670 likes | 1.06k Views
Office of Workforce and Career Development, CDC . Ensure a competent and sustainable workforce Ensure competent and sustainable leadership Ensure the use of best practices in workforce and career development. Epidemic Intelligence Service 1951
E N D
1. The CDCs Epidemic Intelligence Service Program from 19512008 How Many Veterinarians are Accepted Annually? Kris Bisgard, DVM, MPH, Diplo. ACVPM
Supervisor, EIS Field Assignments Branch
Career Development Division
Office of Workforce and Career Development
2. Office of Workforce and Career Development, CDC Ensure a competent and sustainable workforce
Ensure competent and sustainable leadership
Ensure the use of best practices in workforce and career development
3. Epidemic Intelligence Service1951 Two-year post-graduate program of service and on-the-job training
Physicians, doctoral-degree (PhD), nurses, dentists, statisticians, veterinarians
Majority of EIS graduates continue working in public health
4. Required EIS Coursework
5. EIS learning structure: Competency domains and Core Activities of Learning (CALs)
6. Epidemic Intelligence ServiceOWCD Desired Outcomes
Individual-level goals
Public health practitioners who can use epidemiology as a tool
Competent, consequential epidemiologists
Program goals
Balance of EIS Officers
Service to partners
Future leaders
Alignment with CDCs strategic imperatives, public health needs
Improved
Improve public health
7. Veterinarians in Public Health Zoonotic and infectious diseases
Environmental health
Chronic diseases
Population-based medicine
Problem-solving
8. Objective Describe Veterinarians in EIS
9. Epidemic Intelligence Service19512008 3117 EIS Officers
246 (8%) Veterinarians
10. Number of Veterinarians in EISby Decade, 19512008
11. Proportion of Veterinarians in EISby Decade, 19512008 (n=246)
13. Number of Female Veterinarians in EISby Decade*, 19902008
14. From 2002 to 2008, 13 (22%) of 58 veterinary EIS Officers were male and 45 (78%) were female.From 2002 to 2008, 13 (22%) of 58 veterinary EIS Officers were male and 45 (78%) were female.
15. Rate of Veterinarians Accepted for EIS19971999 and 20002002
19971999
72 (8%) of 870 applicants
26 (36%) of 72 veterinarians accepted
20002002
49 (6%) of 843
15 (31%) of 49 veterinarians accepted
16. EIS Applicants, by Year, 20052007
17. Rate of Acceptance for EIS, 2007
69 (38%) of 182 U.S. Citizen/Perm. Resident
12 (10%) of 124 non-U.S. Citizen
48 (27%) of 181 Physicians
31 (31%) of 100 PhDs
5 (23%) of 22 Veterinarians
55 (32%) of 172* Female
26 (23%) of 113* Male
*Sex for 21 applicants not identifiable from application
18. 2008 EIS Class (n=80) 30 (38%) physicians
39 (49%) PhDs and others
52 (74%) of 70 in Public Health Service
56 (70%) female
11 (13%) veterinarians
19. 2008 Veterinary EIS Class (n=11) 11 (100%) female
10 (91%) have additional graduate degree
1 (9%) USDA assignee
1 (9%) USAF assignee
7 (64%) at headquarters and 4 (38%) at field
6 (67%) of 9 in Public Health Service
20. Summary 19512008, 246 (8%) of 3117 EIS Officers were veterinarians
19701989 proportion veterinarians lowest
20002008, 64 (9%) veterinarians of 723 EIS Officers
Number of EIS applicants increased
Proportion of female EIS veterinarians increased
21. Recommendations Encourage veterinarians with advanced training to apply to EIS
Encourage veterinarians to join the Public Health Service
Encourage CDC to accept =12% veterinarians in each EIS class
22. Acknowledgments Marguerite Pappaionou, et al. Veterinarians in Public Health: The Epidemic Intelligence Service of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 19512002. JVME 2003; 30(4):383 91.
Dr. Pappaionous current affiliation: Executive Director,
Association of the American Veterinary Medical Colleges
Jennifer G. Wright, Anthrax Vaccine Research Program, NCIRD, CDC
Douglas Hamilton, Director, EIS Program, CDC
23. If you dont know where youre going, any road will get you there. --Lewis Carroll
24. Match Rate by CIO, 2007 ClassOffered >6 Positions*includes Prematched Assignments
25. Match Rate by CIO, 2006 ClassOffered Positions >6*includes Prematched Assignments
26. Proportion of Veterinary EISOs by Sex, 20022008 The following four slides summarize and compare key findings in race reporting in Montana from 2000, shown by the blue bar, to 2006, shown by the orange bar.
