EAC tests rapid response to outbreaks

The EAC’s Nairobi simulation successfully tested the new rapid deployable expert pool, organized by the EAC Secretariat and partners.

ARUSHA: THE East African Community (EAC) table-top simulation exercise (TTX) organised by the bloc’s Secretariat together with partner states and other technical partners has successfully tested the activation of the recently established regional rapidly deployable expert pool recently in Nairobi, Kenya.

The expert pool was set up in 2020 based on the lessons learnt from the Ebola outbreak in 2014/15 in West Africa as well as other infectious diseases’ outbreaks in the EAC, to ensure a timely regional response to such disease outbreaks working with regional experts.

The training was aimed at strengthening capacities and knowledge among the partner states and EAC experts in relation to regional and continental guidelines and mechanisms in place for rapid response, centering for the African Health Volunteers Corps and Strengthening and Utilising Response Groups for Emergencies (AVoHC-SURGE) initiative, implemented across the continent.

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According to a statement posted on the EAC website, the key objective of TTX was to identify strengths and areas of improvement for collaboration and coordination between national, regional and continental level in an outbreak scenario and to develop a roadmap, including recommendations on how to integrate the EAC rapidly deployable expert pool and the AVoHC-SURGE initiative to allow for joint planning, deployments and capacity development.

Also read: EAC expedites cross-border health programmes

WHO and Africa CDC recently joined forces to collectively develop the AVoHCSURGE roter. AVoHC is a reference to Africa CDC’s initiative “Africa CDC’s African Volunteer Health Corps initiative.” SURGE is a reference to WHO’s initiative, “Strengthening and Utilising Response Groups for Emergencies.”

A TTX is a facilitated discussion under a low stress environment where participants meet to discuss their roles during an emergency and to practice, evaluate and identify areas for improvement in their responses to a particular scenario.

The simulation exercise has been part of a three-day workshop that was opened by a joint training of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) and the World Health Organisation Regional Office for Africa (WHO AFRO).

Speaking during the closing ceremony of the training, Dr Eric Nzeyimana, Principal Health Officer at the EAC on behalf of the EAC Deputy Secretary General in charge of Infrastructure, Productive, Social and Political sectors, Andrea Ariik said the EAC simulation exercise, using the lessons learnt and recommendations, puts the region in a good place and better prepared to outbreaks of epidemics and pandemics in the future.

On his part, Dr Radjabu Bigirimana, AVoHC Lead at the Africa CDC highlighted the mutual benefits of the close collaboration between the EAC Secretariat and the Africa CDC through the AVoHC-SURGE initiative.

“A collaboration framework is under development that will allow us to join forces in outbreak response through joint rostering of experts, capacity building and deployments inside the EAC and on the continent.”

Dr Arisekola Ademola Jinadu, Technical Officer IHR Monitoring and Evaluation Framework reminded participants on the importance to follow-up on the outcomes and recommendations of the simulation exercise at all levels to inform other ongoing preparedness and response efforts.

The training and the TTX, brought together more than 50 experts from health, environment and livestock sectors in charge of emergency preparedness and response in the EAC Partner States as well as the EAC Secretariat, WHO AFRO, Africa CDC, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH and the German Epidemic Preparedness Team (SEEG) who together simulated a response to a cross-border Ebola Virus outbreak in the EAC region