Trump Withdraws U.S. from World Health Organization — What Does That Mean?

Mar. 15, 2025

President Donald Trump signs executive orders on January 20, 2025.Photo:Anna Moneymaker/Getty

WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 20: President Donald Trump signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House on January 20, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump takes office for his second term as the 47th president of the United States.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty

PresidentDonald Trumpsigned anexecutive orderJan. 20 that withdraws the United States from the World Health Organization (WHO), aglobal coalition of 194members that addresses health issues on a global scale. But experts say this order may leave Americans unprotected from emerging diseases such asbird fluandMarburg— and inhibit the agency from responding to new threats.

“It’s a cataclysmic presidential decision,” Lawrence Gostin, professor of global health law at Georgetown University and director of WHO’s Center on Global Health Law said in a post onX. “Withdrawal is a grievous wound to world health, but a still deeper wound to the US.”

That’s because, asThe New York Timesreports, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control would lose access to WHO’s data on emerging global health concerns. Gostin, along with Richard Conniff, author ofEnding Epidemics: A History of Escape From Contagion, wrote in theWashington Postthat withdrawal will leave the U.S. open to diseases from abroad, citing how WHO recently stopped an outbreak of Marburg, called the"eye-bleeding virus.”

WHO headquarters in the background in Geneva, Switzerland.

They also write that childhood diseases that were eradicated via vaccinations may come back — and withbird flulooming, this move leaves America unprotected from another pandemic. “Withdrawal from the WHO will put U.S. agencies and pharmaceutical companies at the back of the line for accessing critical data on H5N1 and slow development of vaccines we might urgently need to save lives,” Gostin and Conniff wrote.

The U.S.' status and power may take a hit, according to Elisha Dunn-Georgiou, president and CEO of the Global Health Council, asNPRreported. Withdrawing is “really bad for the U.S. [in terms of] access to data, to surveillance, to being at the table negotiating and holding other countries accountable when there is an epidemic or pandemic.”

In response to emerging threats, Trump’s order also includes a provision where the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs is empowered to “establish directorates and coordinating mechanisms” that are “necessary and appropriate to safeguard public health and fortify biosecurity” — but did not specify what these mechanisms were.

WHO’s work will suffer as well,NBC Newsreported, as it will lose US funding, likely for programs for vaccines and child and maternal health.

In his order — one ofmanysignedon his first day in office — Trump cited WHO’s “mishandling of theCOVID-19pandemic that arose out of Wuhan, China, and other global health crises,” as well as “onerous payments from the United States.” Trump said he believes, from a population perspective, China should pay more than the U.S.

“World Health ripped us off, everybody rips off the United States. It’s not going to happen anymore,” Trump said as he signed the order,Sky Newsreported.

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media briefing at the National Health Committee in Beijing, China, 31 March 2021

In itsofficial responseto the withdrawal, the World Health Organization pointed out that the United States was a founding member when the coalition was created in 1948, and has actively participated in its World Health Assembly and Executive Board.

“For over seven decades, WHO and the USA have saved countless lives and protected Americans and all people from health threats. Together, we ended smallpox, and together we have brought polio to the brink of eradication. American institutions have contributed to and benefited from membership of WHO,” the statement continued, adding the WHO plays a crucial role in “detecting, preventing and responding to health emergencies, including disease outbreaks, often in dangerous places where others cannot go.”

WHO said it “regrets the announcement that the United States of America intends to withdraw from the Organization.”

“We hope the United States will reconsider and we look forward to engaging in constructive dialogue to maintain the partnership between the USA and WHO, for the benefit of the health and well-being of millions of people around the globe.”

source: people.com