Topic

Back #EndTB Webinar: Supporting countries to transition to case-based, digital TB surveillance

What’s new in WHO TB strengthening surveillance?

Supporting countries to transition to case-based, digital surveillance

The World Health Organization (WHO), in collaboration with The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the University of Oslo, are organizing a webinar on the guidance, products and support for implementation that is available to countries to fully transition to case-based, digital surveillance systems for TB.

The objectives of the webinar are to:

-          provide an overview of WHO’s available, and in development products, to support transition to case-based, digital surveillance for TB;

-          provide a demo of the WHO DHIS2 TB tracker for patient surveillance and monitoring of programme activities;

-          share country experiences from recent implementation attempts of the DHIS2 TB tracker;

-          provide an overview of support that is available to countries for the implementation of DHIS2 digital packages for TB;

-          provide an opportunity for an interactive discussion between the panel and webinar participants.

The webinar will run twice on Friday 8th July 2022, 0900 – 1100h and 1600 – 1800h (CEST / GMT +2), to allow participation from all time zones. Both sessions will run in English with simultaneous translation.

Please feel free to circulate this invitation to all your relevant networks who you think would benefit from this webinar.

A final agenda, and the languages for which simultaneous translation will be available for each of the two sessions, will be communicated at a later date.

A zoom link will be shared closer to the date.

Download the flyer and promote on social media, here.

Entire content available on: https://www.who.int/news-room/events/detail/2022/07/08/default-calendar/endtb-webinar-supporting-countries-to-transition-to-case-based--digital-tb-surveillance



Language

English

Typology

Multimedia

Topic

Surveillance Digital Health Tuberculosis

Target

Public Health Primary care

Countries

USA Canada South America Central America Caribbean Middle East South pacific China India Indochina Singapore Europe & UK Oceania Africa