EuroWire, GENEVA: The World Health Organization called on governments, scientists, health workers and the public to renew their commitment to working together and supporting science as it marked World Health Day 2026 with a campaign centered on evidence-based health action. WHO said the initiative, launched ahead of the April 7 observance, is built around the theme “Together for health. Stand with science.” and is intended to reinforce cooperation at a time when countries continue to face infectious disease risks, climate-related health threats and pressure on public health systems.

WHO said the World Health Day 2026 campaign will run for a full year and is designed to rally support for decisions grounded in scientific evidence across human, animal and environmental health. The agency linked the message to a One Health approach, which promotes coordination across sectors to address risks that cross borders and disciplines. The campaign also coincides with the anniversary of WHO’s founding, giving the organization a global platform to stress the role of research, surveillance, vaccination, prevention and international coordination in improving health outcomes.
In outlining the case for science-led policy, WHO pointed to long-term health gains recorded over the past quarter century. The agency said the global maternal mortality rate has fallen by more than 40% since 2000, while deaths among children under five have dropped by more than 50% over the same period. WHO presented those figures as evidence that sustained investment in research, public health programs and coordinated international action has delivered measurable results, even as health systems in many countries continue to face widening demands and uneven access to care.
Science and cooperation at the center
WHO tied the 2026 message to a set of international meetings in Lyon, France, where health and science cooperation are central themes this week. The One Health Summit is being held from April 5 to April 7 under the French G7 Presidency, bringing together officials and experts to examine links between human, animal and environmental health. WHO is also convening the Global Forum of WHO Collaborating Centres in Lyon from April 7 to April 9, placing its scientific network at the center of the World Health Day campaign.
The organization said its collaborating centres network now includes more than 800 academic, technical and public health institutions worldwide that support WHO’s work in research, standards, training and disease control. By highlighting that network, WHO is underscoring how much of global health work depends on formal scientific partnerships rather than isolated national responses. The agency’s 2026 campaign materials say the effort is meant to strengthen trust in evidence, support facts-based policymaking and encourage collective action on risks that increasingly affect multiple regions at the same time.
One Health message gains prominence
Regional WHO offices have echoed the same message in their World Health Day materials, reinforcing the central role of science and coordinated surveillance. WHO’s European office said it reviews more than 240,000 potential public health event signals each year across its 53 member states, an example of the monitoring capacity needed for early detection and response. WHO’s South-East Asia office also linked the campaign to risks such as dengue, zoonotic disease and climate-related pressures, showing how the agency is applying the same science-based framework across different regions.
The campaign leaves WHO with a simple but expansive message for 2026: that recent gains in public health were achieved through research, prevention and cooperation, and that future progress depends on the same foundations. By making science and collaboration the defining theme of this year’s observance, the agency is positioning World Health Day as both a milestone and a call for sustained evidence-based action across governments, laboratories, clinics and communities.
