WHO grading of public health events and emergencies
The world faces an increasing number of emergencies with health consequences from all hazards, including infectious disease outbreaks, conflicts, natural disasters, chemical or radio-nuclear spills and food contamination.
Many emergencies can be complex, with more than one cause, and can have significant public health, social, economic and political impacts. WHO has specific responsibilities and accountabilities for emergency operations under the International Health Regulations (IHR) (2005) and within the global humanitarian system as the Interagency Standing Committee (IASC) Global Health Cluster Lead Agency.
These responsibilities begin with early detection and risk assessment or situation analysis of a public health event or emergency. Events or emergencies requiring an operational response by WHO are referred for grading.
This page describes the grading process, definitions of various grades, and the criteria for grading. WHO uses three levels of emergency grades; emergencies that continue for more than six months may be defined as protracted crises, which also have three grades.
Grading is an internal activation procedure that triggers WHO emergency procedures and activities for the management of the response.
The grading assigned to an acute emergency indicates the level of operational response required by WHO for that emergency. WHO’s immediate operational response to acute events and emergencies is not dependent on grading. If the risk assessment or situation analysis indicates the need for an operational response, WHO immediately repurposes the country office(s), initiates response activities and then proceeds to grading within a maximum of 24 hours of the analysis. Protracted emergencies (that persist for longer than 6 months) are assigned protracted grades to indicate the level of operational response to be sustained by WHO over a prolonged, often indefinite period.
Purpose of grading
Grading is an internal WHO process that is conducted to:
For acute events and emergencies, the grading exercise is conducted within 24 hours of:
For moderate risks or slower onset events, e.g. due to conflict or drought, grading may only happen several days after initial assessment.
A public health event or emergency that is being monitored by WHO but that does not require a WHO operational response.
A single country emergency requiring a limited response by WHO, but that still exceeds the usual country-level cooperation that the WHO Country Office (WCO) has with the Member State. Most of the WHO response can be managed with in-country assets. Organizational and/or external support required by the WCO is limited. The provision of support to the WCO is coordinated by an Emergency Coordinator in the Regional Office.
A single country or multiple country emergency, requiring a moderate response by WHO. The level of response required by WHO always exceeds the capacity of the WCO. Organizational and/or external support required by the WCO is moderate. The provision of support to the WCO is coordinated by an Emergency Coordinator in the Regional Office. An Emergency Officer is also appointed at headquarters to assist with the coordination of Organization-wide support.
A single country or multiple country emergency, requiring a major/maximal WHO response. Organizational and/or external support required by the WCO is major and requires the mobilization of Organization-wide assets. The provision of support to the WCO is coordinated by an Emergency Coordinator in the Regional Office(s). An Emergency Officer is also appointed at headquarters, to assist with the coordination of Organizationwide inputs. On occasion, the WHE Executive Director and the Regional Director may agree to have the Emergency Coordinator based in headquarters. For events or emergencies involving multiple regions, an Incident Management Support Team at headquarters will coordinate the response across the regions.