Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2022)

Adapting Longstanding Public Health Collaborations between Government of Kenya and CDC Kenya in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020–2021

  • Amy Herman-Roloff,
  • Rashid Aman,
  • Taraz Samandari,
  • Kadondi Kasera,
  • Gideon O. Emukule,
  • Patrick Amoth,
  • Tai-Ho Chen,
  • Jackton Kisivuli,
  • Herman Weyenga,
  • Elizabeth Hunsperger,
  • Clayton Onyango,
  • Bonventure Juma,
  • Peninah Munyua,
  • Daniel Wako,
  • Victor Akelo,
  • Davies Kimanga,
  • Linus Ndegwa,
  • Ahmed Abade Mohamed,
  • Peter Okello,
  • Samuel Kariuki,
  • Kevin M. De Cock,
  • Marc Bulterys

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2813.211550
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 13
pp. 159 – 167

Abstract

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Kenya’s Ministry of Health (MOH) and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Kenya (CDC Kenya) have maintained a 40-year partnership during which measures were implemented to prevent, detect, and respond to disease threats. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the MOH and CDC Kenya rapidly responded to mitigate disease impact on Kenya’s 52 million residents. We describe activities undertaken jointly by the MOH and CDC Kenya that lessened the effects of COVID-19 during 5 epidemic waves from March through December 2021. Activities included establishing national and county-level emergency operations centers and implementing workforce development and deployment, infection prevention and control training, laboratory diagnostic advancement, enhanced surveillance, and information management. The COVID-19 pandemic provided fresh impetus for the government of Kenya to establish a national public health institute, launched in January 2022, to consolidate its public health activities and counter COVID-19 and future infectious, vaccine-preventable, and emerging zoonotic diseases.

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