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LIBERIA COMPREHENSIVE EBOLA RESPONSE DASHBOARD
Version of 26 December 2014
Disclaimer: the information presented here is collected for management information purposes only and is not intended for publication. The information included does not represent official statements by either the Government of Liberia or its partners.
99.8%
Social mobilisation
Required social mobilizers recruited
82/ 640
Case management
Occupied beds vs current bed
capacity
30%
Psychosocial
Required psychosocial
workers recruited
66%
Epi laboratory
Available spare capacity
27%
Non-Ebola healthcare
Triages at regular health facilities open
5 out of 15
Contact tracing
Counties with inadequate
contact tracing
Summary 1 of 3: Medical Response
Key outstanding actions
1. Roll out mouth swab to other counties especially Bong county
2. Survivors registration started. Need partners to provide survivors kit
3. Provide awareness (training ) for funeral homes to reduce unsafe burial at the community level
4. Provide psychosocial support services to burial teams
5. To develop food and water supply plan & secure funding for Montserrado ETUs
6. Continue integration of people doing contact tracing, social mobilisation and focus on active case finding
7. Speed up opening of Interim Care Center (ICC) in Bong County
8. Need to release funding for Psychosocial personnel training
9. Develop supply plans for all facilities to allow planning by Logistics (ETU, CCC, regular health facilities)
10. Accelerate roll out plan for triages at regular health facilities
98%
Body management
Bodies collected within 24 hours
Cemetery operational
Tren
d on
la
st w
eek
Ok, training ongoing
Scale Up Still Awaiting
Release of Funding
Need to focus on 5 counties
with poor coverage
Ok Cemetery opened
Data still poor on
clinic status
Ok, RITE Implement
ation ongoin
5 out of 19
Medical planning
Key medical supplies with less
than 1 week stock/pipeline
80%
Finance of ebola
response
Of Ebola Funding
Requirement Committed
Summary 2 of 3: Non-medical Support Response
Key outstanding actions
1. 5 categories of medical supplies needed immediately
2. Need comprehensive picture of who is supplying
what, critical for log cluster forecasts and dispatch
plans
3. Airport runway tarmac plan critical
4. Ensure real-time information for decision making and
improve dispatch plans from partners in order to
provide visibility and planning of the supply chain
5. Launch package of interventions for desludging of
latrines and sceptic tanks at ETUs in Greater Monrovia
6. Airport processes to allow faster dispatch of incoming
commodities
7. Address Guinea border problems for ebola cargo
8. Log Cluster to provide county maps showing ETUs,
CCCs, and other facilities served by each FLB
9. LogCluster to send information on availability of
donated Maersk containers for partner use.
10. There is an urgent need to dispatch more cargo from
the Main Hub to the rest of the country
5 out of 5
Logistics
Forward Logistics Bases have land
allocated
18%
WASH
Percentage of Planned WASH
activities completed
Epi-Data
Awaiting indicator
3 out of 7
Border controls
Regular Airlines Operating
33%
Education system
Teachers trained in EVD
1
Development projects
Health care facility for international
project and concession workers
24
Communication
Targeted Ebola Daily Press
Briefings Held
100%
Economic impact
Markets allowed to be
open
Summary 3 of 3: Response to the Consequences of Ebola
Stable
Security
Security Situation
Key outstanding actions
1. Food and livelihood assistance needed for EVD affected
2. Identify health support (e.g scale up Aspen Clinic support) needed to encourage concession workers & development project contractor
3. Funding needed for budget shortfall to support short term stimulus activities
5. Continue to hold ebola working session for media managers
6. Ensure all community radio stations are transmitting daily ebola press conference
7. Re-launch critical development projects
8. Develop modules for airing of radio education programs
9. Train teachers in EVD prevention
10. Re-open schools by January 2015
23%
Food security
Increase in price of rice since August
Annex 1. Social mobilization & communications
Plan for achieving objective Current Status and Actions Underway
Establish robust, evidence-based strategic framework for all social mob efforts
10 county approached: completed qualitative component field work in all 6 planned counties; completed quantitative components in 5 of 6 counties-data analysis to begin in parallel Ongoing quantitative survey work in 4 additional counties to expand understanding.
Establish ‘single source’ information platform accessible to all partners
Developed key message Guidance Package covering: Health Promotion Network has begun dissemination key on the Ebola must campaign. messages on safe burial practices, signs and symptoms, prevention, available services and treatment at ETUs, contacts and contact tracing, survivors and stigma and community engagements. Strengthened coordination with community radio station managers. MERCI CORPS, ICRC and other partners coordinating community engagements on outbreak in Yekepa, Nimba County.
Establish coordinated network of at least 10,000 trained social mobilizers
15,175(chiefs, elders, religious leaders, youth groups, woman groups CHVs, peer educators, motor cyclists, survivors including gchvs) have been trained in social mobilization activities in 83 districts in 14 counties.
Establish supervisory, reporting & monitoring system
Reports from the various communities, towns, villages are being collected by the DHO and submitted to the CHT on a weekly basis. There is a need for central level supervision and monitoring of those activities.
Establish ‘near real-time’ behavioral surveillance mechanism
The national strategy “EBOLA MUST GO”. Current messages on election and healthy holidays; anti Ebola regulations disseminated and printed in booklets for the public; save burial messages updated National cemetery Transition away from cremation and vaccine trials in process
225 570
270 684
360 912
315 797
180 366
180 5659
219 570
360 912
315 797
270 684
408
697
345
414
414
180 5659
225 570
180 366
180 456
270 684
# of gCHVs trained
# of Chiefs trained
114400
14500
14600
14700
14800
14900
15000
15100
15200
15300
15175 15203
Current Target
Training
Annex 2A: Case ManagementPlan for achieving objective Current Status and Actions UnderwayEnsure a total of 29 ETUs with adequate coverage in each county
14 ETUs are functioning in the country . Zwedru ETU opened last weekend but has not admitted patients. German ETU was commissioned on December 22.Montserrado now has 430 beds; MSF pulled out of Lofa and the ETU is now serving as a CCC run by Samaritan Purse, Bong 51 beds; Nimba 36; Margibi 51, MMU 22beds, Bomi 20 beds, total beds available in country is 640 beds, with beds now available in part of the Southeast of the country.
