In a newly disclosed exercise, WHO unveiled what it calls a pandemic “strategy game” designed to pressure-test how quickly governments can detect, report, and respond to emerging health threats.
The pitch is harmless: preparedness. The optics are harder to ignore: global authorities rehearsing the mechanics of emergency rule before the next crisis arrives.
The exercise centers on WHO’s “7-1-7” doctrine — detect an outbreak within seven days, notify authorities within one, and mount a response within seven more. On paper, it sounds efficient. In practice, it embeds internationally defined timelines and response structures into national decision-making chains.
WHO explains:
“Achieving these benchmarks requires coordinated action across surveillance, laboratories, emergency operations, risk communication, and leadership. Developed by the Center for Advanced Preparedness and Threat Response Simulation (CAPTRS) in collaboration with 7-1-7 Alliance and WHO’s Emergency Preparedness Department, the game translates the 7-1-7 target into a hands-on experience to test how such coordination plays out under pressure.”
On February 23, 2026, WHO convened insiders to test the game behind closed doors for a “playtest session with staff familiar with the 7-1-7 framework to stress-test the game’s design ahead of broader country-level piloting planned later this year.”
The Chosen Crisis: Ebola In Uganda
The simulation scenario was not mild.
Participants navigated an outbreak of Sudan Ebola virus disease in Uganda — one of the deadliest pathogens on earth.
“The scenario focused on an outbreak of Sudan Ebola virus disease in Uganda, prompting players to grapple with real-world challenges such as delayed case recognition, reporting breakdowns, and operational constraints.”
Delayed case recognition. Reporting breakdowns. Operational constraints.
Since disease and death are the result and consequence of the sin, why are believers having issue with the WHO testing process?
ReplyDeleteGenesis 3:1
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