Applied Epidemiology Training: A Key Component of the Medical Education Partnership Initiative (MEPI)
Date
2013-01Author
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Global AIDS Coordinator (OGAC)
Medical Education Partnership Initiative (MEPI
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In 2011, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) with support
from the Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator (OGAC) began an applied
epidemiology training component within the Medical Education Partnership
Initiative (MEPI). MEPI was developed to expand and enhance medical
education in sub-Saharan African countries that receive support from the U.S.
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). This mentored initiative
includes pre-service and in-service training being developed collaboratively
by CDC’s Division of Public Health Systems and Workforce Development
(DPHSWD), Division of Global HIV/AIDS (DGHA), and Division of Healthcare
Quality Promotion (DHQP) and implemented in Kenya and Zimbabwe. MEPI is
designed to enhance critical public health competency gained within medical
education and improve surveillance and response capacity at the district level
by targeting medical students and recent medical graduates who are
(or will be) charged with managing their country’s public health programs.
To accomplish this goal, DPHSWD facilitates a partnership among the
country’s Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP), Ministry of Health
(MOH), and the respective MEPI-partner medical school.
Program Description
By leveraging FETPs and working collaboratively with ministries of health
and in-country academic institutions, CDC improves public health capacity
in Africa by providing medical students with hands-on public health
experience in gathering data for decision making, managing outbreaks, and
conducting surveillance and response. For example, in consultation with the
MEPI-supported University of Zimbabwe and University of Nairobi medical
schools, FETPs are adapting and integrating evidence-based surveillance and
epidemiology curricula and field exercises into the standard coursework. The
applied epidemiology training is currently being offered for 4th year medical
students. In addition, the FETP graduates and respective MOH are identifying
recent medical graduates to participate in a six-month training course
on public health surveillance and response. During the training, medical
graduates participate in a 2-week classroom session followed by a field
practicum in epidemiology mentored by a FETP graduate.
To strengthen capacity for identification and prevention of healthcareassociated
infections, FETP in collaboration with DHQP is designing trainingmaterials on infection control and hospital epidemiology, which will be
integrated into both the in-service and pre-service training.
Publisher
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention School of Medicine, University of Nairobi