ETU construction has been steady in all the counties.Establishment of 78 CCCs, starting with 15 new priorities (UNICEF)
6 CCCs are operational, 8 CCCs are currently under construction by UNICEF, and three CCCs will soon be opened in Montserrado by eHealth.
Identify trained staff and essential supply requirements for ETUs and CCCs
MoH/WHO/DoD-- 240 staff being trained per week in cold training, 40 hot training per week at MOD1, 20 hot training at IMC per week. Essential supplies issues are being sorted out for ETUs and CCCs. RITE kits have been set up at central IMS and will now be prepositioned in the counties.
Conduct active case finding for hotspots RITE Strategy has been launched and there is an ongoing assessment of counties preparedness.
Increase number of ambulances 43 ambulances have been deployed in the response as at November 28. ( Bomi-5, Gbarpolu-2, Grand Bassa-1, Capemount-5Grand Gedeh-3, Lofa-1,Margibi-2, Maryland-1, Montserrado-15, Nimba-2 , Rivercess-2, Rivergee-1, Sinoe-2; Grand kru-1)
Date updated: 23/12
02468
10121416
6
15Priority CCCs as of Dec 23.
Constructed Priority CCCs Target Priority CCCs
CCcSTARGETS UNDER REVIEW
0500
1,0001,5002,0002,500
82640
1000
2,169ETU beds as of Dec 23.
Occupied BedsCurrent available ETU beds in countryInitial planned bed capacityPotential Capacity at Planned ETUs
Bed
capa
city
& n
eeds
ETU data – 23rd December 2014ETU Name Current
CapacityTotal
patientsTotal
confirmed patients
Total beds free
PartnersPotential
capacity- all wards
New admissions last 2 days
Notes
Bomi (Tubmanburg) 20 2 2 18 IOM 100 0
Bong (Suakoko) 51 11 9 40 IMC 71 5 No report - Data from 21 Dec
Grand Gedeh (Zwedru) 10 0 0 10 PIH 50 0 Margibi (Firestone) 31 0 0 31 Firestone 31 0
Margibi (Kakata) 20 1 0 19 IMC 70 0 No report - Data from 21 Dec
Margibi (Monrovia Medical Unit) 22 1 0 21 USPHS 25 1
Montserrado (Unity Conference Centre) 30 1 1 29 MOHSW 96 0
Montserrado (Chinese ETU) 50 10 1 40 Chinese FMT 100 5
Montserrado (ELWA 2) 100 3 0 97 MOHSW/WHO 100 0 Montserrado (ELWA 3) 60 26 21 34 MSF 250 9 Montserrado (Island
Clinic) 150 18 10 132 WHO/MOHSW 150 4
Montserrado (MoD) 40 5 2 35 AU / Cuban FMT / MOHSW / MSB 100 3
Montserrado (SKDII) 20 COMMISSIONED 12/23 German Red Cross / Army 100 0
Nimba (Ganta United Methodist Hospital) 36 4 1 32 Nimba CHT / PCI 36 3
First confirmed in more than 62 days - from
Guinea
Total 640 82 47 538 Uneven distribution across the country 1279 30
Date updated: 23/12
Total patients using ETUs over time
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
Total patients
Date updated: 23/12
CCC data – 23rd December 2014CCC Name Current
CapacityTotal
patientsTotal
confirmed patients
Total beds free
PartnersPotential
capacity- all wards
Number triage in the last 2 days
Notes
Grand Cape Mount (Jene Wonde RRC) 8 No report MTI, eHealth 8 CCC team working on
reporting system
Margibi (Dolo's Town Clinic) 30 0 0 30 Save The Children 30 1 CCC team working on
reporting system
Margibi (Wohrn Clinic) 30 1 0 29 Save The Children 30 1 CCC team working on reporting system
River Gee (Fish Town Hospital) 15 0 0 15 Samaritans Purse 15 0 CCC team working on
reporting system
Lofa (Zorzor) 10 No report Samaritans Purse 10 CCC team working on reporting system
Lofa (Foya) 10 No report Samaritans Purse 10 CCC team working on reporting system
River Cess (Gozohn RCC) MSF CCC team working on
reporting system
Gbarpolu (Chief Jallah Lone Clinic) TBC CCC team working on
reporting system
Grand Bassa (Quewein) MSF CCC team working on
reporting systemTotal 103 1 0 74 103 2
Date updated: 23/12
ETUs Planned
No Location CountyPartners - construction
Planned Date Construction Finished Planned Open date Partners
Maximum bed capacity
Initial beds
1 Bopulu Gbarpolu DoD/AFL 12/25/2014 Week of 1/10/15 PAE / Aspen 50 10
2 Buchanan Grand Bassa DoD/AFL Completed 12/7/2014 IOM 50 10
3 SinjeGrand Cape Mount DoD/AFL Completed 12/15/2014 IOM 50 10
4 Barclayville Grand Kru DoD/AFL 12/30/2014 Week of 1/3/15 PAE / Aspen 50 10
5 Zorzor Lofa DoD/AFL 12/19/2014 Week of 12/28/14 PAE / Aspen 50 10
6 Voinjama Lofa DoD/AFL 12/20/2014 Week of 12/20/14 WAHA / GOAL / PAE 50 10
7 Harper Maryland GAA 12/29/2014 Week of 1/2/15 PIH / PAE 50 10
8 MoD 2 Montserrado WFP Completed TRAINING SITE MOHSW / MSB 0 0
9 SKD 1 Montserrado WFP 12/15/2014 TBC IRC / USAID 100 10
10 Ganta Nimba DoD/AFL 12/18/2014 Week of 12/25/14 PCI 50 10
11 Tappita Nimba DoD/AFL 12/19/2014 Week of 12/20/14 HHI / PAE / Aspen 50 10
12 Gbediah Town River Cess DoD/AFL 12/25/2014 Week of 1/10/15 PAE / Aspen 50 10
13 Fishtown River Gee GAA 12/20/2014 Week of 1/11/15 ARC 50 10
14 Greenville Sinoe GAA 12/20/2014 Week of 12/29/14 PAE / MSB 50 10
Date updated: 23/12
CCCs PlannedNo Location County
Partners - construction
Planned Date Construction Finished Planned Open date Partners - management
Maximum bed capacity
Initial beds
