New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month...

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New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month

New course series on the clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings

Sexual violence and intimate partner violence can be especially problematic in complex emergencies and natural disasters. In these situations, women and children are often targets of abuse, exploitation, and violence because of their sex, age and status in society. This five-course series is intended for healthcare workers providing services to survivors of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings. For a better learning experience, we recommend accessing the courses in the order listed below:

Introduction to the clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Mental health and psychosocial support: Clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Management of intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
First-line support: Clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Clinical management of rape

New course on delivering quality health services to refugees and migrants from Ukraine

OpenWHO launched a course on delivering quality health services to refugees and migrants from Ukraine, the first WHO course in video format to support health workers in hosting and receiving countries to provide quality and safe care that is responsive to the circumstances and particular health needs of people from Ukraine seeking health assistance.
Try out our new interactive features in our new course on Chemical and Biological Deliberate events

The course CBDE Awareness: Recognizing Signs of Deliberate Release of Chemical or Biological Agents aims to ensure that emergency responders recognize possible deliberate events with chemical or biological agents and know the different response types this will require compared to other emergencies. You will have the opportunity to explore interactive videos and exercises, with pop-up texts and knowledge checks across the course modules. A new OpenWHO learning experience is at your fingertips!
New courses and languages

We are pleased to announce the following courses that were also recently made available:

Buruli ulcer: training of health workers at national and district levels on skin Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs): This course is intended to provide basic information for front line health workers to be able to implement the recommended control measures to minimize the negative impact of Buruli ulcer on populations.

Neglected tropical diseases: road map and sustainability framework 2021-2030: OpenWHO courses: The learning package comprises two online courses that aim to give participants a comprehensive overview of the overriding strategic goals and key challenges that NTD professionals and programmes are likely to face over the coming decade: 1) NTD road map strategy; and 2) the Sustainability Framework.

One Health in action against Neglected Tropical Diseases: This course provides practical ideas, tools and examples to enable each of us to take One Health action towards the global goal of substantially reducing the burden of NTDs by 2030

WHO costing and budgeting tool for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: The aim of this course is to introduce the WHO costing and budgeting tool for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The tool is designed to support operationalization and to accelerate implementation of national action plans on AMR.

6 steps for sustainable implementation of national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: This course covers the 6 steps for sustainable implementation of national action plans on AMR from the “WHO implementation handbook for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: guidance for the human health sector”.

Health inequality monitoring foundations courses: This 5- course series addresses the need for capacity strengthening in health inequality monitoring, with courses organized according to the following topics: an overview of terminology and concepts, data sources, health disaggregation, summary measures of health inequality and reporting.
 
On Monday, October 24, 2022 at 12:37:26 PM UTC-4, a a wrote:
New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month

New course series on the clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings

Sexual violence and intimate partner violence can be especially problematic in complex emergencies and natural disasters. In these situations, women and children are often targets of abuse, exploitation, and violence because of their sex, age and status in society. This five-course series is intended for healthcare workers providing services to survivors of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings. For a better learning experience, we recommend accessing the courses in the order listed below:

Introduction to the clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Mental health and psychosocial support: Clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Management of intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
First-line support: Clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Clinical management of rape

New course on delivering quality health services to refugees and migrants from Ukraine

OpenWHO launched a course on delivering quality health services to refugees and migrants from Ukraine, the first WHO course in video format to support health workers in hosting and receiving countries to provide quality and safe care that is responsive to the circumstances and particular health needs of people from Ukraine seeking health assistance.
Try out our new interactive features in our new course on Chemical and Biological Deliberate events

The course CBDE Awareness: Recognizing Signs of Deliberate Release of Chemical or Biological Agents aims to ensure that emergency responders recognize possible deliberate events with chemical or biological agents and know the different response types this will require compared to other emergencies.. You will have the opportunity to explore interactive videos and exercises, with pop-up texts and knowledge checks across the course modules. A new OpenWHO learning experience is at your fingertips!
New courses and languages

We are pleased to announce the following courses that were also recently made available:

Buruli ulcer: training of health workers at national and district levels on skin Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs): This course is intended to provide basic information for front line health workers to be able to implement the recommended control measures to minimize the negative impact of Buruli ulcer on populations.

Neglected tropical diseases: road map and sustainability framework 2021-2030: OpenWHO courses: The learning package comprises two online courses that aim to give participants a comprehensive overview of the overriding strategic goals and key challenges that NTD professionals and programmes are likely to face over the coming decade: 1) NTD road map strategy; and 2) the Sustainability Framework.

