The Trump administration's withdrawal from the World Health Organization (WHO) marked a breakdown in global health cooperation. Framed as a nationalist assertion of sovereignty, the move undermined international solidarity during a global pandemic and reflected a broader retreat from multilateral responsibility. This editorial contends that the decision was not merely administrative but ideological, reducing health to a tool of political posturing and isolationist rhetoric. The impact on low- and middle-income countries reliant on WHO support highlights the real-world consequences of such disengagement. What is at stake is the future of global health security and the integrity of international public health systems.
Muhammad Hamza Shah (Sat,) studied this question.
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