China was openly accused of a cover-up with SARS, and few professionals are confident that anything has changed.42 Chan maintains that while “it is still uncertain whether this sovereign concern will trump the provision of global public good for health. Nevertheless, in a highly globalizing world, infectious diseases know no border. While China is seeking to adhere as much as possible to the underlying norms and rules of global institutions,” reemphasizing that China after SARS “perhaps [needs] to reframe health as a global public good that is available to each and every individual of the world, rather than merely as an issue of concern to nation-states.”37