Some update after 11 months of OpenStreetMap Response to the West Africa Ebola 
outbreak.
Pascal Neis map shows has of today, more then 15 millions of objects edited (ie 
points, lines, relations). The zone covered goes from Bamako the the Atlantic 
ocean (900 km) and from the Ivory coast border to the Guinée-Bissau border (800 
km). Impressive support from the OSM community. Thanks to all.  Excellent 
collaboration also with many partners, conjointly working to provide a detailed 
and accurate map to respond to this quite challenging outbreak and support the 
best we can the logistic of the humanitarian organizations in the field.
 See Pascal Neis Ebola maphttp://t.co/qnO2pOWfbd
As the number of ebola cases goes down, the UNMEER and other UN agencies, MSF, 
Federation of Red Cross, Red Crescent, Nethope, etc. are working to rebuild the 
health system,  assure that better sanitation conditions are available and 
distribute goods to the population dispersed in remote areas.

Both to manage such a huge territory and have the thousand of volunteers visit 
the villages and distribute goods, maps are an essential part.
The present actions are less spectacular, less covered by the medias. But there 
is still a lot of work going on. There are many GIS on the ground supporting 
the logistic of the various organizations. Andrew and I are still collaborating 
to this UNMEER operation and are in contact with the various actors through 
Skype. 

Behind the scene, there are also many collaborators from HOT, OSM and various 
organizations doing various actions such as imagery processing, validation, 
documentation / learning material, development.  The various GIS specialists 
also collaborate in various ways to update the OSM database. For example, there 
was work done recently to update the information about roads condition to 
support the Drive time analysis.

Below are few examples of visualisations using the OSM basemap.UNMEER Liberia 
http://www.unmeer-im-liberia.website/unmeer-gims-web-map-app
WHO Drive Time Analysis tool http://maps.who.int/networkanalysis/WHO Global 
Ebola Response Monitoring and Mapping System http://maps.who.int/MapGallery/ 
WHO Roadmap 
http://maps.who.int/mapjournal/?appid=0ad091b7cb7e404dbf35f7c49ee4c992HDX Ebola 
Depot https://data.hdx.rwlabs.org/ebola
Nethope visualisations http://informatics.nethope.org/Resudox Ebola Cellular 
program http://ebola-cellular-map.resudox.net/

I invite again the GIS from the various organizations to give us some examples 
that show how OpenStreetMap is useful in the field in various ways including 
paper maps, GPS, smartphones, tablets, GIS downloads.

regard Pierre 
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