| Literature DB >> 29051838 |
Damian Hoy1,2, A Mark Durand3, Thane Hancock4, Haley L Cash3, Kate Hardie5, Beverley Paterson5, Yvette Paulino6, Paul White7, Tony Merritt8, Dawn Fitzgibbons9, Sameer Vali Gopalani1, James Flint8, Onofre Edwin A Merilles1, Mina Kashiwabara10, Viema Biaukula11, Christelle Lepers1, Yvan Souares1, Eric Nilles11, Anaseini Batikawai12, Sevil Huseynova13, Mahomed Patel14, Salanieta T Saketa1, David Durrheim5, Alden Henderson15, Adam Roth1,16,17.
Abstract
PROBLEM: The Pacific region has widely dispersed populations, limited financial and human resources and a high burden of disease. There is an urgent need to improve the availability, reliability and timeliness of useable health data. CONTEXT: The purpose of this paper is to share lessons learnt from a three-year pilot field epidemiology training programme that was designed to respond to these Pacific health challenges. The pilot programme built on and further developed an existing field epidemiology training programme for Pacific health staff. ACTION: The programme was delivered in country by epidemiologists working for Pacific Public Health Surveillance Network partners. The programme consisted of five courses: four one-week classroom-based courses and one field epidemiology project. Sessions were structured so that theoretical understanding was achieved through interaction and reinforced through practical hands-on group activities, case studies and other interactive practical learning methods. OUTCOME: As of September 2016, 258 students had commenced the programme. Twenty-six course workshops were delivered and one cohort of students had completed the full five-course programme. The programme proved popular and gained a high level of student engagement. DISCUSSION: Face-to-face delivery, a low student-to-facilitator ratio, substantial group work and practical exercises were identified as key factors that contributed to the students developing skills and confidence. Close engagement of leaders and the need to quickly evaluate and adapt the curriculum were important lessons, and the collaboration between external partners was considered important for promoting a harmonized approach to health needs in the Pacific.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29051838 PMCID: PMC5635332 DOI: 10.5365/wpsar.2016.7.4.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Western Pac Surveill Response J ISSN: 2094-7321
Courses and number of students completing each course, Pacific DDM Programme, August 2013 to September 2016
| Course | Number of times delivered | Number of students undertaking course | Number of students successfully completing course | Percentage of students successfully completing course* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Introduction to Epidemiology and Field Epidemiology | 5 | 112 | 105 | 94% |
| Public Health Surveillance | 5 | 103 | 94 | 91% |
| Outbreak Investigations | 12 | 244 | 178 | 73% |
| Computing for Public Health Practice | 2 | 43 | 33 | 77% |
| Field Epidemiology Project | 2 | 47 | 26 | 55% |
* Students who did not successfully complete a course either opted out of being assessed or undertook the assessment and did not pass
Fig. 1Curriculum framework for Pacific DDM Programme aligned with the Health Metrics Network framework, 2013–2016