Abstract
Abstract EMLab has responded to emergencies including the West Africa Ebola virus outbreak (2014-2016), the COVID-19 pandemic, and outbreaks of yellow fever, Marburg virus, and Lassa fever. It has deployed mobile labs and experts to many countries, including Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Uganda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Germany, and Greece. With accumulated experience from each deployment, EMLab’s diagnostic expertise has evolved beyond RT-PCR and serological testing to include basic point-of-care tests, haematology, and genomic surveillance capacities, also focusing on interoperability with other response capacities such as EMTs. Critical to mission success, the organization works closely with the WHO and GOARN, and was certified in 2023 as an official German response capacity within the European Civil Protection Pool. The two-year continuous deployment from 2014-2016 was pivotal in shaping EMLab’s evolution, also leading to significant capacity-building efforts in West Africa. In Guinea, for example, a surveillance network of three diagnostic laboratories has been established and successfully detected cases of viral haemorrhagic fevers, including the re-emergence of Ebola virus and the first reported case of Marburg virus in Guinea in 2021. Ultimately, EMLab’s extensive experience demonstrates that effective public health emergency response requires constant evolution, strategic partnerships, and a commitment to building local capacities, paving the way for a more resilient and prepared global health community.
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