 I've worked in humanitarian sector and especially with public health emergencies for a number of years. I have worked in both of the major Ebola outbreaks. I've also worked directly in camp settings to lead teams controlling different types of outbreaks. Currently, I'm in DRC in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where we were responding to Ebola crisis, but because of the COVID-19, we had to intervene and to bring all the expertise from every person that worked in the outbreaks. From the very beginning, all of our teams who are responding need to be trained properly. They need to be able to set up effectively and safely screening and triage and isolation areas. They need to have the proper training on infection prevention control. We also trained on personal protective equipment, PPE, because these are all the first layer in terms of making sure that our staff and our healthcare workers are protected so therefore they can protect themselves and patients and the community. The COVID-19 virus is still very new to us and the research are still ongoing. So every day we have updates that we add them on the training. One of the things that we have remarked over all the outbreaks that we work through is that the false information can actually harm more than the infection itself. This is why in ION Marat we decided to have a widespread training that is gathered based on factual information. We're talking about things that ideally should be done face to face, but with the outbreak evolving the way that it is we don't really have time to waste. We did it virtually, myself sitting in Tbilisi, Georgia and then a colleague of mine sitting in North Kibu of DRC. We did it over Skype with a video and we shared the screen with the training material so we can give the training until further notice.