Policy
WMA's Policies on Ethical and Social Issues
The Handbook of WMA Policy is issued as a record of the World Medical Association’s stance on a variety of ethical and social issues. The issues are usually important factors in human health and are relevant to physicians worldwide. Some of the Declarations have needed revision in light of new knowledge or to improve the sometimes awkward wording that inevitably occurs when people of different tongues deliberate together. This dynamic process shows that the WMA is a constantly evolving, unique organization, ideal to act as a protector of patients’ best interests, and as advocates for the medical profession.
We distinguish three types of policies*:
A Declaration or Statement reflects WMA policy on an issue considered to be of significance, to be universally applicable and embodying principles that endure over time. A distinction is made between a Declaration, which is broad in scope, and a Statement, which is limited in scope.
A Resolution expresses WMA’s reaction to a specific, usually urgent, situation.
As of October 2024 we have 37 Declarations, 111 Statements and 57 Resolutions. All declarations and statements are reviewed at least every 10 years, and all resolutions are reviewed every 5 years.
In addition, the WMA Council can issue Council Resolutions to react publicly on urgent issues. When adopted by the General Assembly, they become WMA policy.
*According to the Procedures and Operating Policies of the World Medical Association, Chapter 4. Procedures for the Formulation of Declarations, Statements and Resolutions
- WMA Statement on Aesthetic Treatment (revised)
- WMA Statement on Ageing (revised)
- WMA Statement on Artificial and Augmented Intelligence in Medical Care
- WMA Statement on Conflict of Interest (revised)
- WMA Statement on Dementia
- WMA Statement on Ethical Considerations in Global Clinical Electives (revised)
- WMA Statement on Ethical Guidelines for the International Migration of Physicians (revised)
- WMA Statement on Nuclear Weapons (revised)
- WMA Statement on Obesity
- WMA Statement on Physician Mental Health Care
- WMA Statement on Physicians Well-Being (revised)
- WMA Statement on Providing Health Support to Children in Street Situations (revised)
- WMA Statement on Scope of Practice, Task Sharing and Task Shifting (revised)
- WMA Statement on the Protection of Reproductive Health Rights of Women and Girls
- WMA Statement on Trans People (revised)
- WMA Resolution Calling on the Israeli Government to Comply with the Geneva Conventions and Other Applicable Instruments of Humanitarian Law
- WMA Resolution on Ageing Physicians
- WMA Resolution on Health Workforce at the World Health Organisation (WHO)
- WMA Resolution on Public Health Funding Worldwide
- WMA Resolution on the Role of Physician Associates and Other Non-Physician Providers in the United Kingdom and Other Countries
- WMA Resolution on the Use of Riot Control Agents and Human Rights Violations against Protesters in Turkey (revised)
- WMA Resolution to Uphold the Ethical Framework of Healthcare
Policies reaffirmed by the 229th Council Session, Montevideo, April 2025 and the 230th Council Session, Porto, October 2025
- WMA Statement on Injury Control (with minor revision)
- WMA Resolution on Abuse of Psychiatry (with minor revision)
- WMA Resolution on Academic Sanctions or Boycotts (with minor revision)
- WMA Resolution on Child Safety in Air Travel (with minor revision)
- WMA Resolution on Human Rights Violations against Uighur people in China
- WMA Resolution on Standardisation in Medical Practice and Patient Safety
- WMA Resolution on the Designation of an Annual Medical Ethics Day (with minor revision)
- WMA Resolution Regarding the Medical Profession and COVID-19 (with minor revision)
- WMA Resolution Supporting the Rights of Patients and Physicians in the Islamic Republic of Iran (with minor revision)
Policy Handbook English-Version 2025 (printed in May 2025; 11 MB)