Across the Middle East region, health systems are under relentless pressure. Conflict, displacement, climate shocks, disease outbreaks and financial constraints increasingly overlap—often in the same countries, at the same time. These challenges do not sit neatly within institutional mandates, and they cannot be solved in isolation.
Too often, well-intentioned organisations work side by side, but not together. The result is duplication in some areas and gaps in others—exactly what fragile health systems cannot afford. In today’s health landscape, progress depends on organisations pulling in the same direction. Without that, even the strongest efforts fall short. In a region under constant strain, coordination is the only way to turn effort into impact.
One year ago, the Regional Health Alliance (RHA) brought together 18 United Nations agencies for a strategic dialogue aimed at changing how we work—moving from parallel initiatives to coordinated action.Convened by the World Health Organisation, the meeting reaffirmed a shared commitment to align priorities, resources and delivery around country needs. Over the past year, that commitment has translated into tangible results.
The Regional Health Alliance provides a practical framework for collective action on health across the UN system. Its strength lies in its diversity—health, development and humanitarian agencies working side by side—and in its focus on outcomes. WHO serves as the Alliance’s secretariat, but more importantly, as its driver: convening partners, grounding collaboration in evidence, and keeping country impact at the centre. This approach has already made a difference.