Préparation aux situations d’urgence et protection contre les catastrophes
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arrowEarthquake in Haiti 
 Tuesday, 12 January 2010 
   
arrowEmergency Medical Services 
 WHO/Europe supports Member States in developing improvements and major reforms of emergency services within the health systems. 
   
arrowProtecting health from climate change initiative 
 A seven-country initiative in the eastern part of the WHO European Region. 
   
arrowHealth Cluster Guide [Site du Siège de l’OMS] 
 This Guide advocates a way for the Health Cluster lead agency, the health cluster coordinator and the health cluster partners to work together during a humanitarian crisis to achieve the aims of reducing avoidable mortality, morbidity and disability, and to restore the delivery of equitable access to preventive and curative health care as quickly as possible. 
   
arrowHospital Emergency Preparedness workshops with focus on Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 [Lien externe] 
 Three WHO workshops were organized in Durres, Albania, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova and Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. The workshops took place in September and October of 2009. 
   
arrowHospital preparedness checklist, Focus on pandemic (H1N1) 2009 [pdf, 1MB] 
 This checklist provides the key actions to be carried out in the context of a continuous hospital emergency preparedness process for pandemic influenza, highlighting pandemic (H1N1) 2009 specifics. 
 Également disponible en : en[pdf, 1MB], ru[pdf, 1MB] 
   
arrowNewsletter, July/December 2009 [pdf, 571KB] 
 This newsletter focuses on three hospital emergency preparedness workshops, three health system crisis preparedness assessments, the second public health and emergency management course in Israel and finally the International Day for Disaster Reduction. 
 [EN seulement] 
   
arrowWorld Health Day 2009 
 Save lives. Make hospitals safe in emergencies 
   
 

Boy at camp.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Disasters, both natural and human-made, can affect every community. During and in the wake of a disaster, people suffer - in silence or in the public eye, but always in a state of uncertainty and sometimes despair.
Communities are particularly vulnerable when local and national systems, specifically health systems, are unable to cope with the consequences of a crisis. This may be because they are overwhelmed by a sudden increase in demand or because the institutions that underpin them are weak and cannot deliver what is expected from them.

Crises can be triggered by:

  • sudden catastrophic events - such as earthquakes, floods and industrial accidents;
  • complex and continuing emergencies - including violent conflict, population displacement or dramatic political change;
  • slow onset processes - such as the gradual breakdown of a country's social institutions due to economic decline, environmental pollution or degradation, or the impact of an evolving pandemic.

While disasters are often unpredictable, the damage and loss they cause can be mitigated or in part prevented. The WHO Regional Office for Europe works closely with Member States and international and national partners to help communities prepare for disasters, deal with their health consequences and mitigate their long-term effects.