In Guinea, efforts to strengthen the country’s capacity for outbreak detection and response by training field epidemiologists through a Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP) accelerated in response to the 2014-2016 Ebola epidemic, which claimed 2,544 lives in Guinea and 11,325 worldwide, predominantly in West Africa.
Today, the Guinea Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP) is providing critical support to help control a new Ebola outbreak. On February 14, 2021, the Ministry of Health (MOH) of Guinea reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) a cluster of Ebola cases in the sub-prefecture of Gouécké, Nzérékoré Region. As of April 13, 2021, Guinea has confirmed 16 cases of Ebola, including five deaths and nine recoveries.
“Despite some challenges, the outbreak has been successfully contained within four sub-districts of Nzérékoré,” the program reported to TEPHINET.
FETP-Frontline participants from Nzérékoré, as well as intermediate and advanced FETP participants from other regions, have made vital contributions to slowing the Nzérékoré outbreak, particularly in the areas of coordination and epidemiological surveillance.
FETP participants have led the development of documentation needed for conducting Ebola surveillance, including the country’s Ebola response plan, contact tracing guides, case definitions, and terms of reference for the unit analyzing outbreak data.
Trainees and graduates of the Guinea FETP have constituted the leading MOH workforce deployed in the field to conduct Ebola-related surveillance across the Nzérékoré Region’s 17 health areas. Working directly with local health facility leaders in these areas, the FETP has helped strengthen these facilities’ capacity for understanding and using case definitions to identify suspected Ebola cases among their patients.