Olubunmi Eyitayo Ojo, MSc, is Director, Disease Surveillance and Epidemiology; Mahmoud Dalhat, is Surveillance Advisor, NAPHS Implementation Support Unit; Oyeronke Oyebanji is a Technical Assistant; Ajani Oyetunji is a Technical Officer, NAPHS Implementation Support Unit; and Chikwe Ihekweazu, MBBS, MPH, is Director General; all with the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, Abuja, Nigeria. Richard Garfield, RN, DrPH, is Team Lead, Emergency Response and Recovery Branch, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA. Chris Lee, MD, MSC, MPH, is Senior Technical Officer, Resolve to Save Lives, New York, NY. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Health Secur. 2020 Jan/Feb;18(1):16-20. doi: 10.1089/hs.2019.0051.
Nigeria is working to protect against and respond more effectively to disease outbreaks. Quick mobilization and control of the Ebola epidemic in 2014, at least 4 major domestic outbreaks each year, and significant progress toward polio eradication led to adoption of the World Health Organization's Global Health Security Joint External Evaluation (JEE) and National Action Plan for Health Security (NAPHS). The process required joint assessment and planning among many agencies, ministries, and sectors over the past 2 years. We carried out a JEE of 19 core programs in 2017 and launched a detailed NAPHS to improve prevention, detection, and response in December 2018, which required us to create topic-specific groups to document work to date and propose JEE scores. We then met with an international team for 5 days to review and revise scoring and recommendations, created a 5-year implementation plan, developed a management team to oversee implementation, drafted legislation to manage outbreaks, trained professionals at state and local levels of government, and set priorities among the many possible activities recommended. Management software and leadership skills were developed to monitor global health security programs. We learned to use international assistance strategically to strengthen planning and mentor national staff. Finally, a review of every major disease outbreak was used to prepare for the next challenge. Review and adaptation of this plan each year will be critical to ensure sustained momentum and progress. Many low-income countries are skilled at managing vertical disease control programs. Balancing and combining the 19 core activities of a country's public health system is a more demanding challenge.
尼日利亚正在努力防范和更有效地应对疾病暴发。2014 年迅速动员和控制埃博拉疫情,每年至少有 4 次国内重大疫情暴发,以及在消灭脊髓灰质炎方面取得重大进展,这些都促使尼日利亚采用了世界卫生组织的全球卫生安全联合外部评估(JEE)和国家卫生安全行动计划(NAPHS)。这一进程需要过去两年间多个机构、部委和部门共同参与评估和规划。我们在 2017 年对 19 个核心项目进行了 JEE 评估,并于 2018 年 12 月推出了详细的 NAPHS,以改善预防、检测和应对措施,这要求我们创建特定主题的小组,记录迄今为止的工作,并提出 JEE 评分。然后,我们与一个国际小组进行了为期 5 天的会议,以审查和修订评分和建议,创建了一个 5 年实施计划,组建了一个管理团队来监督实施,起草了管理疫情的立法,培训了州和地方各级政府的专业人员,并在众多建议的活动中确定了优先事项。开发了管理软件和领导技能来监测全球卫生安全计划。我们学会了战略性地利用国际援助来加强规划和指导国家工作人员。最后,对每一次重大疫情暴发的审查都被用来为下一次挑战做准备。每年对该计划的审查和调整对于确保持续的动力和进展至关重要。许多低收入国家在管理垂直疾病控制项目方面很熟练。平衡和结合一个国家公共卫生系统的 19 项核心活动是一个更具挑战性的任务。