| Literature DB >> 31402967 |
Philip Bemah1, April Baller2, Catherine Cooper3, Moses Massaquoi3, Laura Skrip1, Julius Monday Rude2, Anthony Twyman2, Phiona Moses4, Redda Seifeldin2, Kanagasabai Udhayashankar5, Kayla Enrique5, Michelle Niescierenko5, Chantelle Owen4, Lauren Brown6, Bonkoungou Boukaré7, Desmond Williams4, Tolbert Nyenswah1, Francis Kateh3, Bernice Dahn3, Alex Gasasira2, Ibrahima Socé Fall7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The 2014-2016 Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in Liberia highlighted the importance of robust preparedness measures for a well-coordinated response; the initially delayed response contributed to the steep incidence of cases, infections among health care workers, and a collapse of the health care system. To strengthen local capacity and combat disease transmission, various healthcare worker (HCW) trainings, including the Ebola treatment unit (ETU) training, safe & quality services (SQS) training and rapid response team (RRT), were developed and implemented between 2014 and 2017.Entities:
Keywords: Ebola outbreak; Healthcare workforce capacity; epidemic preparedness response
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31402967 PMCID: PMC6675930 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.supp.2019.33.2.17619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Healthcare workers in Ebola treatment unit training content
| Category | Phase 1 and 2 | Phase 3 |
|---|---|---|
| Overview of Ebola | Introduction to ETU (layout, wards, and patient flow) | |
| Screening and overall ETU organization | Ward introduction | |
| Principles of Cleaning and Disinfection, | Cleaning and disinfection in the low and high-risk zones |
Figure 1Safe & quality services (SQS) training package content
Figure 2Healthcare worker Ebola treatment unit (ETU) training coverage by partners and counties
Figure 3Average results of pre- and post-test assessments for ETU training participants
Figure 4HCWs Ebola Virus Disease infection trend September 2014-March 2015
Figure 5Pre- and post-test confidence scores for clinician subgroups who had the SQS training; bar height represents mean scores at pre- (blue) or post-test (yellow), given a 5-point Likert scale measuring confidence in various areas of the health sector; error bars reflect one standard deviation above and below the mean; mean confidence score in all areas significantly increased between pre- and post-test (++++p < 0.001)
Figure 6Pre-and post-test confidence scores for non-clinician subgroup who had the SQS training; bar height represents mean scores at pre- (blue) or post-test (yellow), given a 5-point Likert scale measuring confidence in various areas of the health sector; error bars reflect one standard deviation above and below the mean; mean confidence score in all areas significantly increased between pre- and post-test (++++p < 0.001) clinicians were tested on two additional indicators, relative to non-clinicans