| Literature DB >> 30005613 |
Christine Kihembo1, Ben Masiira2, Lydia Nakiire3, Edson Katushabe4, Nasan Natseri4, Immaculate Nabukenya2, Innocent Komakech4, Charles Lukoya Okot4, Francis Adatu2, Issa Makumbi3, Miriam Nanyunja4, Solomon Fisseha Woldetsadik4, Patrick Tusiime5, Peter Nsubuga6, Ibrahima Soce Fall7, Alemu Wondimagegnehu4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Uganda adopted and has been implementing the Integrated Disease Surveillance (IDSR) strategy since 2000. The goal was to build the country's capacity to detect, report promptly, and effectively respond to public health emergencies and priorities. The considerable investment into the program startup realised significant IDSR core performance. However, due to un-sustained funding from the mid-2000s onwards, these achievements were undermined. Following the adoption of the revised World Health Organization guidelines on IDSR, the Uganda Ministry of Health (MoH) in collaboration with key partners decided to revitalise IDSR and operationalise the updated IDSR guidelines in 2012.Entities:
Keywords: Design; IDSR; Implementation; Multi-disciplinary; Training; Uganda
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30005613 PMCID: PMC6045850 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5755-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Timeline of implementation of activities to strengthen the IDSR program in Uganda
The multi-disciplinary training of health workers conducted to revitalise IDSR in Uganda, 2015–2016
| Type of Training | Level of Training | Target Audience | Duration of Training | Funder | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | IDSR Training | District based | Operational health workers and the District Health Team (DHT) | 5 days | UK Aid Department for International Development (DFID) WHO-AFRO, Polio eradication initiative, Central Emergency Response Fund, the Newborn Adolescent and Child Health (RMANCH) continuum of care, and USAID through WHO, |
| 2 | Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers (VHF) case management and IPC | Regional | Regional teams comprised of mainly clinicians (doctors, nurses, clinical officers) and non-clinicians (hygienists, ambulance drivers, mortuary attendants, askaris etc). | 5 days | DFID, WHO |
| 3 | Training for laboratory workers on sample collection, packaging and transportation of infectious specimens | Regional | Regional teams comprised of Laboratory health workers, hub riders, postal service personnel | 5 days | United States Centres for Diseases Control and Prevention (CDC) |
| 4 | Other Trainings: District level epidemiology training program | District based, modular | District Health Officers, District Veterinary Officers, District Laboratory Focal Person, Health sub-district in-charges | 3 month | Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) through the US CDC |
Fig. 2Structure of the IDSR Training in Uganda, demonstrating module selection and mix for competence and skill development
The distribution of the operational health workers trained during the IDSR revitalization in Uganda, 2015–2016 by level of health facility
| Health Region | Level of Health Facility | Time of Training | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health Centre II | Health Centre III | Health Centre IV | Hospital | ||
| Kampala | 418 (46) | 288 (32) | 90 (10) | 115 (13) | Jun- 2016 |
| Mbarara | 312 (59) | 108 (20) | 72 (15) | 35 (7) | Feb- 2016 |
| Masaka | 149 (39) | 140 (37) | 59 (15) | 35 (9) | Dec-2015 |
| Fort Portal | 234 (54) | 122 (28) | 50 (12) | 24 (6) | Nov-2015 |
| Jinja | 391 (56) | 198 (29) | 64 (9) | 41 (6) | Nov-2015 |
| Kabale | 93 (42) | 57 (26) | 56 (25) | 15 (7) | Nov-2015 |
| Mubende | 186 (70) | 47 (18) | 15 (6) | 19 (7) | Nov-2015 |
| Soroti | 175 (45) | 119 (31) | 51 (13) | 44 (11) | Nov-2015 |
| Lira | 98 (41) | 90 (38) | 43 (38) | 9 (4) | Sep-2015 |
