual on Public Health Decision-Making with Multisource Collaborative Surveillance providing  Step-by-Step Approach.
      • Countries like Indonesia and Nepal have already initiated implementation.
    • Strengthen laboratory systems and cross-sectoral partnerships to improve health security.
  • Key Focus Areas
    • Pandemic and Epidemic Preparedness: Improving responses to infectious diseases and emerging health threats.
    • Zoonotic and Foodborne Diseases: Addressing threats at the human-animal-ecosystem interface.
    • Climate-Driven Health Emergencies: Tackling vector-borne and waterborne diseases linked to climate change.
    • Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR): Enhancing regional efforts to combat drug-resistant infections.

Challenges of WHO in the Region

  • Data Sharing and Coordination Issues: The absence of a unified surveillance system across sectors and fragmented data ownership among stakeholders hinder timely health data sharing and response.
  • Inadequate Laboratory Infrastructure: Many countries face challenges due to weak diagnostic and genomic surveillance capacities, along with limited investment in sustainable laboratory systems.
  • Cross-Border Health Threats: Effective global reporting and coordinated responses to transboundary diseases remain difficult due to gaps in implementing International Health Regulations (IHR) (2005).
  • Climate and Environmental Factors: Climate change is driving an increase in vector-borne and waterborne diseases, highlighting the need for enhanced wastewater surveillance and early outbreak detection.

Way Forward

  • Strengthening Regional Collaboration: Establishing a unified health data-sharing mechanism and fostering multi-sectoral partnerships among SEARO countries will enhance coordinated disease surveillance and response.
  • Investing in Laboratory & Surveillance Systems: Increased funding for diagnostic and genomic surveillance infrastructure, along with advanced early warning systems, is crucial for epidemic preparedness.
  • Policy & Governance Improvements: Developing National Action Plans and ensuring adherence to International Health Regulations (IHR) (2005) will strengthen global coordination in managing health threats.
  • Embracing Innovation in Public Health: Leveraging AI-driven analytics and expanding wastewater and genomic surveillance will improve early disease detection and outbreak response.

WHO and SEARO reaffirmed their commitment to fostering regional health security, ensuring timely health responses, and strengthening multi-source collaborative surveillance across South-East Asia.

About South-East Asia Regional Office (SEARO)

  • The SEARO is one of the six regional offices of the World Health Organization (WHO), responsible for addressing public health challenges in the South-East Asia region.
  • Establishment: SEARO was established in 1948 as part of WHO’s global framework to provide region-specific health policies, technical assistance, and capacity-building support to member nations. 
  • Its headquarters is located in New Delhi, India.
  • Members: SEARO consists of 11 member countries: Bangladesh, Bhutan, North Korea, India, Indonesia, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Timor-Leste.
    • These countries collaborate on health initiatives, policy-making, and emergency response.
  • Objectives: 
    • SEARO aims to strengthen healthcare infrastructure, enhance disease surveillance, combat communicable and non-communicable diseases, and ensure universal health coverage. 
    • It also focuses on improving maternal and child health, promoting vaccination programs, and addressing emerging health threats.
  • Initiatives: Key SEARO initiatives include the Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI), elimination of measles and rubella, antimicrobial resistance monitoring, multi-source collaborative surveillance, and emergency preparedness programs to tackle pandemics and climate-related health risks.

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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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