spar overview
Under the International Health Regulations(IHR) 2005 all States Parties are required to have or develop and maintain minimum core public health capacities to implement the IHR (2005), and report the status of implementation annually, as stipulated in Article 54 of the Regulations.
The formal submission of data from State Parties to the WHO via the IHR annual reports is very important and will be used as the basis for:
Spar Outbreak
The video explains in 3 minutes the AAR practice as promoted by WHO, including the definition, the different methodologies and available resources.
JEE
Joint External Evaluation (JEE)
| Region | Country | JEE Status | Start Date | End Date | Report | Custom text |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| African Region | United Republic Of Tanzania | Conducted | 22-Feb-2016 | 26-Feb-2016 | ||
| Eastern Mediterranean Region | Pakistan | Conducted | 26-Apr-2016 | 06-May-2016 | ||
| African Region | Ethiopia | Conducted | 29-Feb-2016 | 04-Mar-2016 | ||
| African Region | Liberia | Conducted | 05-Sep-2016 | 09-Sep-2016 | ||
| African Region | Mozambique | Conducted | 18-Apr-2016 | 22-Apr-2016 | ||
| Eastern Mediterranean Region | Morocco | Conducted | 20-Jun-2016 | 24-Jun-2016 | ||
| Eastern Mediterranean Region | Qatar | Conducted | 29-May-2016 | 02-Jun-2016 | ||
| South-East Asia Region | Bangladesh | Conducted | 08-May-2016 | 12-May-2016 | ||
| European Region | Turkmenistan | Conducted | 06-Jun-2016 | 10-Jun-2016 | ||
| Region of the Americas | United States of America | Conducted | 23-May-2016 | 27-May-2016 |
Not yet diagnosed
Ralstonia picketti
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome
Hand, foot and mouth disease
Earthquake
Rabies
Methanol, toxic effect
Influenza due to identified avian or animal Influenza virus
Adverse effects of a contaminated medical or biological substance, transfused or infused
Tropical Cyclone
Whooping cough
Poliomyelitis, acute paralytic, vaccine-associated
Plague, bubonic
Exposure to radiation
Nipah virus infection
Mpox
Measles
Leptospirosis
Escherichia coli infection, enterohaemorrhagic (EHEC, VTEC)
Dengue
Circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2
Chikungunya virus disease
Armed conflict
Yellow Fever
Venezuelan equine fever
Oropouche virus disease
Influenza due to identified human influenza virus
Malaria
Antibiotic resistant agents
Poliomyelitis, acute unspecified
Ebola virus disease
Cholera
Acute gastrointestinal syndrome
Acute Fever and Rash Syndrome
Anthrax, unspecified
Rubella (German measles)
Influenza due to identified avian or animal influenza virus
Sudan virus disease
Marburg virus disease
Guillain-Barré syndrome
Arenaviral haemorrhagic fevers, other
Mosquito-borne viral fever, other specified
A joint external evaluation (JEE) is a voluntary, collaborative, multisectoral process to assess country capacities to prevent, detect and rapidly respond to public health emergencies. The JEE examines capacities across 19 technical areas to establish a baseline assessment, enabling countries to have a greater understanding of their gaps and weaknesses in health security, so they can focus efforts to improve in these areas.
| JEE Tutorial | ||
| International Health Re… | ||
| Joint External Evaluati… | ||
| 100 Joint External Eval… |
Spar
State Party Self-Assessment Annual Reporting Tool (SPAR)
Not yet diagnosed
Ralstonia picketti
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome
Hand, foot and mouth disease
Earthquake
Rabies
Methanol, toxic effect
Influenza due to identified avian or animal Influenza virus
Adverse effects of a contaminated medical or biological substance, transfused or infused
Tropical Cyclone
Whooping cough
Poliomyelitis, acute paralytic, vaccine-associated
Plague, bubonic
Exposure to radiation
Nipah virus infection
Mpox
Measles
Leptospirosis
Escherichia coli infection, enterohaemorrhagic (EHEC, VTEC)
Dengue
Circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2
Chikungunya virus disease
Armed conflict
Yellow Fever
Venezuelan equine fever
Oropouche virus disease
Influenza due to identified human influenza virus
Malaria
Antibiotic resistant agents
Poliomyelitis, acute unspecified
Ebola virus disease
Cholera
Acute gastrointestinal syndrome
Acute Fever and Rash Syndrome
Anthrax, unspecified
Rubella (German measles)
Influenza due to identified avian or animal influenza virus
Sudan virus disease
Marburg virus disease
Guillain-Barré syndrome
Arenaviral haemorrhagic fevers, other
Mosquito-borne viral fever, other specified
Under the International Health Regulations(IHR) 2005 all States Parties are required to have or develop and maintain minimum core public health capacities to implement the IHR (2005), and report the status of implementation annually, as stipulated in Article 54 of the Regulations.
The formal submission of data from State Parties to the WHO via the IHR annual reports is very important and will be used as the basis for:
- reporting to the World Health Assembly, on the status of implementation of these Regulations;
- informing the GPW 13 indicator on emergency preparedness; and
- informing UN SDG Goal 3 for indicator 3.d.1 – International Health Regulations (IHR) capacity and health emergency preparedness.
Detailed information on 2019 and previous years up to 2010 of the IHR annual reporting by State Parties are primarily published and available on e-SPAR platform and also at the WHO Global Health Observatory website
Detailed information on 2019 and previous years up to 2010 of the IHR annual reporting by State Parties are primarily published and available on e-SPAR platform and also at the WHO Global Health Observatory website