Filter
525
Text search:
afro
Featured
Recommendations
41
New Publications
129
Language
Document type
No document type
275
Studies & Reports
95
Guidelines
52
Strategic & Response Plan
40
Manuals
30
Situation Updates
14
Fact sheets
14
Training Material
2
Infographics
2
Online Courses
1
Countries / Regions
Africa
45
Latin America and the Carribbean
28
Liberia
23
Congo, Democratic Republic of
22
Sierra Leone
19
Global
18
Ghana
14
East and Southern Africa
14
West and Central Africa
14
Nigeria
12
Venezuela
12
Burkina Faso
11
Guinea
10
Madagascar
10
Uganda
9
Kenya
9
Rwanda
9
Ethiopia
8
Colombia
8
Malawi
7
Mozambique
7
Lesotho
7
Senegal
6
Tanzania
6
Namibia
6
Brazil
6
Mali
5
South Africa
5
Middle East and North Africa
5
Russia
5
Cameroon
4
Togo
4
Western and Central Europe
4
Guinea-Bissau
3
Côte d’Ivoire / Ivory Coast
3
Benin
3
Central African Republic
3
Eswatini/ Swaziland
3
Angola
3
Niger
2
Zimbabwe
2
South Sudan
2
Zambia
2
Bangladesh
2
Ecuador
2
Botswana
2
Mauritius
2
Haiti
1
India
1
Afghanistan
1
Syria
1
Chad
1
Gambia
1
Indonesia
1
Burundi
1
Honduras
1
Bolivia
1
Cape Verde
1
Myanmar / Burma
1
Yemen
1
South–East Asia Region
1
Eastern Europe and Central Asia
1
Asia
1
Italy
1
North America
1
Portugal
1
French Guyana
1
Authors & Publishers
Publication Years
Category
Countries
232
Clinical Guidelines
39
Public Health
38
Key Resources
18
Women & Child Health
13
Capacity Building
10
Pharmacy & Technologies
1
Toolboxes
COVID-19
71
Rapid Response
56
Ebola
41
Mental Health
32
TB
29
HIV
21
AMR
17
Planetary Health
14
Caregiver
12
Pharmacy
10
Global Health Education
9
NTDs
8
Conflict
7
NCDs
7
Disability
6
Cholera
5
Natural Hazards
4
Zika
4
Polio
3
Typhoon
2
Refugee
2
Specific Hazards
1
Social Ethics
1
Health Financing Toolbox
1
National Plague Control Guidelines
recommended
Accessed Oktober 18, 2017
Ending Cholera. A global roadmap to 2030
recommended
Ending Cholera—A Global Roadmap to 2030 operationalises the new global strategy for cholera control at the country level and provides a concrete path toward a world in which cholera is no longer a threat to public health