One Health in action against Neglected Tropical Diseases: This course provides practical ideas, tools and examples to enable each of us to take One Health action towards the global goal of substantially reducing the burden of NTDs by 2030

WHO costing and budgeting tool for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: The aim of this course is to introduce the WHO costing and budgeting tool for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The tool is designed to support operationalization and to accelerate implementation of national action plans on AMR.

6 steps for sustainable implementation of national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: This course covers the 6 steps for sustainable implementation of national action plans on AMR from the “WHO implementation handbook for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: guidance for the human health sector”.

Health inequality monitoring foundations courses: This 5- course series addresses the need for capacity strengthening in health inequality monitoring, with courses organized according to the following topics: an overview of terminology and concepts, data sources, health disaggregation, summary measures of health inequality and reporting.

What do you now about any of it?
 
On Monday, 24 October 2022 at 22:30:02 UTC+2, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, October 24, 2022 at 12:37:26 PM UTC-4, a a wrote:
New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month

New course series on the clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings

Sexual violence and intimate partner violence can be especially problematic in complex emergencies and natural disasters. In these situations, women and children are often targets of abuse, exploitation, and violence because of their sex, age and status in society. This five-course series is intended for healthcare workers providing services to survivors of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings. For a better learning experience, we recommend accessing the courses in the order listed below:

Introduction to the clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Mental health and psychosocial support: Clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Management of intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
First-line support: Clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Clinical management of rape

New course on delivering quality health services to refugees and migrants from Ukraine

OpenWHO launched a course on delivering quality health services to refugees and migrants from Ukraine, the first WHO course in video format to support health workers in hosting and receiving countries to provide quality and safe care that is responsive to the circumstances and particular health needs of people from Ukraine seeking health assistance.
Try out our new interactive features in our new course on Chemical and Biological Deliberate events

The course CBDE Awareness: Recognizing Signs of Deliberate Release of Chemical or Biological Agents aims to ensure that emergency responders recognize possible deliberate events with chemical or biological agents and know the different response types this will require compared to other emergencies. You will have the opportunity to explore interactive videos and exercises, with pop-up texts and knowledge checks across the course modules. A new OpenWHO learning experience is at your fingertips!
New courses and languages

We are pleased to announce the following courses that were also recently made available:

Buruli ulcer: training of health workers at national and district levels on skin Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs): This course is intended to provide basic information for front line health workers to be able to implement the recommended control measures to minimize the negative impact of Buruli ulcer on populations.

Neglected tropical diseases: road map and sustainability framework 2021-2030: OpenWHO courses: The learning package comprises two online courses that aim to give participants a comprehensive overview of the overriding strategic goals and key challenges that NTD professionals and programmes are likely to face over the coming decade: 1) NTD road map strategy; and 2) the Sustainability Framework.

One Health in action against Neglected Tropical Diseases: This course provides practical ideas, tools and examples to enable each of us to take One Health action towards the global goal of substantially reducing the burden of NTDs by 2030

WHO costing and budgeting tool for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: The aim of this course is to introduce the WHO costing and budgeting tool for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The tool is designed to support operationalization and to accelerate implementation of national action plans on AMR.

6 steps for sustainable implementation of national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: This course covers the 6 steps for sustainable implementation of national action plans on AMR from the “WHO implementation handbook for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: guidance for the human health sector”.

Health inequality monitoring foundations courses: This 5- course series addresses the need for capacity strengthening in health inequality monitoring, with courses organized according to the following topics: an overview of terminology and concepts, data sources, health disaggregation, summary measures of health inequality and reporting.
thank you for your interest
 
On Tuesday, October 25, 2022 at 7:58:39 AM UTC-4, a a wrote:
On Monday, 24 October 2022 at 22:30:02 UTC+2, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, October 24, 2022 at 12:37:26 PM UTC-4, a a wrote:
New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month

New course series on the clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings

Sexual violence and intimate partner violence can be especially problematic in complex emergencies and natural disasters. In these situations, women and children are often targets of abuse, exploitation, and violence because of their sex, age and status in society. This five-course series is intended for healthcare workers providing services to survivors of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings. For a better learning experience, we recommend accessing the courses in the order listed below:

Introduction to the clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Mental health and psychosocial support: Clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Management of intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
First-line support: Clinical management of rape and intimate partner violence in humanitarian settings
Clinical management of rape

New course on delivering quality health services to refugees and migrants from Ukraine

OpenWHO launched a course on delivering quality health services to refugees and migrants from Ukraine, the first WHO course in video format to support health workers in hosting and receiving countries to provide quality and safe care that is responsive to the circumstances and particular health needs of people from Ukraine seeking health assistance.
Try out our new interactive features in our new course on Chemical and Biological Deliberate events

