President Donald Trump last week issued an executive order to begin the process of withdrawing the U.S. from WHO, but that did not take immediate effect.
The White House has directed the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to cease all collaboration with the World Health Organization.
The directive to the CDC to halt communications with the World Health Organization was imposed to comply with President Trump's executive order.
ATLANTA (AP) — US public health officials have been told to stop working with the World Health Organization, effective immediately.
The World Health Organization has urged the United State to reconsider its withdrawal from the global health agency. It comes a day after President Donald Trump signed an executive order pulling ...
U.S. President Donald Trump has used one of the flurry of executive actions that he issued on his first day back in the White House to begin the process of withdrawing the U.S. from the World Health Organization for the second time in less than five years.
Public health experts say U.S. withdrawal from the W.H.O. would undermine the nation’s standing as a global health leader and make it harder to fight the next pandemic.
US public health officials have been told to stop working with the World Health Organization, effective immediately.
As part of a rash of executive orders completed on his first day back in the White House, President Donald Trump began the nation’s exit from the World Health Organization. Here, we explain how the withdrawal would work and what it would mean,
In line with Trump's executive order to end all collaboration with the WHO, the CDC has been instructed to end all communications and work with the international public health agency.
President Donald Trump’s decision to exit the World Health Organization means the U.N. agency is losing its biggest funder
The AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the world’s largest nonprofit HIV/AIDS healthcare organization, was recently honored with the Martin Luther King, Jr. Social Justice Award during The King Center’s annual “Beloved Community Awards” in Atlanta.