Virgil Kuassi Lokossou, MD, MPH, MBA, MSc, is Head of Division, Health Emergency and Disaster Management Department, ECOWAS Regional Center for Surveillance and Disease Control, Abuja, Nigeria. Issiaka Sombie, PhD, is Head of Research and Grant Division and Carlos Brito, MPH, is Director, Department of Public Health and Research; Césaire Damien Ahanhanzo, MSc, MPA, is General Coordinator of World Bank-Funded Projects, Department of Planning and Health Information; and Stanley Okolo, PhD, is Director General; all for the West African Health Organization, Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso. Simon Nyovuura Antara, MPH, is Director, Africa Field Epidemiology Network, Kampala, Uganda. Patrick Mboya Nguku, MSc, is Senior Regional Technical Coordinator; Muhammad Shakir Balogun, FMCPath, is Resident Advisor; and Chukwuma David Umeokonkwo, MPH, FWACP, is a Scientific Writer and Field Coordinator; all for the Africa Field Epidemiology Network, Abuja, Nigeria. Chukwuma David Umeokonkwo is also a Consultant Community Physician and Epidemiologist, Community Medicine, Alex Ekwueme Federal University Teaching Hospital Abakaliki, Abakaliki, Ebonyi State, Nigeria. Ernest Kenu, PhD, is a Professor, Ghana Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program, School of Public Health, University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana. Edgard-Marius Ouendo, PhD, is a Professor of Public Health, Institut Regional de Santé Publique, Ouidah, Atlantique, Bénin.
Health Secur. 2021 Jan-Feb;19(1):88-99. doi: 10.1089/hs.2019.0133. Epub 2020 Dec 7.
The ability to prevent, promptly detect, and appropriately respond to a public health threat is essential for health security. Field epidemiology training has helped increase the quality and quantity of the public health workforce to strengthen disease surveillance, outbreak preparedness and response, and general public health capacity. We conducted a desk review on the status of the Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program model in 16 countries in West Africa. We also developed a questionnaire and shared it with West African Health Organization (WAHO) member states to document their experiences and the status of training in their countries. WAHO organized a regional 3-day consultative meeting with major stakeholders in the region to examine progress, gaps, and challenges, and outline a roadmap to strengthen the Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program. Stakeholders shared their experiences, engaged in discussions to identify strengths and gaps, and made plans on a way forward. Member states are at different levels of implementing field epidemiology and laboratory training programs in their countries, and, therefore, major gaps remain in the number and distribution of trained epidemiologists throughout West Africa. Member states implement different variants of the program and in some instances the same cadre of health workers are trained in different but comparable programs with different funding streams. Two member states had not begun implementing the training program. Developing regional centers of excellence was recommended in the long term while collaboration among member states to train the required number of epidemiologists to fill the acute needs could be helpful in the short and medium term. Curriculum harmonization and expansion, deployment and use of trained epidemiologists, accreditation of training institutions, and generation of indigenous funding streams are recommended to improve the Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program in West Africa.
预防、及时发现和妥善应对公共卫生威胁的能力对于卫生安全至关重要。现场流行病学培训有助于提高公共卫生人员的质量和数量,以加强疾病监测、疫情准备和应对以及一般公共卫生能力。我们对西非 16 个国家现场流行病学和实验室培训计划模式的现状进行了桌面审查。我们还制定了一份问卷,并与西非卫生组织(WAHO)成员国共享,以记录他们在本国的培训经验和现状。WAHO 组织了为期三天的区域磋商会议,邀请该地区的主要利益攸关方参加,以审查进展情况、差距和挑战,并制定加强现场流行病学和实验室培训计划的路线图。利益攸关方分享了他们的经验,参与讨论以确定优势和差距,并制定前进的计划。成员国在其本国实施现场流行病学和实验室培训计划的程度不同,因此,整个西非受过培训的流行病学家的数量和分布仍然存在很大差距。成员国实施不同版本的方案,在某些情况下,同一批卫生工作者在不同但可比的方案中接受培训,这些方案有不同的供资来源。有两个成员国尚未开始实施培训方案。建议从长期来看,发展区域卓越中心,而成员国之间的合作则可以帮助在短期和中期培训所需数量的流行病学家以满足紧急需求。建议协调和扩大课程,部署和使用受过培训的流行病学家,认可培训机构,并生成本土供资来源,以改进西非的现场流行病学和实验室培训计划。