| Literature DB >> 24646607 |
Laura N Medford-Davis, G Bobby Kapur1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One hundred ninety-four member nations turn to the World Health Organization (WHO) for guidance and assistance during disasters. Purposes of disaster communication include preventing panic, promoting appropriate health behaviors, coordinating response among stakeholders, advocating for affected populations, and mobilizing resources.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24646607 PMCID: PMC4000058 DOI: 10.1186/1865-1380-7-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Emerg Med ISSN: 1865-1372
Crisis types
| Crisis length | |
| Acute | 21 (81%) |
| Chronic | 5 (19%) |
| Crisis type | |
| Natural disaster | 13 (50%) |
| Outbreak | 11 (42%) |
| Conflict | 2 (8%) |
| Deployment location | |
| Field | 10 (39%) |
| Country office | 7 (27%) |
| Field and country office | 5 (19%) |
| Regional office | 3 (11%) |
| Headquarters | 1 (4%) |
| Arrived how long after crisis started | |
| First 72 h | 3 (12%) |
| 3 days–1 week | 6 (23%) |
| 1 week–1 month | 6 (23%) |
| Greater than 1 month | 11 (42%) |
Suggested communications role for WHO during a disaster response
| Develop and maintain internal and external contact lists | 3 (11.5%) |
| Take meeting minutes; share information between WHO team members | 13 (50%) |
| Send daily updates to RO and HQ | 17 (65%) |
| Write situation reports | 19 (73%) |
| Develop a communications strategy | 24 (92%) |
| Draft talking points and Q&As | 17 (65%) |
| Draft press releases | 14 (54%) |
| Organize press conferences | 13 (50%) |
| Respond to media queries | 10 (38%) |
| Media monitoring | 5 (19%) |
| Document the crisis response | 13 (50%) |
| Develop feature stories | 11 (42%) |
| Update the website | 9 (35%) |
| Write donor reports | 3 (11.5%) |
| Write grant proposals | 1 (4%) |
| Provide technical support for government communications; give public visibility to government response efforts | 7 (27%) |
| Coordinate data and communications strategy | 6 (23%) |
| Health promotion and social mobilization | 12 (46%) |
Recommended skillset for a disaster communications expert
| Professional skills | |
| Managerial skills: able to lead a communications team to coordinate a communications strategy | 18 (70%) |
| Effective writing and editing skills | 15 (58%) |
| Media relations experience | 12 (46%) |
| Analytical skills: able to synthesize large volumes of technical information into concise common language | 3 (12%) |
| Technical skills | |
| Photography and videography: able to record and edit | 24 (92%) |
| Public health literacy | 12 (46%) |
| Computer proficiency | 6 (23%) |
| Working use of English and preferably the local language | 7 (27%) |
| Interpersonal skills and helpful personality traits | |
| Team player: able to work on a team with people from diverse cultural and professional backgrounds | 14 (54%) |
| Diplomatic and respectful in complex socio-cultural-political contexts | 12 (46%) |
| Remains calm under stress | 10 (38%) |
| Willing to work in hardship conditions | 10 (38%) |
| Flexible | 8 (31%) |
| Proactive | 6 (23%) |
| Able to multi-task | 6 (23%) |
| Resourceful, able to improvise | 4 (15%) |
| Able to quickly assess a rapidly evolving situation and act quickly and decisively | 4 (15%) |
Trainings for a communications officer prior to deployment
| Communications | 12 (46%) |
| Designing a crisis communications strategy | |
| How to manage and coordinate an emergency communications team | |
| Presentation and media spokesperson skills | 7 (27%) |
| Humanizing statistics for a general audience | |
| Simulation in a rapidly evolving, high-stress environment | |
| Disaster standards and guidelines | 7 (27%) |
| Sphere Handbook | |
| OSHA | |
| UN and health cluster structure | |
| Public health | 8 (31%) |
| Epidemiology, basic statistics | |
| Types of disasters and their health consequences | |
| Myths and realities of health during a disaster | |
| Personal effectiveness | 6 (23%) |
| Basic life support and first aid | |
| Security precautions | |
| Coping with stress | |
| IT | 3 (12%) |
| How to use a satellite phone | |
| Establishing phone and internet connections in remote locations |
Recommendations to improve communications capacity prior to a crisis
| Develop and pre-write or pre-record common public service announcements in multiple languages on questions that frequently arise during crises | 7 (26%) |
| Maintain a database of statistics for various regions and types of crisis | 2 (8%) |
| Maintain lists for all frequently affected countries and regions of the locally trusted media outlets and sources of information | 3 (12%) |
| Maintain email listservs that can be used to rapidly disseminate information to your organization’s employees, international media outlet contacts, government Ministries of Health, and non-governmental organization contacts | 3 (12%) |
| Develop a global network with 24-h cross-coverage by participants from each time zone | 2 (8%) |
| Create a central electronic sharepoint where all of these materials can be accessed by communications officers around the globe when crisis strikes | 1 (4%) |
Figure 1Location of WHO regions and headquarters [20].
Examples of disaster messages to prepare in advance
| Dead bodies killed by natural disaster and conflict do not carry disease | X | X | X | | |
| Avoiding waterborne illness; sterilizing water | X | X | | X | X |
| Basic wound care and first aid | X | X | X | | |
| Vaccines and immunizations | X | X | X | X | |
| Personal protective equipment to avoid secondary injury | X | X | | X | X |
| Power outage safety: staying warm (or cool depending on the local weather conditions) | X | X | X | | |
| Power outage safety: carbon monoxide poisoning | X | X | X | | |
| Safety around loose power lines | X | X | | | |
| Identifying and avoiding gas leaks | X | X | | | |
| Do not send bulk donations; wait for specific requests | X | X | X |