1 Beh Town Clinic Bomi UNICEF 14-Dec-14 TBC Plan 15 TBC2 Haindi Bong UNICEF 14-Dec-14 TBC PCI 15 TBC3 Kpayeakwelleh Clinic Gbarpolu UNICEF 15-Jan-15 TBC Samaritan's Purse 15 TBC4 Morlaquila Gbarpolu UNMIL/CHT 14-Dec-14 TBC Samaritan's Purse 15 TBC5 Kongbor Clinic Gbarpolu UNICEF 14-Dec-14 TBC Samaritan's Purse 15 TBC6 John Logan Town Grand Bassa UNICEF 15-Jan-15 TBC Concern Worldwide 15 TBC
7 KeitaGrand Cape Mount UNICEF 24-Dec-14 TBC MTI 15 TBC
8Gbarzon Health Center Grand Gedeh UNICEF 31-Dec-14 TBC PIH 15 TBC
9 Niplikoi Clinic Grand Kru UNICEF TBC TBC Samaitans Purse 15 TBC
10 Konia Health Center LofaSamaritans Purse TBC TBC Samaritan's Purse 15 TBC
11 Pleebo Maryland UNICEF 22-Dec-14 TBC PIH 15 TBC12 Mount Barclay Cinic Montserrado eHealth TBC TBC Concern Worldwide 15 TBC13 Louisiana Clinic Montserrado eHealth TBC TBC Plan Int. 15 TBC14 Koon Town Clinic Montserrado eHealth TBC TBC Concern Worldwide 15 TBC15 Bensonville Hospital Montserrado eHealth TBC TBC Plan Int. 15 TBC
16Saclepea Comprehensive Nimba UNICEF 24-Dec-14 TBC PCI 15 TBC
17 Bahn Health Center Nimba UNICEF 24-Dec-14 TBC PCI 15 TBC18 St.Francis Hospital River Cess UNICEF 24-Dec-14 TBC PIH 15 TBC19 Gbeapo Health Center River Gee UNICEF 22-Dec-14 TBC Samaritan's Purse 15 TBC20 Karquekpo Clinic Sinoe UNICEF TBC TBC MTI 15 TBC21 Juaryen Clinic Sinoe UNICEF 31-Dec-14 TBC MTI 15 TBC22 Nyehn Health Center Montserrado MOHSW TBC TBC MOHSW 15 TBC
Date updated: 23/12
Annex 3. Mental Health/Psychosocial (MH/PSS)1-Updated: Dec. 24, 2014
Plan for achieving objectives
Current Status and Actions Underway
Provision of Mental Health/Psychosocial services to individuals and communities
Current: 737 persons received mh/pss services in Bomi, Montserrado, Grand Kru, Nimba group counseling and individual counseling. 30 CWCs members trained in child protection in Zorzor funded by USAID. SOS ICC begins work 12/22. STC trained 25 caregivers and SWs in PSS and CP in Bong County.Action: WHO trained 36 MHCs and social workers on mhpss support services
In community: increase mental health/psychosocial workers focused on affected, hcws, first responders
Current: 50 MHCs and 60 SWs in 10 counties; and 15 County SW Supervisors. UNICEF committed to additional 10 social worker in 5 counties. Action: Expand services to burial team. STALLED
Identify and appropriately place and support children separated from their families
Currently: 744 affected children identified in December. Total of 2,825 affected children (1,338 males and 1,487 females) currently receiving support either through their families and/or are placed at home/or in transitional home. Joint monitoring and supervision visit conducted by UNICEF and MOHSW in Cape Mont, Bomi and Gbapolu.Actions: UNICEF one time grant of $150 USD/child received by 572 children (Bong-30, Grand Geddeh-18, Nimba-9, Bomi-33, Bassa-15, Margibi-50, Lofa-230, Montserrado-162 and Cape Mont-25. 134 children from ETUs and ICCs reunified with their families. ICC opening in Bong still pending.
Team needs 1,000 available Psychosocial workers overall. (Timing: asap.)
Current: Proposed funding for 600 Mental health and Psychosocial workers from World Bank. Proposal developed and submitted. UNICEF to provide additional funding for 10 SWs and 2 supervisors for 3 months.Action: Agreement signed. Release of funds still pending.
Working with partners on provision of quality care
Current: New system for patients and family feedback whilst in the ETU implemented in Montserrado County. Developed plan with Montserrado County to second a MHPSS lead to work with the SW Supervisor to infuse in contact tracing.Action: Expand system to other counties. Began initial distribution of 1000 phones donated by UNICEF for ETUs across the country. Need ID for case investigation teams.
Implement plan to address survivor needs
Current: UNICEF pick up funding for 2 coordinators of Survivors Network Dec-Feb. Final survivors’ meeting for 2014 to be held on Dec. 18, 2014 with 141 survivors attending. BRAC, Lions Intl, UNICEF, ADRA offer to support Survivors. GSA completes distribution to some survivors.Action: Survivors registration started. Database has line listed 1351 survivors. Seeking funding for Survivors ID. Need to develop proposals and MOU for action.
47%53%
SexMaleFemale
0-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 51-60 61-70 71-80 81-90 91-100 Unknown0
200
400194 259
339 275168
64 26 7 0 1 18
EVD Surv ivors by age
Annex 4A. Contact TracingPlan for achieving objective Current Status and Actions UnderwayIdentified and follow up all persons who came in contact with a case
• 474 new cases, 2,752 new contacts and 236 new deaths were reported • A daily average of 23 cases, 131 contacts and 11 deaths were reported daily• 23.8% (113/474) of EVD cases were confirmed and an average daily confirmed cases of
5.4Follow-up every ‘contact’ in person, on a daily basis, for 21 days, to check for signs of symptoms.
