1.Managing surge staff and resources at the WHO Representative Office in the Philippines after Typhoon Haiyan
Rosemarie Urquico ; Heleisha Rachel Laviña ; Megan Counahan ; Julie Lyn Hall
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2015;6(Suppl 1):25-28
The objective of this paper is to compare the role of the administrative team from the WHO Representative Office in the Philippines in the response following Typhoon Haiyan to the response with the three previous large-scale events, assess the lessons learnt and provide recommendations for managing future responses.
2.Looking back, looking forward: lessons from COVID-19 communication measurement, evaluation and learning (MEL)
Oxana Onilov ; Dexin Gong ; Kimberly Chriscaden ; Jargalan Tsogt ; Maria Socorro Melic ; Rosemarie Urquico ; Anna Biernat ; Anna Postovoitova ; Lieke Visser ; Nancy Wong ; Rosemarie North ; Olivia Lawe-Davies
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2024;15(1):01-08
Problem: Communication is an integral component of an emergency response, including to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. Designing effective communication requires systematic measurement, evaluation and learning.
Context: In the Western Pacific Region, the World Health Organization (WHO) responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by using the Communication for Health (C4H) approach. This included the development and application of a robust measurement, evaluation and learning (MEL) framework to assess the effectiveness of COVID-19 communication, and to share and apply lessons in real time to continuously strengthen the pandemic response.
Action: MEL was applied during the planning, implementation and summative evaluation phases of COVID-19 communication, with evidence-based insights and recommendations continuously integrated in succeeding phases of the COVID-19 response.
Lessons learned: This article captures good practices that helped WHO to implement MEL during the COVID-19 pandemic. It focuses on lessons from the evaluation process, including the importance of planning, data integration, collaboration, partnerships, piggybacking, using existing data and leveraging digital media.
Discussion: Despite some limitations, the systematic application of MEL to COVID-19 communication shows its value in the planning and implementation of effective, evidence-based communication to address public health challenges. It enables the evaluation of outcomes and reflection on lessons identified to strengthen the response to the current pandemic and future emergencies.