The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) partners with the Ethiopian Public Health Institute (EPHI) to build capacity at public health emergency operation

Nearly 80 public health professionals from the national and regional levels attended the public health emergency management training in Bishoftu, facilitated by the United States’ CDC and Ethiopia’s EPHI

ADDIS ABABA (U.S. Embassy)–The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) facilitated a public health emergency management (PHEM) training in Bishoftu in coordination with the Ethiopian Public Health Institute (EPHI) from November 26 – December 7, 2018.

As part of Ethiopia’s growing capacity and leadership, the training was actually led by EPHI graduates of CDC’s four-month Public Health Emergency Management (PHEM) Fellowship, which provides advanced public health emergency management training.

The 5-day training provided an overview of foundational PHEM principles and skills and concluded with a scenario-based exercise where participants applied the concepts they learned and identified additional areas for future focus.  Nearly 80 public health officials from the national and regional levels attended the training.

◌ ALSO READ: A big move in bridging journalists and Public Health Emergency (PHE): WHO Ethiopia trains Journalists on PHE reporting

CDC also provided training to EPHI staff on managing virtual emergency operations centers (VEOC), which allow users to share data, track resources, maintain communication and provide reports in real time from on computers and mobile devices at any location. The platform can also store public health emergency management plans and standard operating procedures for easy access and implementation. EPHI will explore possible applications of this software and opportunities to enhance existing communications and data management systems based on the training.

The United States, through CDC, will continue working with EPHI and other partners to invest in strengthening the workforce, infrastructure, and systems required for a robust public health emergency management program in Ethiopia.

Source: U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa