By Wallace Minn-Gan Chow, Representative of Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in the Philippines

Each year, as the World Health Assembly (WHA) brings the international community together in Geneva, one fundamental question resurfaces: should global health governance be guided by political exclusion, or by the health and well-being of people? For Taiwan’s partners, including the Philippines, Taiwan’s meaningful participation in the WHA would allow them to better benefit from Taiwan’s strengths in public health, digital innovation, smart health care, and medical expertise. For the Philippines, supporting Taiwan’s meaningful participation in the WHA is not only a gesture of friendship; it is a pragmatic choice aligned with its public health priorities, including universal health care, digital health transformation, and health system resilience.
Taiwan Leads in Digital Health Transformation
Taiwan’s campaign for participation in this year’s WHA focuses on digital health transformation, smart health infrastructure, medical AI applications, and inclusive global health governance. These are not abstract aspirations. They reflect Taiwan’s long-standing strengths. Taiwan has a mature National Health Insurance system, a high-quality medical network, world-class semiconductor and information and communications technology industries, and the proven capacity to integrate technological innovation into healthcare. Its experience includes telemedicine, health data applications, AI-assisted diagnosis, disease prediction, and solutions for healthy aging.
Concrete Benefits for the Philippines
These strengths are cooperation assets from which the Philippines can directly benefit. As an archipelagic nation, the Philippines has long faced challenges in ensuring medical accessibility for remote and island communities, strengthening primary care capacity, responding to disasters, monitoring infectious diseases, and integrating health data systems. Taiwan’s experience in smart health care, electronic health records, telemedicine, medical AI, and public health emergency response can help the Philippines improve health care efficiency, narrow urban-rural gaps, and reinforce the foundations of universal healthcare.
A Partnership Rooted in People
Taiwan and the Philippines are close neighbors with frequent people-to-people exchanges and deepening ties in trade, education, medicine, and technology. Almost 200,000 Filipino nationals work and live in Taiwan and have access to its healthcare system. Taiwanese medical institutions, universities, and industries also continue to engage with Philippine partners. If Taiwan is able to participate meaningfully in the WHA and WHO-related mechanisms, Taiwan-Philippines cooperation in medical training, smart healthcare and infectious disease prevention, among many others, can become more institutionalized, timely, and effective.
More Cooperation, Few Gaps
Chip in with Taiwan, and the Philippines can benefit from Taiwan’s strengths in technology-driven healthcare and smart medical innovation. Supporting Taiwan’s participation in the WHA is a responsible choice for the health security of the Philippines, Asia, and the wider global communities. Global health governance needs more cooperation, not more gaps.






