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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Programs in West Africa as a model for sustainable partnerships in animal and human health.

Journal:
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
Year:
2012
Authors:
Becker, Karen M et al.
Affiliation:
Tauri Group · United States
Species:
bird

Plain-English summary

In West Africa, experts in animal and human health have been working together to improve health outcomes, especially after outbreaks of bird flu in 2008. This collaboration led to the creation of Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Programs (FELTPs), which combine classroom learning with hands-on training in the field. Over two years, these programs train veterinarians, doctors, and lab scientists to better manage diseases that can spread between animals and humans. The graduates of these programs are equipped to investigate disease outbreaks and conduct important health studies. However, a major challenge remains in finding ways to make these programs sustainable and effective in the long term.

Abstract

The concept of animal and human health experts working together toward a healthier world has been endorsed, but challenges remain in identifying concrete actions to move this one health concept from vision to action. In 2008, as a result of avian influenza outbreaks in West Africa, international donor support led to a unique opportunity to invest in Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Programs (FELTPs) in the region that engaged the animal and human health sectors to strengthen the capacity for prevention and control of zoonotic diseases. The FELTPs mixed 25% to 35% classroom and 65% to 75% field-based training and service for cohorts of physicians, veterinarians, and laboratory scientists. They typically consisted of a 2-year course leading to a master's degree in field epidemiology and public health laboratory management for midlevel public health leaders and competency-based short courses for frontline public health surveillance workers. Trainees and graduates work in multidisciplinary teams to conduct surveillance, outbreak investigations, and epidemiological studies for disease control locally and across borders. Critical outcomes of these programs include development of a cadre of public health leaders with core skills in integrated disease surveillance, outbreak investigation, vaccination campaigns, laboratory diagnostic testing, and epidemiological studies that address priority public health problems. A key challenge exists in identifying ways to successfully scale up and transform this innovative donor-driven program into a sustainable multisectoral one health workforce capacity development model.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22916854/