An article at Brownstone.org raises a question which has have not been previously discussed very much, regarding the proposed World Health Organization international health regulations and pandemic treaty. Regarding the pandemic treaty, what exactly is a "pandemic"? The article points out that pandemics are distinguished from epidemics by being the spread of disease over a larger geographical area. But what else can be said?
An early draft of the pandemic treaty did give definition: "the global spread of a pathogen or variant that infects human populations with limited or no immunity through sustained and high transmissibility from person to person, overwhelming health systems with severe morbidity and high mortality, and causing social and economic disruptions, all of which require effective national and global collaboration and coordination for its control." This definition was dropped from later drafts, and now no explicit characterisation of a pandemic occurs at all. Here is why this is a problem: "On the one hand, pandemics are portrayed as catastrophic events or even an existential threat. On the other, Swine flu is mentioned as an example of a pandemic despite causing fewer deaths than a typical influenza season. Alongside Swine flu, diseases such as SARS-1, MERS, Zika, and/or Ebola are often used as examples to illustrate a perceived increase in pandemic risk, although SARS-1, MERS, and Zika each have less than 1,000 deaths recorded globally, ever, and Ebola is zoonotically confined to central and western regions of Africa."
What we will see if the pandemic treaty gets signed, is that the World Health Organization will decide on what is a pandemic, not nation states, as WHO has now monopolised the role as the fountain of all health and medical knowledge. And that is especially dangerous, given WHO's failure over Covid, advocating polices straight out of the CCP rule book. And we have until May this year to stop them.
"With Member States of the World Health Organization (WHO) negotiating new agreements to centralize management of pandemics with an annual budget of over $31.5 billion, it would be reasonable to assume that everyone was clear on what a pandemic actually is. Surprisingly, this is not the case. Although countries will be voting in two months on a new Pandemic Agreement and amendments to the International Health Regulations (IHR) to grant the WHO wide authority over pandemic management, there is no universally-agreed definition of "pandemic." What degree of severity is required? How widespread must it be? What proportion of the population must be at risk?
An outbreak of common cold crossing borders fits many pandemic definitions, as does a repeat of the medieval Black Death. International agreements are normally formed around a definable problem, but the world is about to invest tens of billions without a solid basis to predict costs and benefits. In other words, there is no clear agreement on what the World Health Assembly is actually agreeing to.
A History of Pandemics
When we now speak of a pandemic, we usually mean the global spread of SARS-CoV-2 that began in 2019. The word evokes images of empty streets and closed markets, of masked faces and silent people standing 6 feet apart. This drives the sense of urgency that policy makers are currently responding to through the design of new pandemic documents. Many pandemic prevention, preparedness and response (PPPR) documents suggest that these policies are an essential response by claiming a 50% chance of a Covid-19-like pandemic in the next 25 years or referring to the economic costs of Covid-19 to support claims of return on investment. This approach is problematic as it fails to distinguish between the direct costs of the disease and the effects of the very unusual response.
The etymology of the word "pandemic" comes from the ancient Greek root dêmos (δῆμος, people, populace) with the related "epidemic" and "pandemic." The prefix pan- (ancient Greek πάν) generally means all or every; thus, pandemic is derived from the ancient Greek concept πάνδημος (of or belonging to the whole people, public). The term usually refers to infectious diseases, although some use of pandemic can be more broadly colloquial, for example speaking of a "pandemic of obesity." What distinguishes pandemics (and epidemics) from endemic diseases is that they affect a large number of people in a relatively short time span and in excess of normal expectancy. What sets pandemics apart from epidemics in people's minds is a wider geographic spread across national borders.
Some of the worst pandemics recorded in history followed the European conquest of the Americas, bringing new pathogens to an immunologically naïve population. Such conditions do not exist in today's globalized world. Other devastating pandemics were caused by bacteria like cholera or the plague, the latter being responsible for the Black Death in the 14th century that wiped out perhaps a third of the European population. Improved sanitation and the discovery of antibiotics has since fundamentally reduced the threat of bacterial infections, once the main driver of pandemics.
The last major pandemic the world faced prior to Covid-19 was the Spanish flu of 1918. Accordingly, up until the Covid-19 pandemic, "pandemic preparedness" almost universally referred to influenza pandemics. The WHO published their first influenza pandemic plan in 1999, motivated by the first recorded human infections with avian flu H5N1. The plan was updated several times, the last time in 2009 and defines several "pandemic phases." These constitute the only pandemic definitions the WHO has published in official guidance and remain specific to influenza.
The Swine Flu Controversy
When the WHO declared the H1N1 Swine flu a pandemic in 2009, despite it being no more severe than normal seasonal influenza, a controversy erupted over what defines a "pandemic." While the WHO's pandemic plan had always focused on the spread of a novel subtype of influenza without requiring it to be extraordinarily severe, a definition on the WHO's website read for six years: "An influenza pandemic occurs when a new influenza virus appears against which the human population has no immunity, resulting in several simultaneous epidemics worldwide with enormous numbers of deaths and illness."
