A recent perspective published in Public Health Challenges highlights how abrupt reductions in international health aid can severely disrupt essential healthcare services in vulnerable countries. The study, written by Nepalese author Animesh Ghimire, examines the experiences of Nepal and Afghanistan to show how sudden donor withdrawal can affect contraception, nutrition, vaccination, primary healthcare, and disease surveillance, while calling for clearer global rules to manage aid transitions responsibly.
Concerns about declining health funding have been growing globally. In 2025, the World Health Organization warned that external health assistance to low- and middle-income countries could drop by as much as 40 percent, raising serious questions about the sustainability of essential services. Many countries rely heavily on donor funding for programmes such as immunization, nutrition support, and disease control, meaning sudden financial cuts can create major disruptions across supply chains, healthcare staffing, and service delivery systems. The paper argues that as global funding priorities shift, stronger governance frameworks are needed to ensure countries are not left vulnerable when aid is reduced.
The impact of funding shocks varies depending on a country’s financial capacity and healthcare infrastructure. Some nations are better prepared to absorb reductions because they have stronger public systems or domestic funding sources. However, many low-income countries lack the resources needed to quickly adapt, meaning even a single funding cut can affect medicine availability, surveillance systems, and the delivery of basic healthcare services. The analysis suggests that financial shocks should be viewed as public health crises because they create multiple interconnected problems within health systems.
Nepal offers a clear example of how aid withdrawal can strain healthcare services simultaneously. For years, the country depended on funding from the United States Agency for International Development to support essential health programmes, including family planning, nutrition, and immunization. When this support declined in 2025, health facilities began reporting shortages of contraceptives such as Depo-Provera injections and intrauterine devices. At the same time, currency fluctuations increased the cost of imported medical supplies, widening the funding gap and placing additional pressure on already strained public facilities.
Nutrition programmes were also affected, putting progress on reducing child stunting and improving maternal health at risk. Immunization initiatives that rely on both domestic and international funding faced disruptions as well, raising concerns about setbacks in efforts to reduce child mortality. According to the perspective, these developments demonstrate how aid withdrawal rarely affects a single programme; instead, it weakens the broader healthcare system and can lead to widespread consequences for population health.
In Afghanistan, the effects of funding shortages have been even more severe. By March 2025, financial constraints had placed around 80 percent of health facilities supported by the World Health Organization at risk of closure by June, potentially leaving millions without access to care. As clinics shut down, communities lost access to treatment for infections, chronic illnesses, and other basic health services. Nutrition programmes also weakened in a country already facing significant food insecurity.
Disease surveillance systems were affected as well because coordination structures supported by WHO lost staff and logistical capacity. This made it harder to detect and respond to outbreaks, even as cases of measles, malaria, and other infectious diseases increased. Social restrictions, including limits on women’s employment, further complicated access to healthcare services by reducing the availability of female healthcare providers. When facilities closed, these barriers intensified, disproportionately affecting women and children.
The perspective highlights how funding reductions interact with existing vulnerabilities, particularly in fragile settings. In such contexts, the withdrawal of international assistance can quickly move beyond service disruptions and contribute to the collapse of entire healthcare systems.
To address these challenges, the paper proposes a governance approach known as “transition discipline.” This framework suggests that aid withdrawal should follow clear rules designed to reduce harm. One key element is a defined grace period that allows countries time to adjust their budgets and maintain services during funding reductions. Another component is the protection of a minimum package of essential health services, including immunization, maternal care, and disease monitoring. The framework also calls for joint transition plans between donors and national governments to clarify responsibilities and ensure a coordinated approach.
The experiences of Nepal and Afghanistan illustrate the broader implications for global health policy. As international health funding declines, there is growing recognition that resilience alone is not enough to protect healthcare systems. Instead, experts argue that the process of withdrawing aid must also be governed carefully to prevent avoidable disruptions. By improving coordination, accountability, and planning between donors and recipient countries, global health systems could better safeguard essential services and reduce the impact of funding transitions on vulnerable populations.







