Tag: field epidemiology

September 7 is the First World Field Epidemiology Day

Photo by Kyle Glenn on Unsplash

In honour of field epidemiologists across the globe, the Training Programs in Epidemiology and Public Health Interventions Network (TEPHINET) has declared 7 September 2021 #WorldFieldEpidemiologyDay.

This day, the first of its kind, is aimed at recognising and raising awareness of the invaluable role Field Epidemiologists play.

As health systems face increasingly complex threats, training workers in field epidemiology is even more important.. The NICD, a division of the National Health Laboratory Service, embarked on a joint collaboration more than 15-years ago in establishing the South African Field Epidemiology Training Programme (SAFETP).  To date the program has trained 98 epidemiologists with the majority located in the public service in South Africa.

Field Epidemiologists, or ‘disease detectives’ are considered the cornerstone of public health preparedness and response. They undertake arduous, time-consuming tasks that include contact tracing, case investigations, community engagement, data collection and analysis.

One such ‘disease detective’ is Alain Musaka Abera, whose team was deployed to Equateur province in the DRC in response to an outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD). “The health zone of Ingende had already reported seven confirmed cases, including two deaths in the community,” said Abera, describing his work. “I had to set up the different pillars of epidemiological surveillance (management of alerts, active research, investigation, follow-up of contacts) and, at the same time, support coordination of the response in the health zone.

“The task was tough; the means of transport insufficient; communication almost non-existent. It was necessary to travel long distances in the forest on motorcycles that sometimes broke down and to cross the river in a canoe to search for and investigate suspects. It took courage, determination, and will to face these constraints.”

Source: NICD