| Literature DB >> 25328621 |
Patrick Nguku1, Akin Oyemakinde2, Kabir Sabitu3, Adebola Olayinka3, Ikeoluwapo Ajayi4, Olufunmilayo Fawole4, Rebecca Babirye1, Sheba Gitta1, David Mukanga1, Ndadilnasiya Waziri1, Saheed Gidado1, Oladayo Biya1, Chinyere Gana1, Olufemi Ajumobi2, Aisha Abubakar3, Nasir Sani-Gwarzo2, Samuel Ngobua5, Obinna Oleribe6, Gabriele Poggensee1, Peter Nsubuga7, Joseph Nyager8, Abdulsalami Nasidi1.
Abstract
The health workforce is one of the key building blocks for strengthening health systems. There is an alarming shortage of curative and preventive health care workers in developing countries many of which are in Africa. Africa resultantly records appalling health indices as a consequence of endemic and emerging health issues that are exacerbated by a lack of a public health workforce. In low-income countries, efforts to build public health surveillance and response systems have stalled, due in part, to the lack of epidemiologists and well-trained laboratorians. To strengthen public health systems in Africa, especially for disease surveillance and response, a number of countries have adopted a competency-based approach of training - Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program (FELTP). The Nigeria FELTP was established in October 2008 as an inservice training program in field epidemiology, veterinary epidemiology and public health laboratory epidemiology and management. The first cohort of NFELTP residents began their training on 20th October 2008 and completed their training in December 2010. The program was scaled up in 2011 and it admitted 39 residents in its third cohort. The program has admitted residents in six annual cohorts since its inception admitting a total of 207 residents as of 2014 covering all the States. In addition the program has trained 595 health care workers in short courses. Since its inception, the program has responded to 133 suspected outbreaks ranging from environmental related outbreaks, vaccine preventable diseases, water and food borne, zoonoses, (including suspected viral hemorrhagic fevers) as well as neglected tropical diseases. With its emphasis on one health approach of solving public health issues the program has recruited physicians, veterinarians and laboratorians to work jointly on human, animal and environmental health issues. Residents have worked to identify risk factors of disease at the human animal interface for influenza, brucellosis, tick-borne relapsing fever, rabies, leptospirosis and zoonotic helminthic infections. The program has been involved in polio eradication efforts through its National Stop Transmission of Polio (NSTOP). The commencement of NFELTP was a novel approach to building sustainable epidemiological capacity to strengthen public health systems especially surveillance and response systems in Nigeria. Training and capacity building efforts should be tied to specific system strengthening and not viewed as an end to them. The approach of linking training and service provision may be an innovative approach towards addressing the numerous health challenges.Entities:
Keywords: Capacity building; Nigeria; Public Health; field epidemiology; training
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25328621 PMCID: PMC4199351 DOI: 10.11694/pamj.supp.2014.18.1.4930
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
NFELTP residents by Zone 2008-2014 (N=207)
| Zone | Number | Per 1 million population | % Coverage* |
|---|---|---|---|
| North West | 42 | 1.14 | |
| North Central | 44 | 1.83 | |
| South West | 40 | 1.21 | |
| North East | 31 | 1.41 | |
| South East | 32 | 1.78 | |
| South South | 18 | 0.9 | |
Target is – 5 epidemiologist per 1 million population
Figure 1Residents recruitment by State of Origin 2008 – 2014 (N=207)
Figure 2Outbreaks investigated and responded to by residents in NFELTP 2008 - 2014
Trainees of short courses 2007 – 2014(N=595)
| Type of short course | Month/Year | Persons trained | Venue | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV/AIDs Program Management 6 month course | September 2013 | 47 | Abuja | Trained on HIV/AIDs epidemiology, surveillance, program management, monitoring and evaluation. Conducted 2 competency-based field projects |
| HIV competency-based Monitoring and evaluation | July-October 2012 | 75 | Abuja | Competency based monitoring and evaluation of programs with emphasis on HIV. Course done through EFMC |
| Stop Transmission of Polio Training | June 2012 | 80 | Create vaccine preventable disease capacity particularly polio | |
| Outbreak investigation | November 2011 | 40 | Ibadan | State RRT trained on outbreak investigation – funded by FMOH |
| Outbreak investigation | September 2011 | 35 | Minna | State RRT trained on outbreak investigation – funded by FMOH |
| Outbreak investigation | June 2011 | 33 | Kaduna | State RRT trained on outbreak investigation – funded by FMOH |
| Basic epidemiology course and health leadership and management | January 2011 | 87 | Sokoto | Equipping frontline health care workers with basic epidemiology and health leadership and management skills in northern Nigeria – funded by US Department of Health & Human Services– Health Diplomacy |
| Zoonoses outbreak and surveillance Short course | September 2010 | 32 | Vom | Zoonoses surveillance and outbreak – USAID funded |
| Outbreak and surveillance | July –October 2008 | 35 | Minna | State epidemiologists training on outbreak investigation and surveillance with emphasis on vaccine preventable diseases |
| HIV/TB collaboration (2 courses) | 2007/08 | 66 | Zaria, Sokoto | HIV/TB epidemiology and collaboration, data analysis |
| Outbreak and surveillance (2 courses) | 2007/8 | 70 | Enugu Lagos | Emphasis on surveillance and outbreak investigation on influenza and vaccine preventable diseases-supported by GID and USAID |
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