• 5,347 contacts are under follow-up• 93% of current contacts are found in Montserrado (72%) and Margibi (21%) • 91% of new cases were found in Montserrado (49%), Grand Cape Mt (13%), Bong
(11%), Margibi (10%) and Grand Bassa (8%) • Case to contact ratio is 5.8
Recruit and train contact tracers at County, District (zonal) and community level responsible for conducting tracing and reporting
There are 5,845 contact tracers and active case finders nationwide
Mobilize resources to expand the number of contact tracers
Approaches • Implement contacts temperature monitoring by next week in Montserrado County• Introduce mobile technology for contact tracing by early January 2015 (2,000 phones
procured)• Recruit and deploy additional Epidemiologists, supervisors (8) and monitors (5) in
Montserrado
Update: 24/12
Indicators Baseline (Status) Targets
1 Percent of suspected cases with contact list 59%* 95%
2 Percent of confirmed and probable cases with contact list N/A 100%
3 Percent of cases and contacts reported within 48 hours 59%* 75%
4 Percent of contacts traced daily 92% 95%
5 Percent of contacts completing 21 days of follow-up 74% 80%
6 Percent of cases not listed on contact tracing list 33%** <5%
7 Percent of contacts that became cases, reported by tracers 6%*** <5%
8 Average number of contacts per case 5.4 10
Annex 4D. EVD Confirmed Cases (Dec 1-21)
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
1
9
19
6
4
7 7
4 4
15
4
2
7
10
7
2
5
34
2
EVD Confirmed Cases (Dec 1-21, 2014)
Annex 5A. Epi LaboratoryPlan for achieving objective Current Status and Actions UnderwayRun other tests along with Ebola increase Health care delivery during the phase of excluding Ebola,
All Labs currently have the capacity and are performing to some extend other test but need a request from the Government of Liberia to proceed on a large scale.The deceased samples are now been tested by LIBR , BONG ,and Island and the sensitivity is high.
Conduct a training Workshop for Medical Laboratory Practitioners on safe blood collection, packaging and transportation.
Training of 100 laboratory Practitioner on the safe phlebotomy and sample transportation approved. To start soonPlanning additional workshop for 91 Laboratory personnel in the safe blood collection, sample packaging and transportation.
Bring in additional staff and resources to maximise laboratory capacity especially for LIBR and to increase the number of phlebotomists
LIBR has capacity to train and serve as a training facility. Explore with partners needed resources to expand capacity
Review practice to ensure it meets required specifications
New desk officers to submit Lab SOPs for review – to confirm labs operate to minimum centralised safety standards (10/10)
Date competed: 10/12
Table showing current laboratory capacity
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 230
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Total number of samples tested in Ebola diag-nostic laboratories during November, 2014 (3-
day rolling average)
LIBR TotalBong TotalIsland TotalLofa TotalELWA Total
Day of November
Test
ed sa
mpl
es
Daily Capacity
LABS Etu served Current Projected Average
LIBR 8 120 180 40
ELWA 2 75 90 52
LOFA 1 80 90 6
ISLAND 3 80 100 60
BONG 2 80 100 25
TOTAL 16 395 560 183
Annex 5B. Current Laboratories and Possible Relocation
19
LBIR
Relocation to Sinje, Cape Mount approved
Laboratory Ebola Malaria Yellow Fever Lassa Others
ELWA: CDC – NIH PCR Malaria PCR
LIBR: CDC-NIH PCR
Bong: Navy PCR
Island clinic: Navy PCR
Sanniquellie –Nimba PCR
Zwedrou - Grand Gedeh PCR
Tapita (Nimba) PCR
Green Ville (Sinoe) PCR
Current Ebola Diagnostics and Technical Capabilities
Current Technical Capability but not performing
Annex 6. Body ManagementPlan for achieving objective Current Status and Actions Underway
Train & deploy sufficient safe burial teams across the country to conduct safe collection and burial.
Current status: 20 IFRC teams down to 14 but with potential to scale up to 20 + 6 GC teams in Monts; 51 GC teams across other counties. 8-12 Montserrado teams currently being used and doing training refresh. Plan for expansion: IFRC/GC able to quickly train additional 10 -15 in Monts.98% body pickups within 24 hours., IFRC 100% pickups in Monrovia within 24 hours
Ensure adequate supplies and storage facilities for body management teams through dedicated warehouse.
19th street warehouses now operational.
Develop sufficient crematorium and burial capacity
National Cemetery at Disco Hill now operational. Social Mobilization ongoing. National stakeholders forum planned.
Undertake actions (e.g. testing, identification etc) to ensure all collections and burials are happening safely.
Swabs being collected by IFRC teams but feedback is a problem. CDC have developed draft guidance but the final feedback and comms strategy needs to be agreed. GC teams being trained in swab testing and will support in all counties.
Date competed: 23/12
Burial Teams – by County
Maximum Teams
23-Nov 29-Nov 06-Dec
GC IFRC GC IFRC GC IFRC
Bomi 2 2 2 2 Bong 3 3 5 3 Gbarpolu 2 3 1 3 Grand Bassa 6 7 8 7 Grand Cape Mount 2 3 3 3 Grand Gedeh 1 2 1 2 Grand Kru 1 1 1 1 Lofa 7 7 7 7 Margibi 3 3 3 3 Maryland 1 2 2 2 Montserrado 35 6 16 6 16 6 16Nimba 5 4 4 4 Rivercess 2 2 2 2 RiverGee 1 1 1 1 Sinoe 1 2 2 2
Total 72 48 16 48 16 48 16
Percent of Maximum 89% 89% 89%
Target/ Percent of Target 65 98% 98% 98%
10/11/..
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11/11/..
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12/11/..
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13/11/..
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14/11/..
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15/11/..
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16/11/..
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17/11/..
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19/11/..
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20/11/..
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21/11/..
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22/11/..
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23/11/..
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24/11/..
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25/11/..
