United States helps Ethiopian health professionals training

Apr19,2019
United States helps Ethiopian health professionals trainingUnited States helps Ethiopian health professionals training

The United States Government, in collaboration with Ethiopian Public Health Institute (EPHI), and the World Health Organization trained 110 health professionals from Ethiopian Federal Police Commission and Ethiopian Ministry of Defense.

The trainees graduated this week after completion of the Frontline Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP), according to the press statement from the United States Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. “Your impact is by no means limited to your Ethiopian National Defense Force and Federal Police medical facilities and bases, or to your region, or even your country,” said Dr. Christine Ross, CDC Ethiopia Country Director. “Now the whole world will have an additional 112 pairs of eyes to better monitor and assess the quality of public health surveillance—and ultimately make the world safer than yesterday,” she said.




FETP is a 3-month in-service training that invests in the capacity to detect, prevent, and respond to outbreaks of diseases and other public health concerns. The program is the result of collaborative support from the funding by Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) and with technical support by U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC), EPHI and WHO.

The statement noted that the effort involved collaboration across the Ethiopian government including the Ministry of National Defense, Ministry of Peace and Ministry of Health. The involvement of these Ministries will help to improve information-sharing and collaboration in the identification of and response to public health threats, building a truly integrated health response capacity in Ethiopia for the first time.

The graduation marks the first completion of this kind of program in Africa. The FETP was launched with technical and financial support from CDC and WHO. It is an outgrowth of earlier investments by CDC to develop highly skilled public health professionals at the Ethiopian Ministry of Health and regional health bureaus, modeled on CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service.

It leverages experience from previous Ebola outbreaks on the continent, highlighting the importance of training working-level health professionals in frontline responses for effective epidemic control. Participants in FETP also benefitted from DTRA’ Biological Threat Reduction Program (BTRP), which focuses on Biosafety, Biosecurity and Biosurveillance, according to the statement.

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