As the news spread about the outbreak of Ebola in mid-May 2026, the World Health Organization (WHO) released a report about pandemics. The title was: A World on the Edge: Priorities for a Pandemic-Resilient Future.
The document was prepared by the WHO’s Global Preparedness Monitoring Board. It sets out why the world isn’t better prepared for pandemics a decade after Ebola exposed dangerous gaps. And six years after COVID-19 turned those gaps into a global catastrophe.
It adds that investment in pandemic preparedness has not kept pace with the rising risk of pandemics.
The Global Preparedness Monitoring Board is an independent monitoring and accountability body established in 2018 by the WHO and the World Bank. The aim was to strengthen preparedness for global health crises. It is composed of political leaders, agency principals and world-class experts. Its task is to provide assessments of global progress in building and sustaining the capacity to prevent, detect and respond to health emergencies.
The report was released during another Ebola epidemic. This time starting in the Democratic Republic of Congo. On 17 May the WHO declared the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern. This means that it is a risk to many countries through international spread and hence requires global coordinated efforts.