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.0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18 Total Collection by Response Time - Montserrado >48 hrs
24 - 48 Hrs
< 24 Hrs
Date of Collection
No. o
f Bod
ies
Annex 6b. Body ManagementDate competed: 5/12
15/10/2
014
17/10/2
014
19/10/2
014
21/10/2
014
23/10/2
014
25/10/2
014
27/10/2
014
29/10/2
014
31/10/2
014
02/11/2
014
04/11/2
014
06/11/2
014
08/11/2
014
10/11/2
014
12/11/2
014
14/11/2
014
16/11/2
014
18/11/2
014
20/11/2
014
22/11/2
014
24/11/2
014
26/11/2
014
28/11/2
0140
5
10
15
20
25
Burials outside Montserrado
> 48 hrs
24 - 48 hrs
< 24 hrs
11-Oct 18-Oct 25-Oct 1-Nov 8-Nov 15-Nov0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
13
9
8
14
11
12
1
2
1
1
10
7
6
3
10
6
2
2
17
2
Weekly burials by county outside Montserrado
River CessGrand BassaGbarpoluCape MountBomi
Hospitals open 131 out of 141 hospitals open(new data submitted this week) 93%
Non-ETU Health-workers names submitted to MDFP for Hazard Pay
7,679 out of 8,162 health workers
Some health workers have now received payment – see next slide
95%
Health facilities openData being worked on but many geographical challenges
150 out of 869 facilities checked139 facilities open; 11 closed; 719 unknown
TRIAGE system established in health facilities
27%182 out of 657 facilities (up 7% since 8 Nov)
Update on health worker pay:• 379 health workers have been placed GOL payroll between October and November 2014
Challenge on hazard pay:• Validation of HW lists submitted by counties for hazard payment (Duplication of acc numbers) Action: • Fast-track joint MFDP and MOH validation processesOther Challenges:• FARA reimbursement ( 2.6 Mil) and Y4 budget support still pending • Still awaiting transfer of the 6 million US dollars to MOH for support to partners for restoration activities in the 5 highly affected
counties
Annex 7. Status of Essential Health ServicesDate completed: 5/12
Processes involved with preparation for Triage Set Up in Health Facilities a) Conduct practical IPC Training for all HF staffb) Deliver IPC supplies after the trainingc) Identify IPC Focal point in facility to ensure adherence to IPC standards and protocols for staff
and patient safetyd) Safeguard HF : ensure 1 entry and 1 exit point in the facilitye) Construct and furnish temporary/permanent structure for screening (triage)f) Setup a holding station for isolation of suspected casesg) Set in place safe medical waste disposal system
Annex 7B. Update on triage: process and next steps
Challenges: • Infrastructural challenges for single entry and exit points within the facility• Behavior change• Inconsistent IPC practices• Inadequate IPC supplies leading to poor adherence to IPC protocols and standards and waste
disposalsAction: • Supportive supervision, mentoring and coaching of staff in health facilities• Assessment by WASH Consortium to be conducted soon to address waste disposal• Address infrastructural challenges in some facilities where needed
Updated on: 05/12
Annex 8A: Logistics ClusterMain Discussion Points• Humanitarian Passenger flights – following a user needs survey with partners, and a UNHAS user group meeting (to be
held Thursday 18 December) a new schedule will be drafted and once approved, will be published on the Logistics Cluster website.
• Forward Logistics Base (FLB) Updates- All 5 FLBs are operational. 3 FLBs have all 6 planned Mobile Storage Units (MSU) erected. Buchanan FLB has now all 4 planned MSUs completed and Harper FLB has 5 out of 6 MSUs completed.
• Dispatch plans and the Main Logistics Hub – 90% of the storage space in the Main Hub is full. There is an urgent need to dispatch more cargo from the Main Hub to the rest of the country.
• Rapid Isolation Treatment of Ebola (RITE): WFP has supported the humanitarian community in response to 2 different outbreaks, and so far has provided 3 RITE kits of supplies by air (Grand Cape Mount and 2 X Greenville)
• Detailed CCC and ETU Mapping: The logistics cluster is consolidating data from all its members to update the Please find in annex a list of zoomed- in maps of ETUs and CCCs for each relevant county.
Update on Action Items. Logistics Cluster:• Logcluster provided detailed casevac/medevac information for non-Ebola procedures for non-UN staff and all necessary
documents are now available on the logistics cluster website.• The logistics Cluster proposed an allocation plan for the 20 container donation of Maersk.• The logistics Cluster has informed the Swiss government of all received requests regarding their donation of generators
and lighting and handling equipment.
Outstanding actions:• Logistics Cluster to follow up with the distribution of the allocated Maersk containers• Logistics Cluster to enquire Maersk if any additional containers can be donated• Partners to offer more &detailed dispatch plans to the logistics Cluster to free the main logistics main hub from cargo.• Partners interested in OFDA stock on hand should contact DARTEbola_Logs@ofda.gov• Partners to share with the Logistics Cluster their storage locations and capacities across the country.• Partners to share any valuable country and county level information for GIS mapping purposes.
Updated on: 17/12
Annex 8B: Logistics Support by Cluster
Location County Partners - Management PPE Medical SuppliesNon-Medical Supplies
Drugs Chlorine
ELWA 2 Montserrado MOHSW/WHO MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW
ELWA 3 Montserrado MSF MSF-B MSF-B MSF-B MSF-B MSF-B
Island Montserrado WHO/AU/MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW
Suakoko Bong IMC IMC IMC IMC IMC MOHSW
Foya Lofa MSF MSF-B MSF-B MSF-B MSF-B MSF-B
Ganta Nimba Nimba CHT/ Methodist Church
Firestone Margibi Firestone Firestone Firestone Firestone Firestone Firestone
Tubmanburg Bomi Bomi CHT MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW
MoD Montserrado AU / Cuban FMT / MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW MOHSW
MOD 2 Montserrado Letter of Intent from MSB Sweden
SKD 1 Montserrado IRC IRC
For each Facility (ETU, CCC, regular health facility), need comprehensive picture of who is supplying what. This is critical for our forecasts and dispatch plans. An excerpt of information we are trying to collect is listed below:
Updated on: 10/12
Annex 9. Medical Planning: Supplies GapUpdated as of: December 13, 2014
KEY: <1 week (7 days) supply <2 week (14 days) supply
ONLY Includes requirements and days of stock for facilities using the MOHSW Supply Chain
Tremendous amount of PPE in country and in the pipeline for ETUs and CCCs; currently, the proportion of supplies in country for IPC is a constraint
Product Description UnitCurrent Stock Available for
MOHSW facilities
Stock in Pipeline for
MOHSW facilities
(1 month)
Forecast (1 month)
Days of Stock (Current)
Days of Stock (Current + Pipeline)
Forecast (1 month)
Days of Stock
(Current)
Days of Stock
(Current + Pipeline)