In response to a query by a CNN journalist questioning the need for a condition of "enormous" severity, the definition of pandemic influenza on the WHO homepage was changed in May 2009, removing the phrase "with enormous numbers of deaths and illness." Instead, the new definition clarified that "pandemics can be either mild or severe in the illness and death they cause, and the severity of a pandemic can change over the course of that pandemic."
Although the definition on the website had no practical effects, the fact that the change happened shortly before declaring Swine flu a pandemic raised suspicion. In March 2011, the European Parliament adopted a resolution on the evaluation of the management of H1N1 influenza in 2009-2010 in the European Union. The resolution "urges the WHO to revise the definition of a pandemic, taking into consideration not only its geographical spread but also its severity."
Peter Doshi pointed out in a 2009 article "the elusive definition of pandemic influenza" that the earlier definition on the WHO website is illustrative of a wider perception of pandemics as catastrophic in nature. He points to another text on the WHO website, where it was stated that even in a best-case scenario of an influenza pandemic, it would lead to 4 to 30 times more deaths than seasonal influenza.
At the same time, the WHO also refers to the Asian flu of 1957-1959 and the Hong Kong flu of 1968-1970 as being pandemics, although they were not extraordinarily severe. Doshi further argued that "we must remember the purpose of "pandemic preparedness," which was fundamentally predicated on the assumption that pandemic influenza requires a different policy response than does annual, seasonal influenza. As a result, Doshi and others argued that the "pandemic" label must of necessity carry a notion of severity, for otherwise the rationale behind the original policy of having "pandemic plans" distinct from ongoing public health programmes would be called into question.
This tension of definitional appropriateness remains today. On the one hand, pandemics are portrayed as catastrophic events or even an existential threat. On the other, Swine flu is mentioned as an example of a pandemic despite causing fewer deaths than a typical influenza season. Alongside Swine flu, diseases such as SARS-1, MERS, Zika, and/or Ebola are often used as examples to illustrate a perceived increase in pandemic risk, although SARS-1, MERS, and Zika each have less than 1,000 deaths recorded globally, ever, and Ebola is zoonotically confined to central and western regions of Africa.
Pandemic or PHEIC?
In an earlier draft of the Pandemic Agreement, the Intergovernmental Negotiating Body (INB) presented a notably specific definition of a pandemic: "the global spread of a pathogen or variant that infects human populations with limited or no immunity through sustained and high transmissibility from person to person, overwhelming health systems with severe morbidity and high mortality, and causing social and economic disruptions, all of which require effective national and global collaboration and coordination for its control."
This definition is more restrictive than most existing definitions of pandemics, as it requires a pathogen to cause severe morbidity and mortality and to spread globally. This might be widely considered to justify unusual measures of intervention. However, the INB discarded its pandemic definition in the latest draft of the Pandemic Agreement without replacement.
The INB's discarded, and highly specific, definition stood in contrast to the definition used by the World Bank in the establishing document of the Financial Intermediary Fund for PPPR (now known as The Pandemic Fund). There, a pandemic is defined as "an epidemic occurring worldwide, or over a very wide area, crossing international boundaries and usually affecting a large number of people." The new draft of the Pandemic Agreement now includes the following definition of a "pathogen with pandemic potential," namely "any pathogen that has been identified to infect a human and that is: novel (not yet characterized) or known (including a variant of a known pathogen), potentially highly transmissible and/or highly virulent with the potential to cause a public health emergency of international concern." It does not actually have to make anyone sick.
Unlike the term pandemic, a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) is defined in the IHR (2005) as "an extraordinary event which is determined…to constitute a public health risk to other states through the international spread of disease and to potentially require a coordinated international response." PHEICs are not limited to infectious disease outbreaks but can extend to health risks from chemical or nuclear contamination. Member States are required to notify the WHO about events that may result in a PHEIC, presumably determining "extraordinary" and "potentially" in some generally accepted context.
Once an alert is made, an ad-hoc emergency committee is convened at the WHO to consult the Director-General about the determination and termination of a PHEIC as well as issuing temporary recommendations to affected States. Although an emergency committee consults, including a member from the affected State(s), all decision-making power lies with the Director-General and it is at their discretion whether and to what degree the committee's recommendations are used. This political aspect is important, as the new Amendments proposed for the IHR would make WHO recommendations during a PHEIC, such as border closures and mandatory vaccinations, binding for member States.
Defining pandemics as potential PHEICs harmonizes the two ongoing negotiations for the Pandemic Agreement and IHR amendments. Many critics claim that the IHR amendments would give the WHO Director-General the power to unilaterally declare a pandemic. Yet, the Director-General already has the power to declare a PHEIC under the existing regulations (although the IHR amendments may make such a declaration more consequential). Currently the proposed amendments do not define pandemics. While it seems logical to harmonize both policies, it is important to remember that the IHR are broader in scope, and not all PHEICs are pandemics. The WHO Director-General declared six PHEICs for infectious disease outbreaks in the last ten years, the latest being Mpox (monkeypox) in 2022.