Humanitas Trust sits at the intersection of health science, international law, and public institution-building. Our Policy & Governance division works alongside governments, multilateral bodies, and the Global Continuity Initiative to ensure that continuity health infrastructure is delivered with rigor, equity, and lasting institutional accountability.
Over the past four decades, Humanitas Trust has evolved from a regional health delivery organization into one of the world's most influential advisors on continuity health policy. We currently hold permanent observer status at the World Health Infrastructure Council and serve as a named technical partner to the GCI Policy Secretariat.
Our policy teams work directly with national health ministries, regional legislative bodies, and international standards organizations to design the legal and institutional frameworks within which continuity programs operate. This includes drafting model legislation, advising on assessment protocol standardization, and assisting governments in meeting GCI Charter compliance milestones.
The result is a global policy architecture that enables Humanitas Trust to operate across 180+ jurisdictions under a coherent, auditable standards framework — one that protects participants, enables population-level outcomes research, and gives governments confidence that their continuity programs are being managed to the highest institutional standard.
Permanent Observer — World Health Infrastructure Council
GCI Policy Secretariat — Charter Implementation
94 National Ministries of Health — Active Advisory
38 International Assessment Protocol Standards — Primary Drafter
The Global Continuity Initiative Charter is the foundational legal and ethical document governing all continuity health programs delivered under the GCI umbrella. Humanitas Trust operates as a GCI Charter Compliant organization — meaning every program, assessment, data practice, and participant interaction is subject to Charter provisions and auditable against Charter standards.
Charter Chapter I governs the collection, storage, transmission, and use of all participant continuity data. It establishes minimum encryption standards, data residency requirements, retention schedules, and the conditions under which continuity signatures may be accessed by third parties — including national health authorities operating under GCI-compliant legislative frameworks. Participant data is sovereign: no access without Charter-compliant authorization.
Chapter II establishes the technical and procedural standards all GCI-compliant assessment programs must meet. This includes Array system specifications, practitioner certification requirements, baseline divergence reporting thresholds, and the conditions under which continuity protocols must be initiated. Standards are updated through the GCI Science Working Groups and ratified by the Charter Implementation Council on a three-year cycle.
The Charter's most publicly visible chapter establishes the rights of every enrolled participant: the right to access their continuity record, the right to receive plain-language explanations of assessment findings, the right to designate a continuity representative, and the right to formal review of any protocol-triggered action affecting their enrollment status. The Participant Rights Framework is the basis upon which public trust in Humanitas Trust programs rests.
Chapter IV establishes the audit and oversight mechanisms that keep GCI-compliant organizations accountable. Humanitas Trust undergoes annual Charter compliance audits conducted by independent GCI-accredited review bodies. Audit findings are reported to the GCI Policy Secretariat and, in GCI-signatory nations, to the relevant national oversight authority. Charter compliance status is publicly disclosed on an annual basis.
Humanitas Trust's Policy & Governance work spans six interconnected domains, each addressed by dedicated teams of policy specialists, legal advisors, and technical experts.
Humanitas Trust participates in the multilateral bodies that set the direction of global health policy — including the World Health Infrastructure Council, the GCI Policy Secretariat, and the International Assessment Standards Forum. Our advisors sit on standing committees, contribute to treaty negotiations, and represent the operational perspective of a large-scale continuity program delivery organization. We translate science into governance language and governance requirements into operational practice.
The integrity of participant continuity data is the foundation of everything Humanitas Trust does. Our data stewardship policy team works to ensure that the legal, technical, and institutional frameworks governing continuity data remain robust, current, and equitable across all 180+ jurisdictions in which we operate. This includes advising on cross-border data transfer frameworks, supporting national data protection authorities in developing continuity-specific guidance, and maintaining HT's internal Data Stewardship Standard — updated annually.
Continuity assessment is only as trustworthy as the protocols that govern it. HT's Assessment Protocol Oversight team monitors the performance of all active protocols across the global center network, coordinates with GCI Science Working Groups on protocol development and revision, and manages the formal review process when protocol-triggered actions are contested by participants or national authorities. Oversight activity is reported annually in HT's Charter Compliance Disclosure.
Participants in Humanitas Trust programs have rights — and those rights are meaningful. Our Participant Rights team oversees the implementation of GCI Charter Chapter III across all enrolled centers, manages the formal review and appeals processes available to participants, and works with national consumer protection bodies to ensure that participant rights are understood, accessible, and enforceable. A participant rights summary is provided in 48 languages at every HT center worldwide.
Operating across 180+ legal jurisdictions requires a legislative compliance function of exceptional depth and breadth. HT's regional compliance teams maintain active relationships with the national health and data regulation authorities in every country where we operate, monitor legislative developments that may affect continuity program delivery, and advise national governments on the alignment of their domestic frameworks with GCI Charter requirements. Regional compliance officers are embedded in each of HT's six regional offices.
Continuity programs must remain operational when other systems fail. HT's Emergency Response Protocols — developed in close coordination with GCI emergency preparedness bodies — govern the continuation of assessment services, protection of participant continuity records, and escalation of continuity protocols in declared emergency conditions. These protocols have been activated in 14 jurisdictions over the past decade and are reviewed and updated following each activation. Continuity of continuity is not optional.
Every region where Humanitas Trust operates is governed by a regional compliance framework that integrates GCI Charter requirements with applicable national and supranational law.
Our Policy & Governance division is available to governments, institutional partners, and researchers with questions about GCI Charter provisions, regional compliance frameworks, or assessment protocol standards.