CORESP – Public Social Emergency Response Operational Body, a project within the scope of social emergency, which operates voluntarily and currently out of passion.
Public social emergencies resulting from threats to public health and beyond continue to constitute a major problem in Member States of the African Region and Europe. Member States need to have functioning Public Social Emergency Operations Centers (COE) to comply with International Health Regulations (IHR) obligations. COEs play a key role in helping Member States prepare for and respond to public social emergencies.
CORESP aims to provide step-by-step guidance for the management and operations of CORESP, with a view to preparing for and responding to public health emergencies (ESP), in order to ensure the optimized and efficient use of these facilities.
It is intended to be used by CORESP employees to guide the operations and management of CORESP, aimed at vulnerable people after accidents or other emergencies with activation and deactivation procedures and the procedures to follow under each activation level. Furthermore, intervention teams that coordinate the response to points and other public social emergencies will also make use of this document.
- Support for the integration of refugees.
- Support for the homeless – Shelter
- Social Emergency - Transport of Corpses (regarding the removal of corpses (45/2004)
- Employment and more volunteering.
- Education
- Vulnerable groups
- Health
- Internal and external training
- Social reinsertion.
Coming from Portuguese-speaking countries or already installed in our country as part of our disaster response operations, we want to legalize the activity , become a non-profit institution and work with/for the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries as the main objective in our country, with the conditions to organize delegations in all Portuguese-speaking countries and other signatory countries of the United Nations - UN that, due to the interests of organizations and institutions and or similar, want to become part of the institution, thus taking a constitutive form international and with greater global representation.