The
European Medical Corps (
EMC) is a civilian
incident response team that was launched on 15 February 2016 by the European Union to provide an emergency response force to deal with outbreaks of epidemic disease anywhere in the world. The EMC was formed after the 2014
Ebola outbreak in West Africa when
the WHO was criticized for a slow and insufficient response in the early stages of the Ebola outbreak. The framework for the European Medical Corps is part of the
EU Civil Protection Mechanism's new
European Emergency Response Capacity (otherwise known as the 'voluntary pool'). The EMC is part of the emergency response capacity of European countries. Teams from nine EU member states—Belgium, Luxembourg, Spain, Germany, the Czech Republic, France, the Netherlands, Finland, and Sweden – are available for deployment in an emergency. The EMC consists of medical teams, public health teams, mobile biosafety laboratories, medical evacuation capacities, experts in public health and medical assessment and coordination, and technical and logistics support. Any country in need of assistance can make a request to the Emergency Response Coordination Centre, part of the European Commission's Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection department. The first deployment of the EMC was announced by the European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection on 12 May 2016, a response to the
outbreak of yellow fever in Angola in 2016. ==List of Commissioners==