The Eastern Europe and South Caucasus (EESC) Intermediate Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP-I) is a 10-month learning-by-doing applied training program that prepares the public health workforce – and developing leaders – to investigate and respond to major disease outbreaks more effectively. Since 2022, ICAP at Columbia University, in partnership with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has supported the training of mid-level public health and animal health specialists from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova, Georgia, and Ukraine. By the end of 2024, 62 specialists and 30 mentors will have been trained through the program.
The FETPs are modeled on the CDC’s successful Epidemic Intelligence Service program but are operated by individual countries and ministries of health. Each FETP is tailored to meet the needs of its country through mentored field projects, addressing shared public health challenges between the Ministries of Health, Agriculture, and Food Safety. Using a unique, applied training approach that focuses on learning by doing, FETP trainees, or residents, spend 75-80 percent of their time maximizing hands-on training in the field and only a limited amount of time in the classroom. FETP is divided into three tiers: 1) FETP-Frontline (FETP-F), 2) FETP-Intermediate (FETP-I), and 3) FETP-Advanced (FETP-A). All three aim to enhance local, district, and national capacities to evaluate and strengthen public health surveillance systems, investigate outbreaks, inform control measures, and conduct field studies addressing public health issues of concern.