The course CBDE Awareness: Recognizing Signs of Deliberate Release of Chemical or Biological Agents aims to ensure that emergency responders recognize possible deliberate events with chemical or biological agents and know the different response types this will require compared to other emergencies. You will have the opportunity to explore interactive videos and exercises, with pop-up texts and knowledge checks across the course modules. A new OpenWHO learning experience is at your fingertips!
New courses and languages

We are pleased to announce the following courses that were also recently made available:

Buruli ulcer: training of health workers at national and district levels on skin Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs): This course is intended to provide basic information for front line health workers to be able to implement the recommended control measures to minimize the negative impact of Buruli ulcer on populations.

Neglected tropical diseases: road map and sustainability framework 2021-2030: OpenWHO courses: The learning package comprises two online courses that aim to give participants a comprehensive overview of the overriding strategic goals and key challenges that NTD professionals and programmes are likely to face over the coming decade: 1) NTD road map strategy; and 2) the Sustainability Framework.

One Health in action against Neglected Tropical Diseases: This course provides practical ideas, tools and examples to enable each of us to take One Health action towards the global goal of substantially reducing the burden of NTDs by 2030

WHO costing and budgeting tool for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: The aim of this course is to introduce the WHO costing and budgeting tool for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance (AMR).. The tool is designed to support operationalization and to accelerate implementation of national action plans on AMR.

6 steps for sustainable implementation of national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: This course covers the 6 steps for sustainable implementation of national action plans on AMR from the “WHO implementation handbook for national action plans on antimicrobial resistance: guidance for the human health sector”.

Health inequality monitoring foundations courses: This 5- course series addresses the need for capacity strengthening in health inequality monitoring, with courses organized according to the following topics: an overview of terminology and concepts, data sources, health disaggregation, summary measures of health inequality and reporting.
thank you for your interest

The courses are what\'s known as Public Health administration. What is your interest in the operational details of public health administration?
 
On 24/10/2022 21:29, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, October 24, 2022 at 12:37:26 PM UTC-4, a a wrote:
New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month

What do you now about any of it?

Stop reposting \"A A\" shit or you will end up in everyone\'s kill file.

--
Regards,
Martin Brown
 
On 2022-10-25 21:11, Martin Brown wrote:
On 24/10/2022 21:29, Fred Bloggs wrote:
[Doesn\'t matter...]

What do you now about any of it?

Stop reposting \"A A\" shit or you will end up in everyone\'s kill file.

Does Fred ever contribute anything useful then? Do we care what
catastrophe prediction he\'s echoing this week?

Jeroen Belleman
 
Covid19 is not over yet

1 USA 99,123,438 +14,042 1,093,153 +84
4 Germany 35,288,228 +115,535 152,755 +273
108 China 257,583 +221 5,226

It\'s better to deepen your knowledge on the subject than to downplay it.

WHO is a good contact point
 
On Wednesday, October 26, 2022 at 6:26:00 AM UTC+11, a a wrote:
Covid19 is not over yet

1 USA 99,123,438 +14,042 1,093,153 +84
4 Germany 35,288,228 +115,535 152,755 +273
108 China 257,583 +221 5,226

It\'s better to deepen your knowledge on the subject than to downplay it.

But a a doesn\'t seem to know anything useful, and seems to propagate misleading misconceptions. He \"broadens\" our knowledge by trying to introduce misleading nonsense.

> WHO is a good contact point.

But a a can be pretty much guaranteed to point you at the wrong data in the wrong context.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 


Global News
New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month
Celebrating World Humanitarian Day

As we mark World Humanitarian Day on 19 August, OpenWHO is proud to host free multilingual learning resources to support the response to humanitarian crises. This includes a new course on food insecurity available in English and French, as well as 18 courses in Ukrainian to support the response to health emergencies in Ukraine.

OpenWHO also offers online courses that address many diseases currently causing outbreaks, including:

Monkeypox: Introduction | Intermediate
Yellow fever: Introduction
Cholera: Introduction | Vaccines | Kits
Polio: Introduction
Marburg: Introduction
Leptospirosis: Introduction
Plague: Introduction | Resources
Lassa fever: Introduction

New courses and languages

We are pleased to announce the following courses that were recently made available:

The Food Insecurity and Health Readiness and Response Strategic Framework: This course introduces the basic concept of food insecurity, the main implications of food insecurity and food crises on health, health systems and programming, and the structure and content of the Strategic Framework. The course is also available in French.
African Vaccines Regulatory Forum clinical trials inspections: This online training is designed to complement the African Vaccine Regulatory Forum (AVAREF) guideline and checklist for the inspection of clinical trials.
Malaria elimination: This course aims to equip learners with the knowledge and skills to plan, implement, monitor and evaluate a programme for malaria elimination and prevention of re-establishment of transmission.
Inequality monitoring in HIV, tuberculosis and malaria: This course introduces the general steps of inequality monitoring in the context of HIV, TB and malaria, which should be an integral part of country programmes.
Understanding and using WHO guidelines on tuberculosis: This course explains how TB guidelines are developed, how the GRADE approach relates, how to interpret the certainty of evidence, and how guidelines can be accessed and adapted to the local context.
Onchocerciasis: training of health workers at national and district levels on skin-NTDs: This course examines the epidemiology of onchocerciasis, clinical aspects, impact, diagnosis, treatment and control, elimination, public health interventions and role of community health workers.
Noma: training of health workers at national and district levels on skin-NTDs: This course addresses epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical features, diagnosis, treatment and public health considerations, including the human rights perspective of noma.
 
On Wednesday, October 26, 2022 at 8:09:54 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
Global News
New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month
Celebrating World Humanitarian Day

As we mark World Humanitarian Day on 19 August, OpenWHO is proud to host free multilingual learning resources to support the response to humanitarian crises. This includes a new course on food insecurity available in English and French, as well as 18 courses in Ukrainian to support the response to health emergencies in Ukraine.

OpenWHO also offers online courses that address many diseases currently causing outbreaks, including:

<snip>

No mention of a treatment for a_a_itis - the eruption of irrelevant posts on forums devoted to subject completely different from the ones a a wants to tell us about.

Contempt doesn\'t seem to work.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Wednesday, October 26, 2022 at 5:25:44 AM UTC-4, bill....@ieee.org wrote:
On Wednesday, October 26, 2022 at 8:09:54 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
Global News
New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month
Celebrating World Humanitarian Day

As we mark World Humanitarian Day on 19 August, OpenWHO is proud to host free multilingual learning resources to support the response to humanitarian crises. This includes a new course on food insecurity available in English and French, as well as 18 courses in Ukrainian to support the response to health emergencies in Ukraine.

OpenWHO also offers online courses that address many diseases currently causing outbreaks, including:
snip

No mention of a treatment for a_a_itis - the eruption of irrelevant posts on forums devoted to subject completely different from the ones a a wants to tell us about.

Contempt doesn\'t seem to work.

It\'s only irrelevant to ignorant buffoons. You might notice that every one of the great advances being made is a result of advanced instrumentation almost all of which is electronics-based. Then of course there\'s a huge amount of physics and advanced mathematics involved. You think clinicians are doing all this themselves?

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Thursday, October 27, 2022 at 7:03:57 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Wednesday, October 26, 2022 at 5:25:44 AM UTC-4, bill....@ieee.org wrote:
On Wednesday, October 26, 2022 at 8:09:54 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
Global News
New courses and languages on OpenWHO this month
Celebrating World Humanitarian Day

As we mark World Humanitarian Day on 19 August, OpenWHO is proud to host free multilingual learning resources to support the response to humanitarian crises. This includes a new course on food insecurity available in English and French, as well as 18 courses in Ukrainian to support the response to health emergencies in Ukraine.

OpenWHO also offers online courses that address many diseases currently causing outbreaks, including:
snip

No mention of a treatment for a_a_itis - the eruption of irrelevant posts on forums devoted to subject completely different from the ones a a wants to tell us about.

Contempt doesn\'t seem to work.

It\'s only irrelevant to ignorant buffoons. You might notice that every one of the great advances being made is a result of advanced instrumentation almost all of which is electronics-based. Then of course there\'s a huge amount of physics and advanced mathematics involved. You think clinicians are doing all this themselves?

I have noticed, I worked in medical ultrasound myself, at EMI Central Research in the UK from 1976 to 1079. We did collaborate with clinicians.

What a a posts has nothing to do with that kind of medically motivated research, and you\'d have to be an ignorant buffoon to think that it did.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Thursday, 27 October 2022 at 03:43:31 UTC+2, bill....@ieee.org wrote:
On Thursday, October 27, 2022 at 7:03:57 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
from 1976 to 1079.

really ?>
 
On Thursday, October 27, 2022 at 8:55:26 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
On Thursday, 27 October 2022 at 03:43:31 UTC+2, bill....@ieee.org wrote:
On Thursday, October 27, 2022 at 7:03:57 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
from 1976 to 1079.

really ?

Typo. 1976 to 1979. I left a bit before EMI got taken over by Thorn Electric, not that I\'d seen that coming.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 

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