| Gulu | 147 (48) | 100 (33) | 24 (8) | 36 (12) | Jul-2015 |
| Mbale | 137 (35) | 160 (41) | 34 (9) | 56 (14) | Jun-2015 |
| Arua | 107 (29) | 194 (53) | 34 (9) | 33 (9) | May-2015 |
| Hoima | 52 (30) | 56 (32) | 31 (18) | 37 (21) | May-2015 |
| Moroto | 98 (52) | 61 (32) | 7 (4) | 23 (12) | May-2015 |
| Total | 2597 (47) | 1740 (32) | 630 (11) | 522 (10) | |
Fig. 3Participants’ pre and post-training assessment scores showing knowledge gain across all health regions during the IDSR training in Uganda 2015–2016
Categories of health workers trained in VHF case management and IPC plus those trained in safe sample collection and referral in Uganda, 2015–2016
| Health worker category | Numbers trained | Time of Training |
|---|---|---|
| Training on VHF case management and infection prevention and control | ||
| Clinicians | 337 (69) | Sept-Dec 2015 |
| Non-Clinicians | 134 (27.5) | Sept-Dec 2015 |
| National Trainers | 17 (3.5) | Jul-2015 |
| Training on sample collection, packaging and transportation of dangerous pathogens for laboratory health workers | ||
| Laboratory workers | 208 (91.6) | |
| Laboratory hub riders/Transporters | 4 (1.8) | Sep 2015- Aug 2016 |
| Postal service personnel | 15 (6.6) | |
Some of the resources and materials deployed to support IDSR/IHR strengthening in Uganda, 2013–2016
| Resource category | Type of resource | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| National curricula, guidelines, Standard Operating Procedures (SOPS) and job aids | − National Technical Guidelines for IDSR, 2nd Edition | The revised guidelines were printed and disseminated to participants (Health facility, DHT and DRRT) |
| − National curriculum on IDSR/IHR | National curriculum developed, used for IDSR training | |
| − Case definitions and epidemic thresholds for IDSR- a working guide for health workers | Working guide updated, printed and provided to participants (Health facility, DHT and DRRT) | |
| − Guidelines and SOPS for responding to Ebola/Marburg virus outbreaks in Uganda | SOPS and guidelines adapted by a multi-sectoral National Task Force (NTF) team. Printed copies availed at national level | |
| − Curriculum on VHF case management and infection prevention and control (IPC) | National curriculum adapted and used during VHF case management training | |
| − Updated vaccine-preventable diseases case investigation forms (Polio/AFP, NNT, Measles, AEFIs)a | Updated case investigation forms disseminated during IDSR training | |
| − VHT handbook on community-based disease surveillance. | The training manual was developed | |
| − Curriculum on VHF case management and IPC | National curriculum adapted | |
| Contingency medical and laboratory supplies | − Kits and Shipment boxes for laboratory specimens | 300 laboratory kits supplied |
| − 5 tents each with a 20-bed capacity designed to serve as mobile isolation facilities | Tents were procured and prepositioned | |
| − Personal protective equipment (PPE) and medical supplies | 500 sets of PPEs and assorted medical supplies procured and prepositioned at regional and district hospitals | |
| Other logistical support to strengthen surveillance and IDSR/IHR | − A walk through thermoscanner | A walk-through scanner was procured and installed at the international airport to support screening of incoming travellers. |
| − Motorcycles and Vehicles | Motorcycles and vehicles procured and given to high-risk districts to support surveillance activities | |
| MTRACK and Electronic HMIS reporting via DHIS2 System | − A short message mobile telephone based reporting platform for weekly HMIS reporting | m-trac systems introduced and integrated with the DHIS2 for e-HMIS reporting |
aAFP Acute Flaccid Paralysis, NNT Neonatal Tetanus, AEFIS Adverse events following immunisation, HMIS Health Management and Information System, DHIS 2 District Health Information Software, DHT District Health Team, DRRT District Rapid Response Team