| Literature DB >> 29450095 |
Zeinab Gura Roka1, Jane Githuku1, Mark Obonyo1, Waqo Boru1, Tura Galgalo2, Samuel Amwayi3, Jackson Kioko4, David Njoroge5, James Anthony Ransom6.
Abstract
The logistical and operational challenges to improve public health practice capacity across Africa are well documented. This report describes Kenya's Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program's (KFELTP) experience in implementing frontline public health worker training to transfer knowledge and practical skills that help strengthen their abilities to detect, document, respond to, and report unusual health events. Between May 2014 and May 2015, KFELTP hosted five training courses across the country to address practice gaps among local public health workers. Participants completed a 10-week process: two 1-week didactic courses, a 7-week field project, and a final 1-week course to present and defend the findings of their field project. The first year was a pilot period to determine whether the program could fit into the existing 2-year KFELTP model and whether this frontline-level training would have an impact on local practice. At the end of the first year, KFELTP certified 167 frontline health workers in field epidemiology and data management. This paper concludes that local, national, and international partnerships are critical for improving local public health response capacity and workforce development training in an African setting.Entities:
Keywords: Competencies; Field epidemiology; Preparedness; Training; Workforce development
Year: 2017 PMID: 29450095 PMCID: PMC5809989 DOI: 10.1186/s40985-017-0070-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Rev ISSN: 0301-0422
Fig. 1The current pyramid model of field epidemiology training and public health workforce development being implemented as part of KFELTP
Fig. 2.Map of Kenya’s 47 counties; counties that were clustered to form one training group are circled in the same color
Topics for didactic component of FELTP-frontline
| Item | Topic | Course | Learning objectives |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Introduction to epidemiology | 1 | Understand frontline epidemiology concepts: person, place, time; agent, host, environment |
| 2 | Introduction to surveillance | 1 | Understand frontline surveillance concepts: active vs. passive |
| 3 | Introduction to statistics | 1 | Understand frontline concepts of public health statistics |
| 4 | Descriptive statistics: measures of central tendency | 1 | Understand how to calculate the measures and interpret |
| 5 | The world of data—collection, management, analysis | 1 | Understand the activities associated with each aspect of training |
| 6 | Field project—data quality audit | Interim | Application of standard tool to assess the quality of data generated within their health facility or agency |
| 7 | Measures of frequency | 2 | Understand how to calculate rates, ratios, and proportions |
| 8 | Outbreak investigations | 2 | Understand the steps to undertaking an outbreak investigation |
| 9 | Monitoring and evaluation | 1 and 2 | Understand how to develop and implement an M&E plan within the context of public health practice |
| 10 | Communicating and presenting public health data | 2 | How to organize and analyze, develop visual displays, and communicate public health data |
| 11 | Field project presentations | 2.5 | Application of item 10 to their field project data/findings |
Profile of year 1 participants (n = 184)
| Cadre | Medical officer (10%) |
| Nurse (15%) | |
| Clinical officer (6%) | |
| Public health officer (17%), environmental health officer (5%), surveillance officer (15%) | |
| Health records/informatics (10%) | |
| Pharmacist (2%) | |
| Veterinary officer (4%) | |
| Laboratory (16%) | |
| Program affiliation | HIV/AIDS (14%) |
| Laboratory (14%) | |
| Veterinary (4%) | |
| Tuberculosis (4%) | |
| Immunization (2%) | |
| Maternal and child health (7%), health records/informatics (9%) | |
| Other (16%) | |
| Position | Program manager (6%) |
| Department head (53%) | |
| Program officer (32%) | |
| Years of public health experience | < 3 (13%) |
| 3–5 (20%) | |
| > 5 (67%) |
Budget categories and direct expenses for year 1, KFELTP
| Funding category | Expenditure | % of total |
|---|---|---|
| Administrative support (salaries and per diems) | $56,697 | 15 |
| Field project (reimbursement of field activity costs) | $57,466 | 16 |
| Conference packages (meeting space, lodging, and meals for participants and faculty) | $170,068 | 46 |
| Dinner allowances for participants | $29,070 | 8 |
| Transportation reimbursements for travel between home county and training location | $30,033 | 9 |
| Materials preparation (printing and duplication) | $23,626 | 6 |
| Totals | $366,960 | 100 |
Examples of additional FELTP-sponsored training activities, 2004–2016
| Start date | Name | Duration | Current status | Target group | Credential |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 2004 | FELTP | 2 years | Ongoing | Doctors | MSc in field epidemiology awarded by Moi University |
| Nurses | |||||
| Laboratory scientists | |||||
| Veterinarians | |||||
| Public health officers | |||||
| September 2006 | Field epidemiology short course | 3 months | Ceased | District medical officers | Certificate of completion awarded by Ministry of Health |
| September 2011 | Mepi | 2 months | Ended in 2015 | 5th-year medical students | Certificate of completion awarded by the Ministry of Health |
| September 2014 | Vepi | 2 months | Ended in 2015 | 4th-year veterinary students | Certificate of completion awarded by the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, and Fisheries |
Mepi medical epidemiology training program (pre-service), Vepi veterinary epidemiology training program (pre-service), CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention