About Us
About us
About GOARN
We are a WHO network of over 250 technical institutions and networks globally that respond to acute public health events with the deployment of staff and resources to affected countries. Coordinated by an Operational Support Team based at the WHO headquarters in Geneva and governed by a Steering committee, we aim to deliver rapid and effective support to prevent and control infectious diseases outbreaks and public health emergencies when requested.
GOARN Steering Committee
The Steering Committee (SCOM) of the Global outbreak alert and response network (GOARN) is a representative body of 21 partner institutions that oversee the planning, implementation and evaluation of the Network activities and strategic goals. The Committee fulfills the following functions:
- approving and monitoring the implementation of the Network’s work plan
- approving the terms of reference and monitoring the activities of Technical Working Groups and Standing Sub-Committees
- approving the addition of new institutions/organizations/networks to the Network.
- advocating for the network and representing the network at key public health events.
GOARN Operational Support Team
The GOARN Operational support team (OST) is based at the World health Organization in Geneva, Switzerland and in various WHO Regional Offices supporting outbreak response at the regional level. The OST facilitates the day to day running of the network and coordinates outbreak response missions, network activities and communications for the Network. You can reach the Operational support team for more information on how to get involved with GOARN.
Partner Institutions
Abu Dhabi Public Health Center (ADPHC)
United Arab Emirates (the)
Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Ethiopia
African Coalition for Epidemic Research, Response and Training (ALERRT)
United Kingdom
African Field Epidemiology Network (AFENET)
Uganda
Aix-Marseille University
France
American University of Beirut Medical Center
Lebanon
African Field Epidemiology Network (AFENET): Dr Simon Nyovuura Antara
Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC): Dr Yanping Zhang
Dr Yanping Zhang is the director of the Infectious Disease Control Division at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC). He graduated as MD on public health from Shandong Medical University in 1987 and graduated as MPH from China CDC in 2007, and was also graduated from the Chinese Field Epidemiology Training Program in 2004.
Dr Yanping Zhang worked in Henan Provincial CDC after graduation from the university for 20 years, His main work duty is prevention and control of zoonoses such as Japanese encephalitis, Leptospirosis, Rabies, Brucellosis, HFRS, Plague and so on. Since 2007, he worked at China CDC, his main research area is emerging and reemerging infectious diseases control and prevention. He attended emergency events response including severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome(SFTS),pandemic influenza A(H1N1), H7N9 and other human infected avian influenza, Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), Zika virus disease, Corona Virus Disease 2019 and Unknown etiology diseases. As a deputy director of the public health emergency center of China CDC, he is now mainly coordinating the surveillance, risk assessment, emergency preparedness and response of emerging infectious disease and pandemic preparedness. He also coordinated the establishment and management of emergency response teams and logistics support. Dr Yanping Zhang is the focal point for the emergency medical teams (EMT) in China.
Eastern Mediterranean Public Health Network (EMPHNET): Dr Mohannad Al-Nsour
European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC): Mr Thomas Hofmann
Mr Thomas Hofmann is heading the Section “Emergency Preparedness and Response” at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) in Stockholm. This Section also hosts the Secretariat for the EU Health Task Force, which supports countries in their national preparedness and response work.
Before he joined the Centre in 2021, he was working for WHO and the WHO Health Emergencies Programme (WHE) in various offices and functions. Besides directly supporting low- and middle-income countries with capacity building and during response operations, he was coordinating the implementation and application of the International Health Regulations (IHR) in the WHO European Region and supporting IHR Review and Emergency Committees at WHO Headquarters. Mr Hofmann was involved in several outbreak and crisis responses, on the national level by mobilizing support, e.g. during his earlier employment with the German Federal Ministry of Health, on the international level by coordinating support, and on the field level while being deployed, e.g. in Liberia during the EVD outbreak.
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research (ICDDR,B): Dr Lubaba Shahrin
Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Virales Humanas "Dr Julio I. Maiztegui" (INEVH)-ANLIS "Dr Carlos G. Malbràn": Dr Alejandra Morales
International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies: Ms Gwendoline Eamer
Gwen Eamer
is a humanitarian public health specialist with more than 15 years of
experience in emergency management. Gwen is a public health in emergencies
generalist, with experience implementing long-term community health programmes
in conflict zones, in recovery from disasters and epidemics, and leading
outbreak responses ranging from Ebola to cholera to COVID. She brings a wealth
of experience in community-based emergency response, participatory planning and
implementation of health programming, and training of local health workers and
emergency responders. Gwen holds an M.Sc. in Global Health, and leads the
Public Health in Emergencies file at the International Federation of Red Cross
and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), where she is responsible for global epidemic
response tools, coordination of health responses, and development of tools for
volunteer-based action to improve health outcomes in emergencies.
International Severe Acute Respiratory and emerging Infection Consortium (ISARIC): Dr Gail Carson
Currently, Dr Carson is helping WHO EURO with the new regional strategy Preparedness 2.0 in the role of Chair of the Technical Advisory Group (TAG). Dr Gail Carson became Chair of the GOARN Steering Committee in June 2022 after 4 years of being the Deputy Chair. The Ebola outbreak in Gulu was the first outbreak that Dr Carson participated in as a GOARN in 2000. Over the subsequent years, Dr Carson was deployed again to VHF outbreaks and to WHO Geneva, where she supported a number of activities around clinical care and training for outbreaks. Dr Carson completed her adult infectious diseases clinical training in the UK and took up a consultant post with the public health agency of England in 2008. Leaving in 2012 to help set up the international clinical research consortium ISARIC, based at the University of Oxford. In 2016, ISARIC and Dr Carson were selected for the GOARN SCOM, and in 2017, she set up the GOARN research. More recently, Dr Carson led, on behalf of SCOM, the GOARN strategy revision 2022-2026. GOARN partners continue to inspire and humble Dr Carson, and she looks forward to seeing out her tenure as the Chair of the GOARN Steering Committee and working closely with the Operational Support Team, GOARN Regional focal points, WHO, and, of course, the GOARN Partners.
