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- Risk Communicator
- Issue 3
- Emergency & Risk Communication
- Anthrax Scare
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- Issue 2
- Priceless Collaboration for Hurricane Preparedness
- Talking to WHO's John Rainford - New WHO Guidelines
- Emergency Communication Challenges in Hurricane Katrina Response
- Hurricane Readiness in High-Risk Areas: Survey Results
- Elements of a Successful Exercise: Functional vs Tabletop and Beyond
- Collaboration & Communication During Emergency Response
- Public Health Observances
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- Issue 1
- Introduction to the Risk Communicator
- Social Media & Emergency Communication
- Messaging Is Matter of Trust
- Program Spotlight: Frontlines of the CA Wildfires
- Research Summaries: Summaries of Work from Deborah Glik and Craig Lefebvre
- Risk Communication Opportunities During National Observances
- Upcoming Conferences, Training, and Workshops of Interest to Risk Communicators
- Contributors
- About the Newsletter
- Communicating in the First Hours
- SNAPS
- What CDC Is Doing
- What You Can Do
- Blog: Public Health Matters
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Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication Course (CERC)
Overview of Crisis & Emergency Risk Communication
Crisis and emergency risk communication is an approach used by scientists and public health professionals to provide information that allows an individual, stakeholders or an entire community, to make the best possible decisions about their well-being, under nearly impossible time constraints, while accepting the imperfect nature of their choices.
The CERC training program draws from lessons learned during public health emergencies, and incorporates best practices from the fields of risk and crisis communication. With this comprehensive training program, the CDC has moved forward in meeting the needs of partners and stakeholders in preparing for, responding to and recovering from the threat of bioterrorism, emergent diseases, and other hazards
Goals
CDC's Office of Enterprise Communication is offering Crisis & Emergency Risk Communication Training for appropriate public health workers and communicators both inside and outside the government. Goals are to:
- Disseminate training curricula and tools that will help public health communication professionals effectively prepare for and respond to public health emergencies.
- Introduce crisis and emergency risk training curricula and tools developed by the CDC Office of Enterprise Communication to public health officials, both inside and outside CDC.
- Train communicators, both inside and outside CDC, to subsequently train public health professionals in how to systematically plan, develop, implement, and evaluate crisis and emergency risk communication activities.
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- Page last updated October 3, 2008
- Content source: Office of Enterprise Communication (OEC)
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