BMJ Global Health (Feb 2024)

Disseminating information on acute public health events globally: experiences from the WHO’s Disease Outbreak News

  • Ibrahima Socé Fall,
  • Babatunde Olowokure,
  • Oliver Morgan,
  • Masaya Kato,
  • Roberta Andraghetti,
  • Maria Almiron,
  • George Sie Williams,
  • Aura Corpuz,
  • Amarnath Babu,
  • Tshewang Dorji,
  • Tamano Matsui,
  • Ka Yeung Cheng,
  • Lauren E MacDonald,
  • Harsh Lata,
  • Alessandro Miglietta,
  • Eri Togami,
  • Neil Jan Saad Duque,
  • Devin Perkins,
  • Jukka Tapani Pukkila,
  • Carmen Dolea,
  • Abdirahman Mahamud,
  • Adedoyin Awofisayo-Okuyelu,
  • Esther Hamblion

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2023-012876
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2

Abstract

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WHO works, on a daily basis, with countries globally to detect, prepare for and respond to acute public health events. A vital component of a health response is the dissemination of accurate, reliable and authoritative information. The Disease Outbreak News (DON) reports are a key mechanism through which WHO communicates on acute public health events to the public. The decision to produce a DON report is taken on a case-by-case basis after evaluating key criteria, and the subsequent process of producing a DON report is highly standardised to ensure the robustness of information. DON reports have been published since 1996, and up to 2022 over 3000 reports have been published. Between 2018 and 2022, the most frequently published DON reports relate to Ebola virus disease, Middle East respiratory syndrome, yellow fever, polio and cholera. The DON web page is highly visited with a readership of over 2.6 million visits per year, on average. The DON report structure has evolved over time, from a single paragraph in 1996 to a detailed report with seven sections currently. WHO regularly reviews the DON report process and structure for improvements. In the last 25 years, DON reports have played a unique role in rapidly disseminating information on acute public health events to health actors and the public globally. They have become a key information source for the global public health response to the benefit of individuals and communities.