Director-General of the World Health Organization
The World Health Organization is led by a Director-General (DGWHO), who is appointed by, and responsible to the World Health Assembly (WHA).[1]
Director-General of the World Health Organization | |
---|---|
Reports to | The World Health Assembly |
Term length | 5 years (renewable) |
Deputy | Deputy Director-General |
Overview
Name and Nationality | Years of tenure |
---|---|
![]() | 1948–1953 |
![]() | 1953–1973 |
![]() | 1973–1988 |
![]() | 1988–1998 |
![]() | 1998–2004 |
![]() | 2004–2006 |
![]() | 2006–2007 |
![]() | 2007–2017 |
![]() | 2017–present |
*Appointed acting Director-General following the death of Lee Jong-wook while in office |
The term of the DGWHO lasts for 5 years. Directors-General can be and have been appointed for multiple subsequent terms, such as Marcolino Gomes Candau who served for four consecutive terms. The DGWHO is typically appointed in May, when the WHA meets.
The current Director-General is Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who was appointed on 1 July 2017.[3]
Selection process
Candidates for Director-General can be proposed by member states, then nominated by the Executive Board and appointed by the World Health Assembly.[4]
gollark: (praise Rust™, although I still find it somewhat harder to write stuff in than JS or whatever so I only use it for my more perf-sensitive projects)
gollark: Like Rust's `Option`, which is optimized to use null pointers or something, meaning it's basically only a compile-time performance cost.
gollark: There are *low-cost* ones.
gollark: Rust's pretty fast and has the neat safety thing going on.
gollark: Or you could just use high*er* level languages which make it somewhat harder to randomly corrupt memory or whatever.
References
- "WHO Governance". WHO.
- "Former Directors-General". who.int. WHO. Archived from the original on 11 June 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2012.
- "World Health Assembly elects Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus as new WHO Director-General". WHO.
- "World Health Organization Director-General selection: frequently asked questions". WHO. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
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