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UK Ends Global Health Workforce Programme Amid Fiscal Shifts

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The UK has terminated its Global Health Workforce Programme, a six-year initiative aimed at strengthening healthcare systems in six African nations, amid a broader trend of UK aid cuts. The move has sparked concerns about its impact on pandemic preparedness, particularly in “red list” nations, where UK health ODA for workforce development has declined significantly.

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Programme Termination and Funding Shifts

The UK’s Global Health Workforce Programme (GHWP), launched in 2018 to strengthen healthcare systems in six African nations—Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Malawi, and Somaliland—was terminated in March 2026. Funded by the UK Department for Health and Social Care, the initiative aimed to enhance healthcare worker training, improve retention, and build institutional capacity to address staffing shortages. Its goals included advancing pandemic preparedness and supporting the UK’s commitment to invest in countries supplying a significant share of its NHS and social care workforce. For example, the Power for the People Africa Trust, a GHWP partner, trained staff in Kenya’s Homa Bay region to combat gender-based violence and reduce associated teenage pregnancies and HIV infections. The program was positioned as a strategic measure to fortify global health security, with UK ministers emphasizing its role in protecting British citizens from future pandemic threats.

“It would have real human consequences, and once that thread is cut, it is very difficult to pick it back up.”

— Ben Simms, Global Health Partnerships

Impact on Pandemic Preparedness

The GHWP’s closure has raised concerns about its impact on pandemic preparedness, particularly in the six African countries it supported. The program’s focus on strengthening health workforce capacity directly addressed shortages in “red list” nations, where UK health ODA for workforce development fell by 83% from £24 million in 2020 to £4 million in 2023. The World Health Organization (WHO) highlighted this reduction as a threat to global coordination efforts, citing plans to cut up to 2,371 positions by June 2026. Over the past four years, nurse recruitment from the six GHWP countries surged from 11,386 in 2020 to 32,543 in 2024, according to Donor Tracker. This trend has exacerbated under-resourced health systems in partner nations while increasing reliance on migrant labor in the UK, a situation warned against by Global Health Partnerships.

UK Ends Global Health Workforce Programme Amid Fiscal Shifts

Broader Trends in UK Aid Cuts

The GHWP’s termination reflects a broader trend of UK aid cuts, part of a global decline in health-related international assistance. The OECD reported a 12% drop in health aid since 2020, though the UK’s decision stands out for its scale and focus on workforce development, a key component of its aid strategy. The government’s emphasis on “greater impact” with limited resources has drawn criticism from development experts, who argue the approach prioritizes short-term economic goals over long-term global health investments. The Independent Commission for Aid Impact (ICAI) review’s findings about the UK’s aid allocation system further underscore concerns about the effectiveness of the current strategy.

“New HIV infections in Homa Bay today: at some point these infections would cross borders. They would get to Britain's population as well.”

— Caren Okombo, Power for the People Africa Trust

Stakeholder Concerns and Global Implications

Stakeholders have expressed alarm over the program’s closure. Ben Simms of Global Health Partnerships called it a “genuinely historic decision” that risks “ceding ground in global health.” He warned that the closure would have “real human consequences” and that “once that thread is cut, it is very difficult to pick it back up.” Caren Okombo of the Power for the People Africa Trust emphasized that halting the program would reverse progress in Homa Bay, where it had reduced HIV infections and teenage pregnancies. She argued that “new HIV infections in Homa Bay today: at some point these infections would cross borders. They would get to [Britain’s] population as well.” These statements highlight the interconnectedness of global health challenges and the potential risks of underinvestment in international development.

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SMI Global Desk covers international news and breaking events worldwide. The team aggregates and analyzes reports from multiple trusted sources, providing concise and contextualized coverage of major global developments. Content is curated from verified sources and enhanced using AI-assisted workflows, with human editorial review.

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