Body Bags (L) piece 4,095 5,600 10,170 12.3 29.1 11,379 11.0 26.0 Chlorine Powder (HTH 70%) Kg 164,023 30,000 65,230 76.7 90.7 89,404 56.0 66.2 PPE Suit - Hooded Coverall piece 257,854 450,000 24,196 325.0 892.3 108,346 72.6 199.3 PPE Hood Piece 84,600 - 171,148 15.1 15.1 274,125 9.4 9.4 Examination Gloves x100 Box 41,546 91 38,535 32.9 33.0 46,524 27.2 27.3 Face Mask (N95) piece 1,439,294 450,000 26,950 1,628.9 2,138.2 111,100 395.1 518.7 Face Mask - Surgical each 500,936 195,000 108,590 140.7 195.5 121,915 125.3 174.1 Impervious Gown piece 238 540,000 568,211 0.0 29.0 638,061 0.0 25.8 Face Shield - Flexible (Disposable) piece 940,720 540,000 579,860 49.5 77.9 691,785 41.5 65.3 Face Shield - Hard (Re-usable) Piece 4 102,685 1,109 0.1 2,825.3 1,245 0.1 2,515.7 Goggles Piece 45,777 50,000 11,590 120.5 252.1 29,161 47.9 100.2 Apron - Heavy Duty Plastic Reusable each 2,891 92,650 15,683 5.6 185.8 33,254 2.7 87.6 Heavy Duty Plastic Gloves pair 227,598 328,350 24,491 283.4 692.4 67,370 103.0 251.7 Rubber boot pair 44,832 81,590 6,697 204.2 575.8 8,280 165.2 465.7 Hand Sprayer (1 - 2L) piece 1,879 - 825 69.5 69.5 924 62.0 62.0 Backpack Sprayer (12-16L) piece 395 4,720 103 117.3 1,519.1 187 64.5 834.9 Anti Fog Cleaner (12 fl Oz) Bottle 171 - 11,512 0.5 0.5 38,370 0.1 0.1 Scrubs set 50 - 2,640 0.6 0.6 19,470 0.1 0.1
Scenario 1 - Current Sites, Current Capacity
Scenario 2 - Current Sites, Full Capacity
Scenario 1: Current Status 52 ETU beds filled (at MOHSW-supplied facilities), 6 operational CCCs, 585 non-ETU facilitiesScenario 2: Current Sites, Full Capacity Existing ETUs at full capacity (426 beds), 6 operational CCCs, 657 non-ETU facilities open
Annex 10: WASH for EbolaDate updated: 18/12
Humanitarian Response Two Sludge trucks from US-DART team will be handed over to UNICEF and Liberia Water and Sewer Corporation (LWSC) this week to start transporting liquid
sludge being overflowed in Septic tanks in two ETUs to the Fiamah (Monrovia) waste water treatment plant to store and treat infectious liquid waste. These septic tanks were emptied and temporarily stored in UNICEF provided poly tanks. With the funding assistance of USAID, UNICEF will get into an operational plan with Liberia Water and Sewer Corporation (LWSC) to continue emptying and transporting liquid infectious waste from ETUs. UNICEF, in consultation with infection prevention and control (IPC) experts from WHO and ICRC, is organizing a practical training session on handling of Waste by Operators and Drivers of sludge trucks of LWSC Subnational coordination has to be reinforced, and partners working in the EVD response should engage with the WASH cluster coordinators at county level.
The WASH Cluster Coordination group conducted a day long capacity building workshop on Integrated WASH assessment and monitoring for County level WASH Coordinators and other technical staff of MOPW. The main objective of the workshop was “Technical and coordination capacity development of WASH team at sub-national level in support to Ebola response using RITE (Rapid Isolation and Treatment of Ebola) approach”. A total of 35 participants attended including MOH environmental health staff and few NGO staff. Major focus of this workshop was on assessment and monitoring of WASH facilities, before and after installation, by MOPW county technical teams with available INGOs support. It was facilitated by MOPW Assistant Minister, National Cluster Coordinator, MOPW WASH Engineer, Public Health Engineer from OXFAM, UNICEF Cluster Coordinator and two UNICEF WASH specialists. WASH Cluster organized this workshop with financial, logistical and technical support of UNICEF Liberia.
WASH Cluster members have agreed to form five technical working groups (TWGs) in its last weekly meeting with a focal person as chair with an alternative to steer working group work and to report their activities to the Cluster meeting. The TWGs are: ETU/CCC; waste management; Integrated WASH assessment, Hygiene promotion and social mobilization and sub-national coordinator. Each TWGs will draft its major tasks in relation to Ebola response.
The Ministry of Public Works with support from WASH cluster members at county level have begun monitoring the distribution of hygiene promotion kits and their use at household levels. One of the Ebola hard hit communities of Telbormai in Voinjama was monitored during the last week. The first sub-national level coordination meeting for the WASH Ebola Away Response was also initiated during this period
Out of 13 incinerators brought in the country 12 were installed. ICRC is leading the training and technical support for the assembly of these 13 incinerators to be used for bio-med waste at the ETUs in and around Monrovia. UNOPS and WHO organized training for operators from Government counterpart and NGOs who have taken operational responsibility.
WHO, MOHSW, IMC, IOM and MSF are operating and maintaining WASH facilities in ETU for 750 beds capacity in the country (Lofa, Bong, Montserrado, Bomi, Nimba and Margibi counties). IMC with the support of Save The Children open a new ETU in Margibi, and IOM in Tumaburg with the support of USAID/AFL.
The construction of the WASH system for additional ETUs in the country with 16 ETU’s under construction (beds) (Actors: UNICEF, WFP, WHO, AFL, WHH, USAID and WB). These are being assessed by WASH cluster assessment teams to ensure fulfilling minimum WASH requirements with their technical advice and recommendations. As of now 9 of these were assessed for WASH by the Cluster organized teams and schedules for the remaining are being worked out with operating entities. The assessment teams of the cluster also assessed three CCCs in Margibi, Fishtown and in Lofa counties.
As part of UNICEF’s continued support to rehabilitation of the water supply system and sanitation facilities in ETUs, UNICEF provided 12 units of poly tanks and 3 submersible pumps to the unity Centre ETU to pump out waste water from the overflowing tank with proper drainage.
Rehabilitation and upgrade of the water supply system and sanitation facilities in ELWA-2 ETU is almost halfway to complete. The work involves construction of 2 toilets, 2 showers and a storm water drainage system and rehabilitation of pipelines for water supply.
Annex 11. Finance & Donation coordinationPlan for achieving objective Current Status and Actions UnderwayCommunicate the role of donations coordination to potential donors & establish information & donation point. Currently several donations are made outside the structure and information is not always shared with the donations coordination team
• To hold a public service announcement with information on where and how to make donations
• Need for a comprehensive list of immediate needs to share with potential donors• Need for a dedicated website for the National Ebola Command Center to facilitate
dissemination of donations information• There are currently two separate accounts for donations (Ebola Trust Fund and MoHSW
Ebola Account).
Collate and communicate relevant information (transport, duty and fees) to potential donors
• Ad hoc submission of various requests from different agencies/organizations for duty waivers, airport handling fees and transportation from airport.
