ETHIOPIA FIELD EPIDEMIOLOGY TRAINING PROGRAM (EFETP) COMPILED BODY OF WORKS IN FIELD EPIDEMIOLOGY
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Executive summary
This body of works is the summary of all outputs produced, core competences accomplished and
thesis during two years class & field residency in Field Epidemiology Training Program. These
include outbreak investigations, surveillance data analysis, surveillance system evaluation,
woreda health profile description, and conducted a research.
The first chapter contains outbreak investigations of acute watery diarrhea in Gulele sub city,
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in May 2017. For the outbreak case control study was conducted. The
study result revealed eating salad, outside at gathering and raw meat and using common latrine
were found as risk factors of disease contraction.
Regarding surveillance data analysis, four years typhus HMIS report/data of Gulele Sub City
from 2012-2015 were taken retrospectively and descriptive analysis by person, place and time
was performed. HMIS report is used to make the 4 years data uniform because the surveillance
data was incomplete & couldn‘t be described by place & person. Trend revealed the overall
prevalence rate of typhus fever in the Sub City was almost increasing from 2011/12-2014/15 and
the increment was by far high in 2014/15 (22.1 per.1000pop. per year). Among the woredas of
Gulele Sub City, wereda 5 showed high prevalence in all years except in 2012/13. Generally
Wereda 8 and wereda 3 are the least prevalent weredas in Gulele Sub City, A.A, Ethiopia.
A surveillance system evaluation was also conducted in Gulele sub city, in February 2017 in five
of the ten woredas of the sub city for one of public health important diseases, typhoid fever
which is weekly reportable and one of the twenty communicable diseases under surveillance
which had a significant magnitude from the weekly surveillance reports of Gulele sub city. The
study finding revealed trend analysis were not being done by health centers, therefore the system
was not sensitive & useful to detect outbreak, to estimate magnitude of the morbidity and
mortality of the disease and to take action and decision making. In Gulele sub city the system
was not satisfactory and there was also report discrepancy with the laboratory document in
typhoid fever. But the system was confirmed by the respondents as it was simple and flexible by
all assessed sites.
Woreda 9 health profile description of Gulele sub city, Addis Ababa was conducted in May
2016. It includes description of three years data (2013-2015). The objective of the assessment
was to describe the woreda health system and the health status of the population, provide broad
overview of the social, economic, demographic and geographic determinants of health, to
identify priority public health problems of the woreda and produce a baseline health profile
document for possible intervention programs on the identified health problems and further
studies. Overall in the three years, Acute Upper Respiratory Infection, Other or unspecified
infectious & parasitic diseases and Diarrhea were the leading causes of Morbidity in the Woreda
respectively.
A research was conducted on utilization of integrated management of neonatal and childhood
illness (IMNCI) algorithm and associated factors among health professionals assigned at under
five unit in governmental health centers in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 2017. The study revealed that
the proportion of IMNCI implementation by health workers in the study setting was (57%). In
this study 75.7% of health workers respond who have attended IMNCI training as compared to
WHO recommendation (60% of facility health workers). The study also identified lack of
training and negative attitude of health workers had significant association towards low
implementation of IMNCI strategy