Major global health gains have been made in recent years, yet complex, interconnected threats − from poverty and inequality to conflict and climate change – remain.
Based on the Sustainable Development Goals, the 13th General Programme of Work (GPW) sets out WHO’s strategic direction for the next five years. It also outlines how the Programme will be implemented and provides a framework to measure progress.
Thirteenth general programme of work, 2019-2023
The central focus of GPW 13 is impact in countries. It articulates WHO’s mission to promote health, keep the world safe and serve the vulnerable.
GPW 13 is structured around key interconnected strategic priorities:
These priorities are linked to three bold targets:
They are supported by three strategic shifts:
WHO is committed to ensuring gender equality, equity and rights-based approaches to health that enhance participation, build resilience and empower communities.
To boost impact for the people we serve, WHO announced the most wide-ranging reforms in the Organization’s history in March 2019.
WHO’s transformation, aligned with the wider United Nations reform agenda, also aims to enhance our normative and technical work to ensure it better meets the needs of all 194 Member States.
Our goal is clear - to make WHO a modern organization that works seamlessly to make a measurable difference in people’s health at country level.
There are five key elements:
After establishing our new strategy, the GPW13, we embarked on a radical redesign of our core processes and operating model to enable our vision of a WHO that works seamlessly to deliver on the triple billion targets and beyond, as outlined in the WHO Transformation Plan and Architecture.
WHO Headquarters adopts the new structure in January 2020, and Regional and Country Offices are restructuring and aligning to the new model.
16 May 2018