Training a Continent: A Process Evaluation of Virtual Training on Infection Prevention and Control in Africa During COVID-19.

Suzan JosephKessy; GiorgiaGon; YewandeAlimi; Waheed AryioBakare; Katherine Gallagher ORCID logo; EmilioHornsey; LizziSithole; Ezinne Victoria ChinemeremOnwekwe; TochiOkwor; AdekemiSekoni; +7 more... AliceVahanian; AnnaVorndran; ThaddeeNiyoyitungira; TajudeenRaji; ChikweIhekweazu; MohammedAbdulaziz; FolasadeOgunsola; (2023) Training a Continent: A Process Evaluation of Virtual Training on Infection Prevention and Control in Africa During COVID-19. Global health, science and practice, 11 (2). e2200051-e2200051. ISSN 2169-575X DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-22-00051
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BACKGROUND: Strengthening infection prevention and control (IPC) capacity was identified as a key intervention to prepare African Union member states to curb the COVID-19 pandemic. As part of the Africa Taskforce for Coronavirus, which helped implement the Africa Joint Continental Strategy for COVID-19 Outbreak response, the IPC Technical Working Group (IPC TWG) was convened to coordinate the development of IPC core components for preparedness, response, and recovery from COVID-19. As part of the IPC TWG's work, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, in collaboration with the Infection Control Africa Network, delivered virtual IPC training sessions targeted to African Union member states. We aimed to undertake a process evaluation of this training to inform and improve both ongoing and future programming. METHODS: The scope of the evaluation was agreed upon through discussion with the training organizers and advisory members and a design workshop. A mixed-methods approach was used; data collection was partly prospective and partly retrospective due to the rapid start of some of the training activities. Existing available data included: usage analytics, the content of questions posed during the webinar and community of practice, and participant feedback survey results. In addition, in-depth qualitative interviews were conducted with a sample of webinar participants. RESULTS: The rapid development of this training was efficient and responsive. The training reached more than 3,000 participants across the 2 rounds, but the numbers varied substantially by location. Participants engaged well during the question period during each webinar, but the asynchronous community of practice was less utilized during the evaluation time frame. Many participants appreciated the African focus of the webinars and gave positive feedback on the practical and context-specific content. CONCLUSIONS: The move toward online training provides an important opportunity to improve IPC across the African continent.



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