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Avian Influenza and Human Influenza: UNICEF ContributionsAuthorDr. Gepke Hingst
UNICEF January 23 - 24 2006 SummaryThis PowerPoint Presentation was presented by Dr. Gepke Hingst, UNICEF's Avian Influenza Co-ordinator, as part of the UNICEF Regional Office for South Asia Avian Flu Communication Meeting held January 23-24 2006. The presentation outlines how UNICEF's current contributions and future planning fit within the greater United Nations (UN) system coordinated response for preparing for and coping with potential outbreaks of avian influenza (also known as avian flu or bird flu). According to the presentation, UNICEF's role is built on its mandate to protect children, in this case from: loss of protein and income from the loss of birds; possibility of children becoming infected or losing parents to the disease; and potential education disruptions. The first part of the presentation focuses on the general UNICEF response, including strategies for preparedness, response and programme continuity in the face of an outbreak. Prevention activities include using communication for behavioural change - hygiene, cough etiquette, poultry cooking, poultry-practices, sick poultry reporting, and promotion of responsible media reporting. It also includes assisting in proper disease surveillance and assessing the culling impact on farmer's families, in terms of nutrition. The latter part of the presentation focuses on UNICEF's communication and media strategy around avian influenza. It suggests that outbreak communication must be open and transparent, providing information about the outbreak and risk, to build trust between the government and public. In terms of fostering resilience of individuals and communities, information for action and risk education should focus on what a person can do, and take into consideration participation and ownership. Three key implementation principles are: The presentation outlines the evolving communication needs for avian influenza. It explains that communication needs are first primarily explanatory. The next phase is increasingly pro-active including anticipating public concerns and media perceptions, and integrating these into public health, personal and community actions. In the third phase communication is increasingly used to shape public perceptions and foster preparedness and choice for action. The presentation outlines a number of areas of ongoing general confusion: Communication about avian influenza presents a number of challenges. It is difficult to communicate risk, there is uncertainty about the pandemic, as well as different perceptions by the intended audience. Therefore difficult to predict the behavioural responses to risk messages. Other challenges include:
ContactDr. Gepke Hingst
Coordinator for Avian Influenza SourceEmail and PowerPoint Presentation sent from Teresa H. Stuart to The Communication Initiative, February 2 2006. Placed on the Communication Initiative site February 12 2006 Last Updated October 09 2007 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
Special FocusAI at Forefront in 2009?
Even if incidence levels remain roughly as they are at the start of 2009, will avian influenza continue to remain at the forefront of public consciousness?
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