WHO Teams Up With IOC And France To Support Healthy Paris Olympics
The World Health Organization is taking part in the Paris Olympics in multiple fields, supporting the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and France to help make the world’s leading sport spectacle, which officially starts this Friday, healthy and safe for spectators and athletes alike.
“Just as athletes and fans around the world have been preparing for the Paris Olympics, WHO has been working with the IOC and the Government of France to make sure these Games are healthy and safe for everyone involved,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “From promoting physical activity to protecting people from a range of health threats, WHO has been proud to play its part in making the Paris Olympics a success.”
WHO and the IOC, close partners through a memorandum of understanding first signed in 2020 and renewed this year, have launched the Let’s Move physical activity promotion campaign, leveraging the power of sport, and the platform of the Paris Olympics, to motivate sports stars and the global public to move for better health.
In line with this campaign, the French Government has introduced a programme of 30 minutes of daily physical activity for school students in France to ensure a lasting, healthy legacy is left from the Paris Olympics.
WHO health security experts at its Geneva-based headquarters and European Regional Office in Copenhagen have also been actively supporting national and regional authorities to safeguard people’s health during the planning and staging of the Games, as well as after. This includes preparing for potential health-related scenarios such as heatwaves, infectious disease outbreaks, food and water safety hazards, terrorism and crowd management.
Joint public health advice has been developed in collaboration with ECDC and France for travellers attending the Paris Olympics and Paralympics, which start 28 August.
Guidance on vaccines travellers may need before undertaking their journeys, protecting against various illnesses, such as respiratory diseases or mosquito- and tick-borne illnesses, and staying cool and hydrated has been developed for the millions of people visiting France for this pinnacle event on the sports calendar.
WHO has participated in the IOC Paris 2024 simulation exercises to test public health plans, established Olympics-specific health event-based surveillance and is producing daily situation reports, in collaboration with the ECDC. These reports are geared towards capturing early signals of any heath events detected and supporting any needed timely responses, and are provided to the IOC and other partners.
Dr Tedros is among local and global figures taking part in the Olympic Torch Relay on Friday, a day after speaking at the Paris Summit on Sports for Sustainable Development, hosted by the French Presidency and the IOC.
During the Summit, WHO will make commitments to mobilize for nutrition ahead of next year’s fourth Nutrition for Growth Summit in Paris, and expand support to countries to improve diets, promote physical activity and provide services to diagnose and manage obesity, with the aim of reducing obesity prevalence in targeted countries by 5% by 2030.