Castries, Saint Lucia. July 6, 2026. The Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) and the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) renewed their partnership to strengthen regional cooperation in disaster management and public health resilience across the Caribbean, through the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on July 6th, 2026. This MOU will strengthen the already established relationship, enhance cooperation between the two CARICOM institutions, and provide better coordinated action to prevent, prepare for, respond to, and recover from disasters and public health emergencies across the Caribbean.
For many years, CARPHA and CDEMA have worked together to support the CARICOM Region in responding to hurricanes, disease outbreaks, and other emergencies. Through CDEMA's Regional Response Mechanism (RRM), CARPHA has provided technical public health expertise during regional emergencies, supporting Member States with disease surveillance, laboratory services, health assessments, risk communication, environmental health interventions, and emergency response planning.
Recent examples of this collaboration include the regional responses to Hurricane Melissa in 2025 and Hurricane Beryl in 2024. Following the devastating impacts of these events across several Caribbean countries, CARPHA supported the health response as part of the CDEMA-led RRM by deploying technical experts to participate in rapid needs assessments, evaluate shelters and health facilities, strengthen disease surveillance, and provide guidance to national health authorities.
Commenting on the significance of the agreement, CDEMA Executive Director, Elizabeth Riley, said:
"The Caribbean's risk landscape is changing rapidly. Climate change, increasingly intense weather events, public health emergencies, and other emerging threats demand that we move beyond traditional approaches and strengthen collaboration across sectors. This MOU between CDEMA and CARPHA reflects our shared recognition that resilience can only be achieved through integrated action and strong regional partnerships."
CARPHA Executive Director, Dr. Lisa Indar, emphasised the importance of integrating public health and disaster management, noting: "Health and disaster management are inseparable. This MOU brings together CARPHA's public health expertise and CDEMA's disaster coordination leadership to strengthen regional preparedness, build more resilient health systems, and better protect the people of the Caribbean from increasingly complex threats."
Sharing remarks at the signing ceremony, CARICOM Assistant Secretary-General Alison Drayton said: “The collaboration between CARPHA and CDEMA therefore represents a practical expression of the Community's commitment to building resilience through cooperation. By combining CARPHA's technical leadership in health security with CDEMA's expertise in disaster mitigation and emergency management, we are strengthening the regional architecture that protects Caribbean people before, during, and after crises.”
This MOU reinforces collaboration between CARPHA and CDEMA in disaster preparedness and emergency response across the Caribbean. Under the agreement, the two agencies will strengthen coordination during regional emergencies, combining CDEMA's leadership in disaster management with CARPHA's technical expertise in public health. The partnership also promotes the protection of affected populations, the integration of health into regional disaster planning and response, the application of shared standards and best practices, and joint capacity-building initiatives through training, simulation exercises, technical exchanges, and knowledge sharing to enhance the Region's resilience.
The partnership will also strengthen joint planning, capacity building, resource mobilisation, and operational coordination, enabling the Caribbean to better anticipate and respond to emerging threats while enhancing regional health security and disaster resilience.
As the Caribbean continues to face increasingly complex and interconnected risks, the strengthened CARPHA– CDEMA partnership will improve coordination during emergencies, protect vulnerable populations, reinforce resilient health systems, and further integrate public health into disaster risk management. The MOU marks another important step towards a safer, healthier, and more resilient Caribbean.
About the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA):
The Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) is the regional inter-governmental agency responsible for disaster management within the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). Established in 1991 as the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Response Agency (CDERA), it transitioned to CDEMA in 2009 to advance Comprehensive Disaster Management (CDM)—an integrated approach to reducing disaster risk, strengthening resilience, and supporting sustainable development across its twenty (20) Participating States.
About the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA):
The Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) is the Caribbean Community's regional public health agency, serving its 26 Member States by providing strategic leadership, technical expertise, and coordinated action to prevent disease, strengthen health systems, and improve regional health security. Through surveillance, laboratory services, research, capacity building, and emergency preparedness and response, CARPHA works with Member States and partners to protect and improve the health of Caribbean people.
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Photo Captions:
Photo Caption: Strengthening disaster preparedness and emergency response across the Caribbean, Elizabeth Riley, CDEMA Executive Director, and Dr. Lisa Indar, CARPHA Executive Director, sign the agreement for continued partnership.
Photo Caption: (L-R) Rear Admiral Errington Shurland, Executive Director, Regional Security System (RSS); Ms. Elizabeth Riley, Executive Director, Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA); Ms. Alison Drayton, CARICOM Assistant Secretary-General; Dr. Lisa Indar, Executive Director, CARPHA; and Lt. Col. Michael Jones, Executive Director, CARICOM IMPACS.