| Literature DB >> 22187606 |
Peter Nsubuga1, Kenneth Johnson, Christopher Tetteh, Joseph Oundo, Andrew Weathers, James Vaughan, Suzanne Elbon, Mufuta Tshimanga, Faustine Ndugulile, Chima Ohuabunwo, Michele Evering-Watley, Fausta Mosha, Obinna Oleribe, Patrick Nguku, Lora Davis, Nykiconia Preacely, Richard Luce, Simon Antara, Hiari Imara, Yassa Ndjakani, Timothy Doyle, Yescenia Espinosa, Ditu Kazambu, Dieula Delissaint, John Ngulefac, Kariuki Njenga.
Abstract
As of 2010 sub-Saharan Africa had approximately 865 million inhabitants living with numerous public health challenges. Several public health initiatives [e.g., the United States (US) President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and the US President's Malaria Initiative] have been very successful at reducing mortality from priority diseases. A competently trained public health workforce that can operate multi-disease surveillance and response systems is necessary to build upon and sustain these successes and to address other public health problems. Sub-Saharan Africa appears to have weathered the recent global economic downturn remarkably well and its increasing middle class may soon demand stronger public health systems to protect communities. The Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) program of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has been the backbone of public health surveillance and response in the US during its 60 years of existence. EIS has been adapted internationally to create the Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP) in several countries. In the 1990s CDC and the Rockefeller Foundation collaborated with the Uganda and Zimbabwe ministries of health and local universities to create 2-year Public Health Schools Without Walls (PHSWOWs) which were based on the FETP model. In 2004 the FETP model was further adapted to create the Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program (FELTP) in Kenya to conduct joint competency-based training for field epidemiologists and public health laboratory scientists providing a master's degree to participants upon completion. The FELTP model has been implemented in several additional countries in sub-Saharan Africa. By the end of 2010 these 10 FELTPs and two PHSWOWs covered 613 million of the 865 million people in sub-Saharan Africa and had enrolled 743 public health professionals. We describe the process that we used to develop 10 FELTPs covering 15 countries in sub-Saharan Africa from 2004 to 2010 as a strategy to develop a locally trained public health workforce that can operate multi-disease surveillance and response systems.Entities:
Keywords: Field epidemiology; laboratory management; multi-disease surveillance and response systems; public health workforce capacity building
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22187606 PMCID: PMC3224071 DOI: 10.4314/pamj.v10i0.72235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1Field Epidemiology Training and allied Programs, 2010
Participants (Graduates and Current Trainees) of 2-year Public Health Schools Without Walls (PHSWOWs) and Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Programs (FELTPs) in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2010
| PHSWOW or FELTP | Country or Countries | Year PHSWOW or FELTP Began | Country or Region Population in 2010 (millions] | Cumulative PHSWOW or FELTP Participants in 2010 | Cumulative Participants per million 2010 population | Field Epidemiology Track (Degree offered) | Laboratory Epidemiology Track (Degree offered) | Veterinary Epidemiology Track (Degree offered) | Source of Startup Funding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Zimbabwe PHSWOW | Zimbabwe | 1993 | 12.6 | 166 | 13.2 | 166(MPH) | n/a | n/a | Rockefeller Foundation |
| 2. Uganda NISWOW | Uganda | 1994 | 33.8 | 284 | 8.4 | 284 (MPH) | n/a | n/a | Rockefeller Foundation |
| 3. Kenya FELTP | Kenya, South Sudan | 2004 | 48.3 | 74 | 1.5 | 49 (MSc Applied Epidemiology) | 25 (MSc Applied Epidemiology and Laboratory Management | n/a | Ellison Medical Foundation |
| 4. South Africa FELTP | South Africa | 2006 | 49.9 | 41 | 0.8 | 24 (MPH Field Epidemiology) | 17 (MPH Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Management) | n/a | PEPFAR |
| S. Ghana FELTP | Ghana | 2007 | 24.0 | 28 | 1.2 | 10 (MPhil Applied Epidemiology) | 9 (MPhil Applied Epidemiology and Laboratory Management | 9 {MPhil Applied Epidemiology) | USA ID |
| 6. Tanzania FELTP | Tanzania | 2008 | 45.0 | 33 | 0.7 | 20 (MSc Applied Epidemiology) | 13 (MSc Applied Epidemiology and Laboratory Management | n/a | PEPFAR, USA ID, PMI |
| 7. Nigeria FELTP | Nigeria | 2008 | 158.3 | 26 | 0.2 | 12 (MSc Field Epidemiology) | 6 (MSc Field Epidemiology and Laboratory | 8 (MSc Veterinary Field Epidemiology) | PEPFAR, USA ID |
| Management) | |||||||||
| 8. Ethiopia FELTP | Eihiopia | 2009 | 85.0 | 35 | 0.4 | 29 (MPH) | 6 (MPH) | n/a | PLPhAR |
| 9. Rwanda FELTP | Rwanda | 2010 | 10.4 | 15 | 1.4 | (MSc Applied Epidemiology) | 3 (MSc Applied Epidemiology and Laboratory Management | 3 (MSc Applied Epidemiology) | PLPhAR |
| 10. West Africa FELTP | Burkina Fa so, Mali, Togo, Niger | 2010 | 54.1 | 12 | 0.2 | 4 (MPH) | 4 (MPH) | 4 (MPH) | USAID |
| 11. Mozambique FELTP | Mozambique | 2010 | 23.4 | 11 | 0.5 | 5 (MSc Applied Epidemiology) | 6 (MSc Applied Epidemiology and Laboratory Management | n/a | PEPFAR |
| 12. Central Africa FELTP | Democratic Republic of Congo, Cameroon, Central African Republic | 2010 | 92.6 | 18 | 0.2 | 12 (Master's in Field Epidemiology) | 6 (Master's in Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Management | n/a | BMGF USAID |
| TOTAL | 637.4 | 743 | 1.2 | 624 | 95 | 24 |
FELTP = Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program, FETP= Field Epidemiology Training Program
PEPFAR = US President's Plan for Emergency AIDS Relief; PMI= US President's Malaria Initiative; USAID = US Agency for International Development; BGMF= Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
MPH = Masters of Public Health; MSc = Masters of Science; MPhil = Masters of Philosophy