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Support for the response to COVID-19 in Uganda: contribution of the global health security program at Makerere University's Infectious Diseases Institute


Mohammed Lamorde
Rodgers Ayebare
Daniel Bulwadda
Judith Nanyondo
Lydia Nakiire
Richard Walwema
Morgan Otita
Peter Mukiibi
Immaculate Nabukenya
Francis Kakooza
Andrew Kambugu

Abstract

Background: Outbreaks are occurring at increasing frequency and they require multisectoral and multi-stakeholder involvement for optimal response. The Global Health Security Agenda is a framework that governments and other stakeholders can use to strengthen countries’ capacities to prevent, detect and respond to outbreaks but there are few examples of academic programs using this approach.


Methods: This is a narrative review of contributions of Makerere University through the Global Health Security Program at the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI). Information was sourced from peer-reviewed publications and grey literature highlighting work done between 2017 - 2021.


Results: Aligned to GHSA, IDI made contributions to strengthen national and subnational capacities for biosafety and biosecurity, sample collection and transportation, electronic disease surveillance, infection prevention and control, case management prior to COVID-19 that were subsequently used to support response efforts for COVID-19 in Uganda.


Conclusion: The IDI Global Health Security program provides a model that can be used by institutions to deliberately develop
capacities relevant to outbreak preparedness and response.


Keywords: Epidemics; University; Ebola.


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1729-0503
print ISSN: 1680-6905