In total, 16 FETP graduates from Ukraine, Moldova, Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia, and five non-FETP participants from Ukraine and Moldova, were awarded certificates for completing the training. Given the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, there is an increased likelihood that these individuals may be called upon to respond to conflict-related emergencies in the region, underscoring the need for, and impact of, this kind of training.
“One of the things that made [this training] so impactful was that it wasn't just theoretical; these people are responding to refugees or to their own internally displaced people or affected populations, so it made it very emotional and real," said Pavlin.
This training is part of a larger effort by TEPHINET and partners to provide FETP graduates with the skills needed to deploy for humanitarian emergencies. FETP fellows and graduates are increasingly called upon to respond to public health emergencies around the globe, yet standardized training to develop the skills and competencies needed to successfully deploy is limited. TEPHINET is thus working with partners and subject matter experts to develop a standardized emergency response curriculum for FETP alumni, and to identify opportunities to host additional “Epidemiological Methods in Humanitarian Emergencies” courses. The next course is scheduled for later this year in Ghana.
An additional goal of TEPHINET’s emergency response work is to build a diverse roster of field epidemiologists with varying experience, background, languages, and global representation so that when organizations need emergency responders, they think of FETPs first. As TEPHINET’s Emergency Response Project Team Lead Lisandro Torre puts it, “Ultimately, we want to introduce the world to FETP graduates as a foundational piece of international public health infrastructure and global outbreak response.”