Field Epidemiology Training Program, Ministry of Public Health and Population, Sana'a, Yemen.
General Directorate for Disease Surveillance and Control, Ministry of Public Health and Population, Sana'a, Yemen.
Front Public Health. 2021 Nov 22;9:688119. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.688119. eCollection 2021.
COVID-19 pandemic has underscored the need for a well-trained public health workforce to save lives through timely outbreaks detection and response. In Yemen, a country that is entering its seventh year of a protracted war, the ongoing conflict severely limited the country's capacity to implement effective preparedness and response measures to outbreaks including COVID-19. There are growing concerns that the virus may be circulating within communities undetected and unmitigated especially as underreporting continues in some areas of the country due to a lack of testing facilities, delays in seeking treatment, stigma, difficulty accessing treatment centers, the perceived risks of seeking care or for political issues. The Yemen Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP) was launched in 2011 to address the shortage of a skilled public health workforce, with the objective of strengthening capacity in field epidemiology. Thus, events of public health importance can be detected and investigated in a timely and effective manner. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Yemen FETP's response has been instrumental through participating in country-level coordination, planning, monitoring, and developing guidelines/standard operating procedures and strengthening surveillance capacities, outbreak investigations, contact tracing, case management, infection prevention, and control, risk communication, and research. As the third wave is circulating with a steeper upward curve than the previous ones with possible new variants, the country will not be able to deal with a surge of cases as secondary care is extremely crippled. Since COVID-19 prevention and control are the only option available to reduce its grave impact on morbidity and mortality, health partners should support the Yemen FETP to strengthen the health system's response to future epidemics. One important lesson learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, especially in the Yemen context and applicable to developing and war-torn countries, is that access to outside experts becomes limited, therefore, it is crucial to invest in building national expertise to provide timely, cost-effective, and sustainable services that are culturally appropriate. It is also essential to build such expertise at the governorate and district levels, as they are normally the first respondents, and to provide them with the necessary tools for immediate response in order to overcome the disastrous delays.
COVID-19 大流行凸显了需要一支训练有素的公共卫生人员队伍,通过及时发现和应对疫情来拯救生命。在也门,这个国家已经进入了长达七年的持久战争的第七个年头,持续的冲突严重限制了该国实施有效防范和应对包括 COVID-19 在内的疫情爆发的能力。人们越来越担心,这种病毒可能在社区中传播而未被发现和缓解,特别是由于该国某些地区由于缺乏检测设施、寻求治疗的延迟、污名化、难以进入治疗中心、对寻求护理的风险或政治问题的认知等原因,报告病例继续不足。也门现场流行病学培训计划(FETP)于 2011 年启动,旨在解决熟练公共卫生人员短缺的问题,其目标是加强现场流行病学能力。因此,可以及时有效地发现和调查对公共卫生具有重要意义的事件。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,也门 FETP 通过参与国家一级的协调、规划、监测以及制定准则/标准作业程序和加强监测能力、疫情调查、接触者追踪、病例管理、感染预防和控制、风险沟通和研究,为应对疫情做出了重要贡献。由于第三波疫情的上升曲线比前几波更为陡峭,而且可能出现新的变异,该国将无法应对病例激增的情况,因为二级保健服务已经严重瘫痪。由于 COVID-19 的防控是减少其对发病率和死亡率的严重影响的唯一选择,卫生伙伴应支持也门 FETP 加强卫生系统对未来疫情的应对。从 COVID-19 大流行中吸取的一个重要教训,特别是在也门的背景下,以及适用于发展中国家和战乱国家的教训是,获得外部专家的机会变得有限,因此,投资于建立国家专门知识以提供及时、具有成本效益和可持续的、文化上适当的服务至关重要。在省和地区一级建立这种专门知识也很重要,因为它们通常是第一个应对者,并为他们提供必要的工具,以便立即做出反应,从而克服灾难性的延迟。