As demonstrated in the previous table, this slide compares the proportion of gonorrhea case reports by reported race in 2000 and 2006.
The proportion of case reports among whites increased from 28% to 48% of cases.
In contrast, case reports among AI/AN decreased from 38% to 20% of all cases.
The proportion of cases reported race unknown remained fairly high, decreasing only slightly from 29% to 26% of all case reports.The following four slides summarize and compare key findings in race reporting in Montana from 2000, shown by the blue bar, to 2006, shown by the orange bar.
As demonstrated in the previous table, this slide compares the proportion of gonorrhea case reports by reported race in 2000 and 2006.
The proportion of case reports among whites increased from 28% to 48% of cases.
In contrast, case reports among AI/AN decreased from 38% to 20% of all cases.
The proportion of cases reported race unknown remained fairly high, decreasing only slightly from 29% to 26% of all case reports.
27. Number of Veterinarians in EISby Decade, 19512008
28. Improved Health Impact Results
Workforce needs are anticipated and filled through strategic recruitment
Skills and competency of the health workforce are improved and sustained
Competent health and leadership cadre are in place when and where needed
Practices of health organizations and systems are improved
29. Program Issues
Clarity of overall goals for program? For individual EISOs?
Current expected (measurable) outcomes?
Evidence base for our approach?
Consistency with educational standards?
Responsiveness to changes in public health practice?
Desired, measurable outcomes?
30. Individual-level Issues
What can EIS graduates do?
What should our graduates be able to do?
How do we determine this?
What are competencies for an applied epidemiologist?
What are required qualifications for our EIS candidates?
31. Competency Domains Essential for EIS Analytic Assessment
Basic Public Health Sciences
Communication
Community Dimensions of Practice
Cultural Competency
Leadership and Systems Thinking
Policy Development/Program Planning
32. Analytic/AssessmentCompetencies Essential for EIS Identify public health problems
Conduct surveillance
Investigate acute and chronic conditions
Apply ethical/legal principles to study design, data collection, dissemination, and use
Manage data
Analyze data
Summarize results/draw conclusions
Recommend evidence-based interventions and control measures
33. Basic Public Health Sciences Competencies Essential for EIS Use knowledge of causes of disease to guide epidemiologic practice
Apply principles of informatics, including data collection, processing, and analysis, in support of epidemiologic practice
34. Communication Competencies Essential for EIS Prepare written/oral reports and presentations that communicate necessary information
Demonstrate basic principles of risk communication
Incorporate interpersonal skills in communication with agency personnel, colleagues, and public
Use effective communication technologies
35. Community Dimensions of Practice Competencies Essential for EIS Provide epidemiologic input into studies, public health programs, and community public health planning processes
Participate in development of community partnerships to support investigations
36. Cultural Competency Competencies Essential for EIS Describe population
Conduct investigations using languages and approaches tailored to population
Use standard population categories or subcategories when performing data analysis
Use knowledge of specific sociocultural factors in population to interpret findings
Recommend public health actions that would be meaningful to the affected community
37. Leadership and Systems Thinking Competencies Essential for EIS Promote ethical conduct in epidemiologic practice
Prepare for emergency response
38. Policy Development Competencies Essential for EIS Bring epidemiologic perspective in development and analysis of public health policies
39. Self-Reported Improvement in Epidemiologic Competence
At end of EIS training
2002 Class: 92%
2003 Class: 95%
2004 Class: 93%
2005 Class: 91%
40. Educational Standards (adapted from Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education) Stage 1: Apprenticeship
Stage 2: Program = Multiple learners and mentors
Stage 3: Formal learning activities
Stage 4: Educational outcomes
Quality of graduates competence to practice, based on scientifically valid, consensus-based measures
Stage 5: Quality of public health practice
