WHO works with all Member States to support them to achieve the highest standard of health for all people.
WHO has dedicated staff working in 149 country offices. These country teams advise ministries of health and other sectors on public health issues and provide support to plan, implement and monitor health programmes.
We work closely with other United Nations agencies, nongovernmental organizations, foundations, the private sector and affected communities to improve essential prevention, treatment and health care services. WHO country teams also support advocacy and resource mobilization efforts.
WHO acts as a knowledge broker and facilitates exchanges between countries, encouraging them to work together to pursue solutions to common challenges.
The Country Cooperation Strategy (CCS) is WHO’s strategic framework to guide our work in and with a country. It responds to that country’s national health and development agenda and identifies a set of agreed joint priorities for WHO collaboration, with a focus on areas where the Organization has a comparative advantage in order to assure public health impact. The CCS aims to respond to country needs and priorities based on WHO’s Global Programme of Work (GPW13) and the health-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
As the public expression of WHO’s results chain at the country level, the CCS sets out clearly defined impact targets for each of the agreed priorities. It also provides input to the process of formulating key elements of WHO’s operational instruments such as the Country Support Plan, which is linked to the Programme Budget.
Each CCS is closely aligned with the GPW13 and United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework and serves as the starting point for WHO work in that country. It guides WHO and governments to deliver on health priorities, measure impact and track health-related SDGs.
The timeframe is flexible to align with national planning cycles. It is generally 4–6 years. The key principles guiding WHO’s cooperation in countries and upon which the CCS is based are:
The 2020 Country Cooperation Strategy Guide: Implementing the GPW 13 driving impact in every country is a new WHO’s cooperate tool to create synergy and alignment between WHO’s leadership priorities, national health policies, strategies and plans as well as the United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework.
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The Country Cooperation Strategy (CCS) is WHO’s strategic framework to guide the Organization’s work in and with a country. It responds to...
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