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. 2000 Nov-Dec;6(6):576–584. doi: 10.3201/eid0606.000605

Developing national epidemiologic capacity to meet the challenges of emerging infections in Germany.

L R Petersen 1, A Ammon 1, O Hamouda 1, T Breuer 1, S Kiessling 1, B Bellach 1, U Niemer 1, F J Bindert 1, S Ostroff 1, R Kurth 1
PMCID: PMC2640917  PMID: 11076715

Abstract

In January 1996, the Robert Koch Institute, Germany's national public health institute, began strengthening its epidemiologic capacity to respond to emerging and other infectious diseases. Six integrated strategies were initiated: developing employee training, outbreak investigation, and epidemiologic research programs; strengthening surveillance systems; improving communications to program partners and constituents; and building international collaborations. By December 1999, five employees had completed a 2-year applied epidemiology training program, 186 health department personnel had completed a 2-week training course, 27 outbreak investigations had been completed, eight short-term research projects had been initiated, major surveillance and epidemiologic research efforts for foodborne and nosocomial infections had begun, and 16 scientific manuscripts had been published or were in press. The German experience indicates that, with a concerted effort, considerable progress in building a national applied infectious disease program can be achieved in a short time frame.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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