What to know about the European Medical Corps

One of the biggest realizations of the aid world at the height of the Ebola crisis was the lack of sufficient response teams ready for immediate deployment in the event of a public health emergency. Ebola response suffered from gaps in human resources, from qualified health care workers to logisticians and engineers who were willing and able to face the risks on the ground.

These positions were eventually filled, but recruiters were pushed to the limit, different countries’ militaries got involved to bring in logistical and engineering support, and various humanitarian players got embroiled in a blame game. The World Health Organization was heavily criticized for its slow response to the crisis and delayed declaration of a public health emergency.

Learning from the Ebola emergency, the WHO launched a unit in late 2014 tasked with building a global registry of foreign medical teams that can be immediately tapped into in the event of a similar crisis.

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