Medecins Sans Frontiers, International: Dr Daniela Garone
National University of Singapore (NUS): Dr Louisa Sun
Robert Koch Institute: Dr Andreas Jansen
Dr Jansen is currently working for the Robert Koch Institute in Berlin as the Head of the Information Center for International Health Protection (INIG). He is a trained MD with a postgraduate degree in field epidemiology (EPIET), a diploma in Tropical Medicine and Travel Medicine, and a board certification in epidemiology.
From 2016-18, he worked at the WHO headquarters in Geneva. As part of the GOARN operation support team, his main task was to coordinate the work on Rapid Response Capacities. From 2010-2015, he was employed as Head of the Section for Scientific Advice Coordination at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) in Stockholm. He was responsible for developing and implementing SOPs and workflows for scientific advice at ECDC, including their IT implementation. Other responsibilities included country assessment missions, evaluation of public health measures, and production guidelines and recommendations based on the available evidence.
In 2015, he was employed as a senior consultant at the WHO Western Pacific Regional Office in Manila, as part of the response team for the MERS outbreak. In addition, he was a member of several public health emergency response teams (pandemic influenza, Q fever, EHEC) both on national and international levels. He has extensive working experience in outbreak response and was the principal investigator in several outbreak investigations.
University of Nebraska: Dr Ali Khan
Public Health Agency of Canada: Dr Njoo Howard
American University of Beirut: Dr Ghassan M. Matar
Indo-Pacific Centre for Health Security, Australian Government’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade: Mr Sean Starmer
Central Department of Microbiology, Tribhuvan University, Nepal: Professor/Dr Prakash Ghimire
UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA): Dr Edmund Newman
National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) : Dr Jacqueline Weyer
Jacqueline Weyer is the Head of the Centre for Emerging Zoonotic and Parasitic Diseases of the National Institute for Communicable Diseases. For 17 years, she has been leading the team responsible for laboratory investigations of human rabies, viral heamorrhagic fevers, arboviruses, and other emerging zoonotic diseases (such as mpox) of concern to the health of the South African public. In the past 10 years, Jacqueline has authored and co-authored more than 60 scientific papers in peer-reviewed journals, and seven chapters in books, and achieved a National Research Foundation C2 rating since 2017. She serves on several national and regional committees and working groups pertaining to laboratory biosafety and biosecurity, rabies and other zoonoses, and One Health. She has been co-chairing the National One Health Forum in South Africa since its inception and a member of the National Rabies Advisory Group since 2008. She serves as the Deputy Chair of the ASSAf Standing Committee on Biosafety and Biosecurity and the Lead for the Implementation of the International Health Regulations in South Africa, Biosafety and Biosecurity work package.
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF): Dr Douglas Noble
Dr Douglas Noble (BSc, BMBCh, MRCS, MPH, MD(Res), FRSPH, FFPH) is the Associate Director for Public Health Emergencies Preparedness and Response for UNICEF. As the global lead for public health emergencies in UNICEF he is driven by a desire to ensure that girls and boys, families and communities are prepared and protected during public health emergencies.
Dr Noble first joined UNICEF in 2013 as the Regional Health Adviser for South Asia based in Kathmandu, Nepal. He later joined UNICEF China as the Deputy Representative from 2017 - 2023.
He has also previously worked in the UK National Health Service, Department of Health and Health Protection Agency, with the World Health Organization, and was a Harkness Fellow with the Commonwealth Fund. He has an honorary academic affiliation with the University of Oxford.
Dr Noble studied science at the University of St. Andrews and medicine at Oxford University. He has a master’s degree and research doctorate in public health from Johns Hopkins and Queen Mary University of London, respectively. He is a British national.
United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC): Dr Athalia Christie
Athalia Christie, DrPH, MIA, is the Principal Deputy Director for the Global Health Center at the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta. Dr Christie supports Global Health operations and provides leadership and guidance in science, implementation research, and response activities, ensuring high-quality and comprehensive program delivery. Dr Christie received her Doctorate in Epidemiology from Johns Hopkins University and a Master’s in International Affairs with a concentration in public health from Columbia University. Dr Christie previously served as the Global Health Center’s Associate Director for Emergency Response and Preparedness, coordinating global emergency response work across CDC, the USG inter-agency and our global partners. During her time in this position, she served three times as the Senior U.S. Government Official overseeing interagency response teams spanning at least 12 federal departments and agencies, twice for Marburg Virus Disease (2023 and 2024) and for Clade 1 Mpox (2024). Previously, Dr. Christie served as the CDC's Ebola Response Lead in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, as well as the Principal Deputy Incident Manager for DRC Ebola, COVID-19, Multi-national Mpox, and Marburg responses. Throughout her 27-year career at the CDC, Dr Christie has consistently displayed commitment to improving global health outcomes, successfully leading local, national, and international public health programs. Dr Christie has expertise in outbreak response, disease control, and policy. She has received many awards for her service, including the Watsonian Public Health Advisor of the Year, the Secretary’s Award for Distinguished Service, and the American Red Cross’ Spirit of Excellence.