Director-General of the World Health Organization

The World Health Organization is led by a Director-General (DGWHO), who is appointed by, and responsible to the World Health Assembly (WHA).[1]

Director-General of the World Health Organization
Incumbent
Tedros Adhanom

since 1 July 2017
Reports toThe World Health Assembly
Term length5 years (renewable)
DeputyDeputy Director-General

Overview

Directors-General of the WHO[2]
Name and Nationality Years of tenure
Brock Chisholm1948–1953
Marcolino Gomes Candau1953–1973
Halfdan T. Mahler1973–1988
Hiroshi Nakajima1988–1998
Gro Harlem Brundtland1998–2003
Lee Jong-wook2003–2006
Anders Nordström*2006–2007
Margaret Chan2007–2017
Tedros Adhanom2017–present
*Appointed acting Director-General following the death of Lee Jong-wook while in office

The term of the DGWHO lasts for 5 years. Directors-General can be and have been appointed for multiple subsequent terms, such as Marcolino Gomes Candau who served for four consecutive terms. The DGWHO is typically appointed in May, when the WHA meets.

The current Director-General is Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who was appointed on 1 July 2017.[3]

Selection process

Candidates for Director-General can be proposed by member states, then nominated by the Executive Board and appointed by the World Health Assembly.[4]

References

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