WHO says it did sound 'highest level of alarm' for novel coronavirus in January 2020
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Almost one year since the coronavirus outbreak was declared a global "pandemic", the World Health Organization (WHO) clarified on Monday that it did use the "highest level of alarm" to urge actions from all countries in early 2020.

A sign requiring face masks is seen at City Creek Center Monday, March 8, 2021, in Salt Lake City. Utah's statewide mask mandate will be lifted on April 10 under a measure that passed the full Legislature Friday, March 5, 2021. Republican Gov. Spencer Cox has said he plans to sign the bill. The bill lays out a new timeline for when Utah's COVID-19 restrictions applying to businesses, events, and schools would end. The mask mandate would still apply to gatherings of more than 50 people. (AP Photo)

Being asked on Monday's press conference whether the organization should have used the word "pandemic" sooner, Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO's technical lead on COVID-19, said that the WHO announced a Public Health Emergency of International Concern as early as on Jan. 30 last year.

She said that the announcement was indeed the highest level of alarm, or "the highest level that we can under international law."

On Jan. 30, 2020, the WHO declared the outbreak, later named as COVID-19, as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern, following a two-day discussion by a team of international experts.

Michael Ryan, executive director of the WHO Health Emergencies Program, said at Monday's press conference that this level of action was the "highest possible" under common agreement between WHO member states.

He added that there is a solemn legal agreement between 194 WHO members, agreed in 2005, where they came together and agreed with each other what would represent the highest level of alert for global public health emergencies.

"That is an agreement between all member states on this planet, who agreed in law, that this would represent the trigger to collective action in response for containment," he said.

"Maybe we need to shout louder," said Ryan, "But maybe some people need hearing aids."