|
Two new documents are now online.
The
first is the Pan American Health Organization's Strategic Plan for a secure
and disaster-resilient health sector, covering the period 2008-12.
This document is in line with PAHO's overarching Strategic
Plan for the same period, which responds to the long-term Health Agenda
for the Americas, a collective call to action and an instrument to "guide
the collective action of national and international stakeholders who seek
to improve the health of the peoples of this Region." The countries
of Latin America and the Caribbean have made considerable progress in
reducing the health impact of major emergencies and disasters. Although
national level disaster preparedness is relatively well-advanced in the
Americas, historically our work has tended to progress in isolation from
initiatives in other regions of the world. The last five years has shown
us that more and more institutional players are becoming active in the
health preparedness and risk reduction field and that we can no longer
be an ‘island’, separated from the broader international health
community. The Strategic Plan can be downloaded
here.
The
second is a discussion paper on global humanitarian trends
and their potential impact on the countries of the Americas that was prepared
in response to conversations with regional health authorities. This document
was discussed at and revised following a high-level consultation in April.
The topic of disaster management has grown steadily and gained an increasingly
important place on the health agenda of countries in Latin America and
the Caribbean. However, the increasing number of actors, the improved
capacity at local and regional level and globalization is quickly changing
how we deal with risk reduction and disaster management. To address this
changing environment, PAHO/WHO organized a high-level consultation to
analyze the situation and revise a position paper written to keep the
Region's ministries of health and other actors abreast of what may be
in store when a major disaster occurs. The Executive Report of the deliberations
of this meeting, a list of participants and the revised
discussion paper can be downloaded
here.
|