RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Social Mobilization and Community Engagement Central to the Ebola Response in West Africa: Lessons for Future Public Health Emergencies JF Global Health: Science and Practice JO GLOB HEALTH SCI PRACT FD Johns Hopkins University- Global Health. Bloomberg School of Public Health, Center for Communication Programs SP 626 OP 646 DO 10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00226 VO 4 IS 4 A1 Gillespie, Amaya M A1 Obregon, Rafael A1 El Asawi, Rania A1 Richey, Catherine A1 Manoncourt, Erma A1 Joshi, Kshiitij A1 Naqvi, Savita A1 Pouye, Ade A1 Safi, Naqibullah A1 Chitnis, Ketan A1 Quereshi, Sabeeha YR 2016 UL http://www.ghspjournal.org/content/4/4/626.abstract AB Key lessons for the crucial components of social mobilization and community engagement in this context: Invest in trusted local community members to facilitate community entrance and engagement.Use key communication networks and channels with wide reach and relevance to the community, such as radio in low-resource settings or faith-based organizations.Invest in strategic partnerships to tap relevant capacities and resources.Support a network of communication professionals who can deploy rapidly for lengthy periods.Balance centralized mechanisms to promote consistency and quality with decentralized programming for flexibility and adaptation to local needs.Evolve communication approaches and messaging over time with the changing outbreak patterns, e.g., from halting disease transmission to integration and support of survivors.Establish clear communication indicators and analyze and share data in real time.Following the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of a Public Health Emergency of International Concern regarding the Ebola outbreak in West Africa in July 2014, UNICEF was asked to co-lead, in coordination with WHO and the ministries of health of affected countries, the communication and social mobilization component—which UNICEF refers to as communication for development (C4D)—of the Ebola response. For the first time in an emergency setting, C4D was formally incorporated into each country's national response, alongside more typical components such as supplies and logistics, surveillance, and clinical care. This article describes the lessons learned about social mobilization and community engagement in the emergency response to the Ebola outbreak, with a particular focus on UNICEF's C4D work in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. The lessons emerged through an assessment conducted by UNICEF using 4 methods: a literature review of key documents, meeting reports, and other articles; structured discussions conducted in June 2015 and October 2015 with UNICEF and civil society experts; an electronic survey, launched in October and November 2015, with staff from government, the UN, or any partner organization who worked on Ebola (N = 53); and key informant interviews (N = 5). After triangulating the findings from all data sources, we distilled lessons under 7 major domains: (1) strategy and decentralization: develop a comprehensive C4D strategy with communities at the center and decentralized programming to facilitate flexibility and adaptation to the local context; (2) coordination: establish C4D leadership with the necessary authority to coordinate between partners and enforce use of standard operating procedures as a central coordination and quality assurance tool; (3) entering and engaging communities: invest in key communication channels (such as radio) and trusted local community members; (4) messaging: adapt messages and strategies continually as patterns of the epidemic change over time; (5) partnerships: invest in strategic partnerships with community, religious leaders, journalists, radio stations, and partner organizations; (6) capacity building: support a network of local and international professionals with capacity for C4D who can be deployed rapidly; (7) data and performance monitoring: establish clear C4D process and impact indicators and strive for real-time data analysis and rapid feedback to communities and authorities to inform decision making. Ultimately, communication, community engagement, and social mobilization need to be formally placed within the global humanitarian response architecture with proper funding to effectively support future public health emergencies, which are as much a social as a health phenomenon.