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WHO Says Billions Saw Health Gains in 2025 Despite Funding Cuts

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Summary

The World Health Organization's Results Report 2025 documents substantial global health progress despite significant funding cuts. An estimated 567 million additional people were covered by essential health services in 2025 (up 136 million from 2024), approximately 698 million more people were better protected from health emergencies (a rise of 61 million), and 1.75 billion additional people were living healthier lives (a jump of 300 million since 2024). However, roughly half of WHO's output targets went unmet, with financial pressures and internal restructuring affecting delivery, and the world remains off track to meet health-related Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. The findings will be presented at the 79th World Health Assembly in May 2026.

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The WHO Results Report 2025, presented ahead of the 79th World Health Assembly, documents significant global health gains across three fronts: expanding essential health services, strengthening health emergency protection, and improving overall wellbeing. Progress was driven by expanded communicable disease services including HIV and tuberculosis, improved sanitation, and a growing health workforce. The newly adopted Pandemic Agreement and revised International Health Regulations supported gains in emergency preparedness, with WHO responding to 66 emergencies across 88 countries in 2025.

Healthcare providers and public health authorities should note that despite progress, gaps remain in diabetes management, measles surveillance, and financial protection. Reduced staffing capacity and limited technical support pose ongoing risks to programme delivery. The Director-General emphasized that protecting and expanding these gains will require sustained support and investment to advance WHO's constitutional vision of health as a right for all.

Meeting

Date
2026-05-18
Location
Geneva

Archived snapshot

Apr 24, 2026

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WHO says billions saw health gains in 2025 despite funding cuts

23 April 2026

Health Despite significant funding cuts, the World Health Organization (WHO) was able to support significant national health gains for hundreds of millions of people in 2025, according to its annual Results Report released on Thursday.

"The Results Report 2025 shows that with support from WHO and partners, countries have delivered tangible benefits for millions of people," said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. "At the same time, these gains cannot be taken for granted."

The report, released ahead of the World Health Assembly next month, finds progress on three fronts: expanding access to essential health services; strengthening protection from health emergencies; and improving overall wellbeing.

Yet roughly half of its output targets went unmet, with financial pressures and internal restructuring taking a toll on delivery – and the world remains off track to meet the health-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.

Billions reached but targets missed

Though WHO failed to reach it’s 'Triple Billion' goals, which aimed for one billion more people to benefit in each of the three fronts by the end of 2025 compared with 2018, there was nonetheless substantial progress.

An estimated 567 million additional people were covered by essential health services in 2025, up 136 million from 2024.

Around 698 million more people were better protected from health emergencies, a rise of 61 million on the previous year. And, 1.75 billion additional people were living healthier lives, a jump of 300 million since 2024.

Progress toward universal health coverage was driven by expanded services for communicable diseases including HIV and tuberculosis, improved sanitation and a growing health workforce. Gaps remain, however, in diabetes management, measles surveillance and financial protection.

Emergency measures strengthened

Gains in emergency preparedness were supported in part by the newly adopted Pandemic Agreement and revised International Health Regulations.

WHO responded to 66 emergencies across 88 countries in 2025, including delivering 33 million medical consultations through health partners in Gaza.

Other areas, including disease detection, emergency response and polio eradication, remain more challenging, reflecting constraints in country capacity, financing and operations.

Meanwhile, WHO also strengthened emergency mental health and psychosocial support systems, increasing country coverage from 28 per cent to 48 per cent.

HPV vaccine coverage climbed from 17 per cent in 2019 to 31 per cent in 2024 through simplified single-dose schedules. A new global air pollution roadmap targets a 50 per cent cut in related deaths by 2040.

Funding squeeze threatens hard-won gains

However, reduced staffing capacity, limited technical support and slower programme implementation were among the immediate consequences.

A large share of WHO's budget also remains earmarked for specific thematic areas, limiting strategic flexibility.

The findings will be presented by Tedros at the 79th World Health Assembly, running from 18 to 23 May 2026 in Geneva.

"Protecting and expanding [these gains] will require sustained support and investment, so that together we can continue advancing the vision set out in WHO's Constitution: the highest attainable standard of health as a right for all," Tedros said.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
UN News
Published
April 23rd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
International
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Public health authorities Healthcare providers
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Health service delivery Emergency preparedness Disease prevention
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Healthcare Pharmaceuticals

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