#13,715
For the next three days (Dec 4th-6th) more than 40 countries around the world will be participating in a virtual pandemic simulation exercise, organized and conducted by the WHO Global Emergency Operations Centre (WHO EOC).
With another pandemic considered all but inevitable, exercises like this can help identify weaknesses in existing plans and preparations, and increase international cooperation.I've been lucky enough to participate in a couple of similar exercises held by the HHS/CDC in 2008 for H5N1 and 2009 for the H1N1 pandemic (see HHS Pandemic Exercise & To D.C. & Back), and so I appreciate their value.
Last May, in CLADE X: Archived Video & Recap, we were able to observe a live day-long internet-streamed tabletop exercise organized by Johns Hopkins.
If you haven't time to watch the entire 8 hour exercise, I would urge you to view the 5 minute wrap up video. It will give you some idea of the possible impact of a severe - but not necessarily `worst case' - pandemic.The WHO statement and a link to the FAQ on this week's exercise follow:
Simulation exercise puts global pandemic readiness to the test
3 December 2018
A simulation for a global pandemic response involving more than 40 countries will take place 4-6 December, 2018, coordinated by the World Health Organization’s Global Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) and by the EOC Network, a global network of health emergency operations centres. This is the first global pandemic response training exercise, and the third in a series of simulations this year, following regional exercises in Jordan and Senegal.
National and regional EOCs from around the world will take part in the interactive scenario, responding to emailed inputs from the WHO EOC. The scenario will revolve around an outbreak of influenza with pandemic potential on the fictional island nation of Mizzou, located off the coast of North America.
There is no actual virus: this is an internet training exercise. The training exercise takes place only within the offices of national and international EOCs. There is no deployment of people or goods. The exercise will not affect public or official activity.
The exercise is occurring on the centenary of the 1918 influenza pandemic (“Spanish flu”), which is estimated to have infected one third of the global population and resulted in the deaths of millions of people. The most recent global flu pandemic occurred about a decade ago. These events occur periodically and it is only a matter of a time before another global pandemic occurs. Member States have been working diligently with WHO to be prepared for the next event.
The exercise offers participants a way to test their plans and capabilities in a realistic environment to gain an in-depth experience that can best be achieved by practice. Evaluators drawn from Asia, North America, Europe, and Africa will be watching how the participating EOCs perform in real time, measuring performance against what is expected from existing procedures. This experience will identify gaps and areas for opportunity that will ultimately help in the assessment and improvement of Member States’ readiness to respond jointly and effectively to a global public health emergency. The exercise is only a part of the many ways WHO supports countries to be ready for global health emergencies.
Global EOC Exercise (GEOCX) FAQ (5 page PDF)