41. Rationale for Development of Competencies for Applied Epidemiologists (AECs) Definition of needed skills for hiring
Method to evaluate, reward, promote workers
Roadmap for training existing workforce
Guidelines for academia
Improved ability to define the field
Utility for any certification process
42. Methods Review existing competencies/framework
Convene expert Panelcrosscutting representation
Subgroups:
Leadership group
Review panel
Consultant/editor
Obtain directed feedback (informatics)
Conduct validation surveyspractice, academia
Summer 2005tier 2 only (n= 380)
Early 2006all tiers (n= 420)
Quantitative, qualitative comments
43. Competency Framework for Public Health Professionals Analytic Assessment
Basic Public Health Sciences
Communication
Community Dimensions of Practice
Cultural Competency
Financial Planning and Management
Leadership and Systems Thinking
Policy Development/Program Planning
Source: Council on Linkages between Academia and Public Health Practice
44. Development Process Conducted 3 in-person meetings of expert panel (Oct 04, Mar 05, May 06), multiple conference calls
Presented at CSTE (Jun 05), APHA (Dec 05)
Used web-based surveys to obtain expert panels and other practitioner/academic input
Recognized that COL competencies apply to all public health professionals, including epis
Focused on crafting language to reflect unique aspects of epidemiologic practice
Recognized that proficiency will differ depending on level of experience and job expectations
46. Skill Domain 1: Analytic/AssessmentTier 2 Competencies Identify public health problems
Conduct surveillance
Investigate acute and chronic conditions
Apply ethical/legal principles to study design, data collection, dissemination, and use
Manage data
Analyze data
Summarize results/draw conclusions
Recommend evidence-based interventions and control measures
Evaluate programs
47. Example: Analytic/AssessmentTier 2 Sub-Competencies Conduct surveillance
Design surveillance for particular public health issue
Identify surveillance data needs
Implement new or revise existing surveillance system
Identify key findings
Conduct evaluation of surveillance systems
48. Example: Analytic/Assessment Tier 2 Sub-Sub-Competencies Identify surveillance data needs
Create case definition
Describe sources, quality and limitations of surveillance data
Define data elements to be collected or reported
Identify mechanisms to transfer data from source to public health agency
Define timeliness required for data collection
Determine frequency of reporting
Describe potential uses of data to inform surveillance system design
Define functional requirements of supporting information system
49. Differentiating Between Tiers Example: Surveillance Tier 1 (entry level or basic):
Support evaluation of surveillance systems
Tier 2 (mid-level epidemiologist/team leader):
Conduct evaluation of surveillance systems
Tier 3 (senior level):
Supervisor/Manager -- Assure evaluation of surveillance systems
Senior Scientist (PhD) -- Design and conduct evaluation of surveillance systems
50. Four Tiers of Practice Tier 1:
Recent MPH graduate/MA epidemiology or
Bachelors degree only with some epidemiology experience
Tier 2:
MPH or MA epidemiology with 2+ years experience
Doctoral epidemiologist
Non-epidemiology professional degree plus epidemiology training
Tier 3A: (supervisory, management)
Tier 2 with additional experience
Tier 3B: (senior scientist, researcher)
Tier 2 with additional experience Nonepi prof degree include RN, MD/DO, DDS/DMD, DVM, PhD, RSNonepi prof degree include RN, MD/DO, DDS/DMD, DVM, PhD, RS
51. Alignment of the EIS Program with Essential CDC/CSTE Applied Epidemiology Competencies Richard Hoffman, MD*
Denise Koo, MD
EIS Conference
52. CIO Match Rate, 2006 ClassOffered Positions < 6
53. CIO Match Rate, 2007 ClassOffered Positions < 6
54. CAL Completion Rates(Source: EISO Exit Survey)
55. Essential Applied Epidemiology Competencies for all EIS Officers
56. Mapping the EIS competencies to the Essential AECs
57. Mapping the CALs to the Essential AECs
58. Survey of EIS Supervisors:Methods
59. Survey of EIS Supervisors:Participants
60. Results of Survey of EIS Supervisors (n=21):Essential AECs with Insufficient Priority or Opportunity
61. Survey of EIS Supervisors:Results
62. Possible ways to evaluate competence in the essential AECs
63. EIS course work that is applicable to the Essential AECs
64. AECs for which there is EIS course work but not necessarily on-the-job training
65. Possible ways to modify the EIS program
66. We would like to acknowledge and thank:
67.
Thank you for your participation!!