• Relationship with Liberia Revenue Authority (LRA) established to expedite duty waivers. • The new organization of the logistics cluster will address other challenges.
Collect, compile and report donation information to relevant stakeholders
Donation database currently updated on a daily basis. Reports are produced weekly. Meeting with Ministries of Finance & Development Planning and Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Health and Social Welfare to reconcile and harmonize donations.
Date completed: 15/11
Disbursed
Total commitment
- 100,000,000 200,000,000 300,000,000 400,000,000
244
303 701
Ebola Response Funding for Liberia, US$ million
*This excludes General Budget Support commitments and includes in-kind donations.
Annex 12. Food security
Graph of key indicator e.g. food/ commodity prices to be added
Objectives Current Status / Actions Required / Issues to be escalatedProvision of Food to affected people
• WFP delivered food to 37,700 beneficiaries in five counties in the last two weeks: Grand Cape Mount, Lofa, Maryland, Nimba and Sinoe. Since August, WFP has provided support to care for more than 200 patients and survivors, to 15,000 isolated households and to 566,700 persons in areas of intense and widespread transmission. FAO Signed an agreement with African Development Corps (ADC) to implement the conditional cash transfer initiative with 20 women associations. Training of women associations in VSLA methodologies and governance.
Understand situation Joint Rapid Assessment at National level (MoA, WFP, FAO): The impact of EVD on Food Security is significant in most affected communities and special care should be given to them. EVD had a huge impact on rural economy through the closure of boarders and markets. Saving and loans schemes were affected as well as trading, the second source of income for 73% of affected population.
Current needs / challenges
• Continued food and livelihoods assistance for people affected by EVD;• Limited inclusion of local cassava products (gari) in food aid support to ebola affected patients and hhs• Need to revitalise Village Savings and Loans Associations (mostly Women) through injection of cash• Need Balance between longer-term food/economic security interventions and ebola-related food actions
Current status of Ebola impact and potential risks
From WFP VAM Nov 2014 “Special Focus Ebola”: • Estimate current 480,000 food-insecure people in Liberia with Ebola-driven accounting for 80,000. • Predict under Low Ebola Scenario * number of Ebola-driven food-insecure people rises to 380,000 by March 2015 (and total of 840,000).• Would see food security worsening in Gbarpolu, Bong, Margibi and Grand Cape Mount in particular. *disease continues to spread at the average rate observed in the previous 42 days and then begins to slow down by January 2015
Date competed: 23/12
Liberian Dollar Prices for Imported Parboiled Rice in selected MarketsData Source: Liberia Price Monitor and FAO field data for month of Sept 2014
13-Mar 14-Apr 14-Sep % Change Mar-13 to Apr-14
% Change Apr-14 to Sep-14
Bo Waterside‐ 2,658 2500 -5.94%
Buchanan 2733 3200 17.09%
Foya 2801 3000 7.10%
Pleebo 2704 2900 7.25%
Red Light 2,531 2250 3045 -11.10% 35.33%
Saclepea 2307 2550 3350 10.53% 31.37%
Tubmanburg 2465 2250 3,150 -8.72% 40.00%
Voinjama 2967 2750 3000 -7.31% 9.09%
Zwedru 3,521 2750 -21.90%
Annex 13. BordersUpdated: 20/11
Border Status
Sierra Leone: Bo Waterside Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Sierra Leone: Foya./Kailahun Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Guinea: Foua/Gueckedo Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Guinea: Voinjama/Macenta Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Guinea: Ganta Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Guniea: Yekepa Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Cote d’Ivoire: Loguatuo Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Cote d’Ivoire: Janzon Town Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Cote d’Ivoire: Tempo Town Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Cote d’Ivoire: Harper Closed, except for ebola cargo (request via IMS) or trade cargo (request via MoJustice)
Senegal (sea) Open
Annex 14. Development Projects
Current status Actions Required & by whom?
RIA runway: project delayed (6 months?) as not confident quality companies will tender for the contract now
Need to identify criteria required for contractors, consultants to return to sites.
Some indicators include:- lifting of the State of Emergency, - resumption of service of more than one
international airline- positive assessment of healthcare risks (e.g. an
acceptable hospital is Ebola free and able to treat non-Ebola emergencies)
- reduction of the new cases rate to an acceptable percentage of peak (if not 0 new cases),
Mount Coffee: on-site construction works suspended until Ebola situation under control; manufacturing, procurement, and other project management activities continue as plannedHFO (JICA, WB, GoL): all stalled no work ongoing. Risk of 1 year delayRed light to Gbarnga road: Contractors have envoked force majeure. Risk of loss of dry season and one year delayFish Town to Harper: Progress has been ongoing to enable works to begin without major further delayFeasibility study for Ganta – Tappita: cannot tender for consultant as quality companies will not bid in current circumstancesAgriculture: ?
What is the impact of ebola on major development projects? Which major projects have been critically impacted?
Most of the crucial development projects have stalled – potential major impact and losing dry season. Contractors and supervising engineers have pulled out. Required financing from GoL budget is at risk due to forecast Budget shortfall.
Updated: 27/11
Annex 15. Immediate economic issues
Specific Objectives to mitigate impact Current Status and Actions Required & by whom?The Ebola Private Sector Management Group (EPMSG) are developing a private sector engagement plan that will identify their strengths and abilities as implementing partners for the Ministry of Finance and Development Planning’s Economic Stabilization and Recovery Plan.
Ministry of Finance and Development Planning are consolidating the Economic Stabilisation and Recovery Plan into a project by project synopsis and lining up potential partners.
Six NGOs and UN agencies have initiated a national social-safety net programme that is led by the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection. Initial ideas and geographic coverage have been proposed and the Ministry and UNDP (co-chair) will evolve the plan. There is strong donor interest.
Final mapping of initial proposals needs to be completed to provide an initial picture of social safety net coverage for Liberia in 2015 and how it links into re-investment and livelihoods opportunities for sustainability.
The World Bank has confirmed the its interest in supporting social safety net programmes. USAID has also shown significant interest. Both agencies are keeping in close contact with the Ministry and UNDP as the co-chair of the Technical Working Group on Social Safety Net Cash Transfers.
The banking infrastructure and mechanisms for making payments is under stress. UNDP is working with the banks and mobile money networks to help them function better in areas outside Monrovia. Longer-term interventions will be needed to overcome the problems that are faced, but some quick fixes may be possible. UNDP is engaged with USAID, NetHope and others that have had this issue on the radar for some years.
