 Next up Fred. Hey, who are you? What do you do? I am Frederick Ham, a member of the GIS unit. GIS, what's GIS? GIS Geographic Information System. Geographic Information Systems, okay? And the GIS unit is based in Geneva supporting all MSF operations. Okay, that's clear. And GIS. Okay, and why are you here today? What are you showing us today? Today I'm presenting a geographic application innovative one supporting MSF operations as a pilot in DRC. Okay, what's new about it? Why is it different? The new thing is that it's a dynamic map allowing the access to different kind of information and linked to different databases like reports of given activity in the underground. It is split between different type of activities by cause of the intervention. So cholera, outbreak, displaced people or other type of cause of the intervention. It is split between explorations, which is the first needs assessment done before a project is actually launched, project or emergency intervention. And you can pin on a given, you can click on a given pin and having information on the intervention. Okay, so to be clear just to the top, so to be clear what happens now is that lots of different MSF staff, they collect all kinds of different data and they come back to the head office and they give paperwork to some guy and then they put everything on a static map which is stuck on the wall. And this is dynamic and so now the staff will collect information electronically, email it into some clever system which produces this marvelous dashboard. Is that what happens? Yeah, actually we've been developing this application which is fed by data collected using mobile devices on the ground by a team of, led by a GIS specialist and a number of people collecting data with those devices. Okay, so you get some lay workers, guys that you can hire locally, ladies you can hire locally with their smartphones and then they upload stuff and it all goes into this clever tool. And then the field coordinator, medical coordinator, they can make more informed quicker decisions. Is that the idea? Exactly, exactly. You're right. So we have different type of information displayed, activities. Can you make it do some cool stuff? I'll let you click. Actually here you have activities for last year, 2016 but if you want you can display all years from 2003 to now. So you can see in this area where the intervention. In clear blue you have the exploration, in dark blue you have the actual regular projects or long term projects and in yellow you have the emergencies intervention. If you want only displaying the emergencies, you click on it and you have actually all emergencies by course. So you have cholera, internal displacement and MRG called fever. Okay, that's clear. Dr Bargavi, is this going to make a difference to your life as a field coordinator? This would be exactly. My question perhaps not as a field coordinator but as a medic, what would this offer me? What does this offer the doctors of MSF? Well, this part is about activities but I haven't shown you the health part. So you have also access to information about health facilities and you can filter again health facilities by for instance status of the health facility and you zoom in and click on a given health facility. You can have access to some information about this health facility. General information like a statement of the building, like medical information about the number of beds, number of doctors. So if I was planning say for instance a measles campaign I would know certain sites that I could use, where sites were capable of doing vaccination and things like that. Brilliant. Do you have to give information about what's the local capacity, what are the constraints you might face? Because if you click on a dangerous health facility you might think that this might infer some more constraint support for me. Could I also be able to check where outbreaks had happened before if I was looking for hotspots or anything like that for certain diseases? I would say indirectly through the intervention we had. So for instance given intervention addressing cholera outbreak would be displayed. But we don't display on these applications actual outbreaks. But it could be done in another application for instance. And where are you with this, this tested in the field already? What was the stage of the process of this project are you? Now it's functional, it's working fed by the information collected by the team. It's being used in the field today? Yeah and here you have information collected in August last year but you have some information more up to date for some other facilities. And that's a pilot project? It's a pilot indeed and it is inspired by other interventions and other applications. So now we are developing one for Middle East, one for Chad which different attributes, different information displayed depending on the request of the team. Fantastic, great. Thanks very much. Good luck with it all.