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Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America Central American Disaster Health Information Network Presentation to: EnHIOP, 12-04 Tallahassee, FL By: John C. Scott Center for Public Service Communications On behalf of: National Library of Medicine

Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

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Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America. Presentation to: EnHIOP, 12-04 Tallahassee, FL By: John C. Scott Center for Public Service Communications On behalf of: National Library of Medicine. Central American Disaster Health Information Network. Project Origins . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Central American Disaster Health Information Network

Presentation to:EnHIOP, 12-04Tallahassee, FL

By: John C. Scott

Center for Public Service Communications

On behalf of:

National Library of Medicine

Page 2: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Project Origins

Hurricane Mitch - 1998

El Salvador Earthquakes -

2001

Page 3: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Project Goal

Support, rebuild, and improve the health information infrastructure of Honduras, Nicaragua, and El Salvador and Guatemala:

Technology infrastructure

Training of health science librarians

Information product development

Page 4: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Managing Disasters isis

Managing Information

Reliable information is the most valued commodity

before and after a disaster.

Page 5: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

BackgroundHurricane Mitch

October 1998

El SalvadorEarthquakes

Jan./Feb. 2001

Page 6: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

NLM/PAHO Special ProjectUnique opportunity for collaboration between NLM, as the world’s largest medical library and PAHO whose mission is improving the health of the people of the Americas Use the Regional Disaster Information Center for Latin America and the Caribbean (CRID) as contractor

Page 7: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

CRIDCollect and disseminate literature on disasters

DESASTRES bibliographic database Over 15,000 disaster-related documents

www.crid.or.cr orwww.crid.desastres.net

Page 8: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Disaster Information Management

Wealth of information but little is accessible Information about lessons learned is valuable throughout the region, but little in writing and often not circulated.

Grey Literature Disaster health information in developing countriesis perishable: it’s not peer-reviewed; frequently unpublished

Internet Access Internet access has been limited, but this is changing. Info access has gone from weeks/months to minutes and from hard copy to searchable electronic files

Page 9: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Participating Sites - Honduras

University of Honduras Medical School

Centro Universitario Region Norte

Page 10: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Participating Sites - Nicaragua

School of Public Health of UNAN

University of Nicaragua Medical School

Page 11: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Participating Sites – El Salvador

Center for the Protection against Disasters

Health Documentation & InformationCenter, Ministry of Health & University

of El Salvador

Page 12: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Participataing Site: Guatemala

Universidad de San Carlos, Biblioteca de la Facultad de Medicina

Note: Guatemala was funded by U.K. via PAHO

Page 13: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Project Objectives

Training of health science librarians

Improving technology infrastructure

Development of Information Products

Page 14: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Librarian Training

Four train-the-trainers courses Costa Rica ( 2001); Bethesda, MD (2001) Nicaragua (2002); Guatemala (2004) Librarians and computer specialists

Additional training Librarians now training professionals, researchers, government officials, community organizations, etc in their own countries

Page 15: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Technology Infrastructure

Computer Equipment Installation Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica (Summer 2001) El Salvador (Summer 2002)Guatemala (January 2004) Each site received a server, router, UPS, switch, laser printer, scanner, and two PCs

Internet Connectivity128K in Honduras, Nicaragua, and El Salvador

256K at CRID

Page 16: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Information Products Digital Library

3,800 documents digitized and available through the CRID web site Links from DESASTRES database to documents Documents also available from local disaster information centers CDs: Top 100 documents

special topics

Page 17: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Information Products (continued)

Document accessibility Develop full-text searching capability of documents

Web site development by participating sites Health resources

Disaster resources

Local resources

Page 18: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Future ActivitiesDisaster Health Information Center Toolkit

Expansion of Network Funding from UK to add Guatemala

Possible Caribbean, South America expansion

Increased attention to related issues: environmental health/toxicology

Promotion and Evaluation

Information Product Development

Information Technology Support

Page 19: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Evaluation and Sustainability

Use of NLM and CRID resources by participating sites for disaster planning

Incorporate information resources into curriculum

Migrate program to local management withcontinued support from the internationaldonor community

Page 20: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Lessons Learned

Success requires leadership and vision at many levels

Multiple sites require time, energy, patience,flexibility

Collaboration requires sensitivity to linguistic and cultural issues

Partnerships require teamwork and compromise

Possible applicability in US states/local communities

Value in NLM-PAHO collaboration

Page 21: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Conclusion

Dissemination of quality information is:

the most cost effective disaster reduction activityand a way to empower national and local communities

Page 22: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Project Team

NLM: Ms. Stacey Arnesen; Mr. Victor Cid Dr. Melvin SpannPAHO: Mr. Ricardo Perez CRID: Mr. Dave Zervaas and staffCPSC: Mr. John Scott

Page 23: Health Information for Disaster Preparedness in Latin America

Project Team

Dave Zervaas & CRID staff

Mel Spann , NLMStacey Arnesen, Victor Cid. NLM

Ricardo Perez, PAHO;John Scott, CPSC

Central American librarians& computer specialists

Cecilia Garcia, UNAH