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Building a Skilled One Health Frontline Field Epidemiology Workforce: Regional Mentors Workshop for Frontline FETP in Eastern and Central Africa

Dr. Ditu Kazambu making closing remarks at the Regional One Health Frontline FETP Mentors Workshop from June 9–13, 2025, in Kampala, Uganda.

As emerging public health threats increasingly cross the boundaries of humans, animals, and the environment, a strong and collaborative response remains more critical than ever. With over 60% of these threats being zoonotic in origin, the importance of a well-trained, multidisciplinary workforce grounded in the One Health approach cannot be overstated.

To address this pressing need, the U.S. CDC, in collaboration with AFENET, conducted a Regional One Health Frontline FETP Mentors Workshop from June 9–13, 2025, in Kampala, Uganda. The workshop marked a significant step in the rollout of the revised Frontline FETP curriculum, now enhanced with One Health content, practical field exercises, and case studies reflecting real-world complexity.

Workshop Goals:

  • Trained selected mentors from the Ministries of Health, Livestock/Agriculture, and Environment on the updated curriculum.
  • Strengthened participants’ capacity in adult learning, facilitation, and mentorship.
  • Established a pool of regional mentors equipped to support the implementation of the revised Frontline One Health training in their respective countries.

The hands-on, five-day workshop brought together mentors from Uganda, Tanzania, DRC, Rwanda, Central African Republic, and the Republic of Congo, along with technical experts from AFENET. Participants engaged in group work, teach-backs, and case discussions tailored to the health challenges commonly faced in the region.

By equipping mentors with the tools to deliver this updated curriculum, the initiative laid the foundation for a resilient One Health workforce capable of early detection, prevention, and timely response to public health threats—safeguarding communities and strengthening regional health systems across Africa.

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