Project: Gabay Bakuna Consequential Immunization Geographies Initiative Project (US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s [CDC] Strengthening Immunization Program Implementation in Sub- National Consequential Geographies - Philippines)
Rationale: In 2020, an estimated 17 million children worldwide were completely unvaccinated against diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis in 10 countries where 65% of these children live. The Philippines was included among the 10 countries with the highest number of unvaccinated children for the said diseases, or what are called “zero-dose” children. Hence, the United States Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (US CDC) has included the Philippines as one of the countries in Asia for a project on consequential geographies to address zero-dose children, measles, polio, and vaccination during public health emergencies.
The “Gabay Bakuna” Consequential Immunization Geographies Initiative Project aims to improve public health surveillance capacity at the national and subnational levels; two (2) strategies are included. These are: 1) supporting and continuously improving comprehensive VPD surveillance systems, and 2) preparing for and responding to VPD outbreaks in targeted subnational areas. As part of national capacity strengthening and technical assistance to the Department of Health Epidemiology Bureau (DOH EB), the development of a supportive supervision (SS) tool for disease surveillance officers and technical officers of Regional, Provincial, City, and select hospital Epidemiology
and Surveillance Units (ESUs) was prioritized to improve the quality of reporting VPDs. This was part of the recommendation of the functionality assessment done by the DOH EB. The primary goal of the development of the SS Tool is to greatly enhance the capacities of disease surveillance officers (DSOs) at the regional and local government levels in the identification, recording, and reporting of VPD cases. Improving these crucial procedures, the program hopes to provide more accurate and timely data for public health action. A critical component of this initiative is to build the capacity of managers and supervisors at the Department of Health's (DOH) Regional Epidemiology and Surveillance Unit and Provincial DOH teams, as well as the Provincial and City Epidemiology and Surveillance Units (PESU / CESU) in conducting supportive supervision in the project sites. To standardize and facilitate this training, an interim module on supportive supervision for supervisors and supervisees for VPD surveillance will be developed.
The Project is looking for a “Health Module Developer and Training Specialist” who will be contracted as a short-term consultant. He/She will develop the manuals, modules, and guides for supportive supervision for supervisors and supervisees involved in vaccine-preventable disease (VDP) surveillance. He/she will provide technical expertise in the field testing and validation, advanced implementation in selected LGUs, and roll-out of the developed modules, including the training of supervisor trainers and hospital disease surveillance officers on the use of the supportive supervision manual, modules, and guides.
The Health Module Developer and Training Specialist will participate in meetings of the Jhpiego Immunization Team, US CDC, Gabay Bakuna partners, and the concerned offices of the DOH and the DOH CHD IV-A, and provide technical recommendations in the finalization of the tools, workshop or training course designs, course evaluations, and participants pre- and post-training assessments, and strengthening learning and development initiatives of the DOH.
Responsibilities:
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