Background OpenWHO is the open-access learning platform of the World Health Organization (WHO) that provides online learning for health emergencies with essential health knowledge for emergencies. There is emphasis for courses on severe emerging diseases with epidemic and pandemic potential to help frontline health workers prevent, control and respond to infectious diseases. This research addresses the question of how the existing OpenWHO online courses on infectious disease were used in the countries of disease occurrence and how to prepare for disease X, a novel or unknown pathogen with pandemic potential. Methods OpenWHO collects self-declared demographic data from learners among which there is data on geographical location of learners. ...
Background Clinical training during the COVID-19 pandemic is high risk for medical students. Medical...
An “infodemic” is an overabundance of information – some accurate and some not – that occurs durin...
The increase in cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) worldwide has been paralleled by increa...
On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the outbreak of coronavirus disease (...
The COVID-19 pandemic generated an unprecedented global demand for learning about the disease and ho...
The World Health Organization (WHO) launched the first web-based learning course on COVID-19 on Janu...
Accessibility, multilingualism and real-time knowledge transfer are the tenets of the OpenWHO learni...
This paper introduces online learning related key considerations for asynchronous health information...
Real-time learning in health emergencies is a critical mechanism to provide frontline health workers...
INTRODUCTION: OpenWHO provides open-access, online, free and real-time learning responses to health ...
In pursuit of equitable access to emergency-related knowledge, the World Health Organization (WHO) t...
OpenWHO provides open access, online, free and real time learning responses to health emergencies. B...
BY-COVID learnings and policy recommendations after 18 months of cross-disciplinary collaboration A...
Inequalities persist when it comes to the attention, resource allocation and political prioritizatio...
This paper presents a new dataset of infectious disease outbreaks collected from the Disease Outbrea...
Background Clinical training during the COVID-19 pandemic is high risk for medical students. Medical...
An “infodemic” is an overabundance of information – some accurate and some not – that occurs durin...
The increase in cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) worldwide has been paralleled by increa...
On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the outbreak of coronavirus disease (...
The COVID-19 pandemic generated an unprecedented global demand for learning about the disease and ho...
The World Health Organization (WHO) launched the first web-based learning course on COVID-19 on Janu...
Accessibility, multilingualism and real-time knowledge transfer are the tenets of the OpenWHO learni...
This paper introduces online learning related key considerations for asynchronous health information...
Real-time learning in health emergencies is a critical mechanism to provide frontline health workers...
INTRODUCTION: OpenWHO provides open-access, online, free and real-time learning responses to health ...
In pursuit of equitable access to emergency-related knowledge, the World Health Organization (WHO) t...
OpenWHO provides open access, online, free and real time learning responses to health emergencies. B...
BY-COVID learnings and policy recommendations after 18 months of cross-disciplinary collaboration A...
Inequalities persist when it comes to the attention, resource allocation and political prioritizatio...
This paper presents a new dataset of infectious disease outbreaks collected from the Disease Outbrea...
Background Clinical training during the COVID-19 pandemic is high risk for medical students. Medical...
An “infodemic” is an overabundance of information – some accurate and some not – that occurs durin...
The increase in cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) worldwide has been paralleled by increa...