What is the status of most critical impacts on the economy from the ebola crisis (e.g. concession operations, investment, cross-border trade, government finances etc)
- Current growth rate projects are down to 1% (initial estimate of 8.7% at the start of the year)- 17 percent increase in prices of essential commodities on year on year basis. - Tax revenues expected to contract by 19%- Hardest hit relating to the labor market: agriculture, fisheries, mining- Montserrado, Grand Kru, Sinoe, and Maryland are the most economically impacted counties according to UNMIL data.- There is a disproportionate number of women affected by the loss of livelihoods according to Liberia’s Association of
Marketers- Overall, Ebola is driving communities into higher levels of poverty
Updated: Dec. 11, 2014
Annex 16. Education
Objectives to mitigate impact Current Status and Actions Required to & by whom?Strengthen epidemic preparedness and response measures in all schools and communities in 98 Education Districts
•Completed Ebola Prevention training for 15 CEOs, 98 District Education Officers, 6600 School Principals and Teachers; •Completed Awareness in 98 Education Districts by 6600 teachers (each teacher reached over 100 households) over 2 million persons were reached•Mobilizing resources for the following: (no committed funded yet) a. payment of teachers for community awareness process b. to conduct additional trainings for up to 6000 teachers and principals c. to assist communities establish Ebola Prevention Structures d. to conduct psycho-social counseling in communities
Prepare students & teachers to resume regular schooling
•Modules for the airing of radio programs developed•Programs are being aired on National Radio Stations •Mobilizing resources to engage private & community radios for airing of programs in all counties
Improve Physical learning environment to prevent the spread of EVD and other diseases
•Received support from GoL for minor renovation of 500 schools in 15 counties starting December•Mobilizing resources to: (no committed funded yet) a. renovate additional 1500 schools in 15 counties; b. clean and disinfect school environment nationwide; c. rehabilitate / construct WASH facilities where needed; d. chlorinate 25,000 wells and hand pumps on school premises and ; e. establish hand washing facilities in all schools
What is the impact of school closures?Increase in young children involved in street selling; teen age pregnancy; over aged students; child laborExtreme hardship on private schools teachers due to no salary; condition of school facilities are deterioratingUnavailability of resources for text books, establishment of laboratories, libraries and other items to promote learning The situation may likely have considerable impact on quality and performance of school administrator
Date updated: 27/11
0 5000 10000 15000 20000 25000
Teachers trained in EVD awareness
CurrentNeeded
20,000
6,600
Annex 17A. ETU Threat Assessment
• Violence targeting ETU/CCC is extremely low. Most agitation comes when family
members are seeking information about their loved one in the facility and the
personnel fail to provide an update. As long as facilities are briefing the family
members on the condition of their family member, tensions should remain low.
• Recent demand for dignified burial for victims. Many in the community have expressed
concern over cremating the remains and not having a place to go, nor grieve. Reports
of affluent members of the community successfully retrieving their loved ones and
taking their remains from the facilities to a burial site.
• Petty crimes and theft are expected around the facilities like any other location.
Update: 5/12
Annex 17B. Security Assessment
• The overall security situation in Liberia remains calm but fragile.
• The border situation with Cote-d’Ivoire (CDI) remains calm. The Government of Liberia
(GoL) issued a directive to close all Border Crossing Points (BCP) to contain the Ebola
outbreak until further notice.
• Cancellation of the State of Emergency, markets are reopened in Liberia and the
curfew is midnight to 0600 local.
• The National Election Committee (NEC) submitted a recommendation for Senatorial
Election to be held December 16, 2014 and the date was approved.
• Civilian education began on 17 Nov 14 and campaigning started on 20 Nov 14 and will
continue until 15 Dec 14 (24 hours prior to the election).
Update: 5/12
Annex 18. Wider CommunicationsWhat is being done to use communications to help fight ebola?• NATIONAL CAMPAIGN: “EBOLA MUST GO! STOPPING EBOLA IS EVERYBODY’S BUSINESS~ LAUNCHED
8 DECEMBER• Launched in New Georgia by President with partners and UNMEER• Campaign will now focus weekly on the 5 priority areas – burials, isolation, reporting, contact tracing,
quarantiningImplementation:• National roll-out of social mobilization materials through IMS and partners (ECAP) – Priority• National roll-out of media messaging – national and local radio, GSM and PSAs
• Media training and message packs• Local radio training
• National roll-out of visual materials – billboards, buttons, bumper stickers• Social Media Campaign – Facebook and twitter• Ministry of Information briefings focusing on community and traditional spokespeople• Presidential activities to promote campaign• Media monitoring to track message fidelityCampaign emphasizes Pledge taken by President at the launch:“I, _________________, pledge to protect myself, my family and community, because Ebola Must Go, and stopping Ebola is everybody’s business.”
Date updated: 4/12
Joint Communication Committee (MICAT)
Media and major advertising publicity
Partners
IMS Social MobilizationLeading dissemination and
community-level engagement
Partners
Communities and behaviour
Key actors on whom zero-case success
depends
Key Messages
and materials
Annex 18. Wider CommunicationsWhat is being done to use communications to help fight ebola?
• NATIONAL CAMPAIGN: “EBOLA MUST GO! STOPPING EBOLA IS EVERYBODY’S BUSINESS~ LAUNCHED 8 DECEMBER
• Launched in New Georgia by President with partners and UNMEER• Campaign will now focus weekly on the 5 priority areas – burials, isolation, reporting, contact tracing,
quarantining
Implementation:• National roll-out of social mobilization materials through IMS and partners (ECAP) – Priority• National roll-out of media messaging – national and local radio, GSM and PSAs
• Media training and message packs• Local radio training
• National roll-out of visual materials – billboards, buttons, bumper stickers• Social Media campaign – Facebook and twitter• Ministry of Information briefings focusing on community and traditional spokespeople• Presidential activities to promote campaign• Media monitoring to track message fidelity
Campaign emphasizes Pledge taken by President at the launch:“I, _________________, pledge to protect myself, my family and community, because Ebola Must Go, and stopping Ebola is everybody’s business.”
Date updated: 4/12
General Communications:• Continuing regular Information Ministry briefings and engagement with International Media• Addressing concerns about Holiday period and elections
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