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UMMS, academic partners awarded $20 million CDC grant to prevent ebola outbreak in Liberia

10.06.15 | UMass Chan Medical School

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WORCESTER, MA -- UMass Medical School (UMMS) and its partners at Boston Children's Hospital and other academic medical centers have been awarded $20 million from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to expand their efforts toward preventing another outbreak of Ebola or other highly contagious virus in Liberia.

The two-year grant is an extension of the Ebola relief work conducted by the Academic Consortium Combating Ebola in Liberia (ACCEL), a UMMS-led group that has trained thousands of health care workers on infection control, implemented Ebola diagnostic testing and improved blood collection practices in the wake of the West African Ebola epidemic that sickened more than 10,000 and killed 4,800 people in Liberia last year. A $7.5 million grant from the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation's #TackleEbola campaign supported ACCEL's initial relief efforts.

"There is no question the infection control and lab training efforts undertaken by UMass Medical School faculty in Liberia have saved lives," said UMMS Chancellor Michael F. Collins. "The mission is particularly meaningful, given our nearly decade of service working side by side with the Liberian people to improve their health care system, and we are grateful to the CDC for providing the resources necessary to support these ongoing needs."

"The CDC funding will support work with our Liberian colleagues to address significant gaps in health care worker training, physical infrastructure and health care consumables," said Katherine Luzuriaga, MD, the UMass Memorial Professor of Biomedical Research; vice provost for clinical and translational science and global health; and director of the UMass Center for Clinical and Translational Science.

"Continued improvements in laboratory diagnosis and infection prevention and control practices will be critical to sustain control of Ebola and to prevent future infectious disease outbreaks."

The CDC grant addresses three major objectives:

"By expanding training to all infectious disease control and applying it through innovative training methods that integrate infection control into the practice of emergency care, it is our goal that more than 5,000 Liberian health care workers across all hospitals in Liberia will have the ability to safely care for patients with the ongoing threat of Ebola still present," said Michelle Niescierenko, MD, pediatric emergency physician and director of the Global Health Program at Boston Children's Hospital and the Infection Prevention and Control Project Leader on the CDC grant.

"What we are really trying to do now is move toward permanent and sustainable labs," said Jeffrey Bailey, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine at UMass Medical School, CDC grant principal investigator, and laboratory project leader. The grant will support the manpower and training for Liberians to eventually run their own labs.

"Workforce capacity is the biggest issue. Right now there are 20 or 30 registered technologists in the entire country of Liberia. We have more than that at our hospital in Worcester. We will provide training so that they have highly functioning labs. They will have the ability to conduct constant monitoring so that if there is a new outbreak of a new disease, they will have the capability to do the testing. This will ensure that we never again have an outbreak of the scale that we saw with Ebola."

UMass Medical School and ACCEL have a long history of helping Liberia rebuild its health care system, which began years before the Ebola crisis. Through their longstanding relationships with the Liberian Ministry of Health, the University of Liberia, and the Liberia College of Physicians and Surgeons, ACCEL has provided clinical mentoring and teaching throughout the medical education system. UMMS has provided nurse and physician education and training in collaboration with the HEARTT (Health Education and Research through Training) Foundation; developed a pediatrics curriculum for a country with only two native-born practicing pediatricians; and worked with the Liberian Post-Graduate Council to develop a post-graduate training program.

ACCEL consortium members include UMMS, Boston Children's Hospital, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, University of Maryland, University of Florida, Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia and Massachusetts Institute for Technology.

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About the University of Massachusetts Medical School

The University of Massachusetts Medical School, one of the fastest growing academic health centers in the country, has built a reputation as a world-class research institution, consistently producing noteworthy advances in clinical and basic research. The Medical School attracts more than $249 million in research funding annually, 80 percent of which comes from federal funding sources. The mission of the Medical School is to advance the health and well-being of the people of the commonwealth and the world through pioneering education, research, public service and health care delivery with its clinical partner, UMass Memorial Health Care. For more information, visit http://www.umassmed.edu .

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Contact Information

Sarah Willey
University of Massachusetts Medical School
sarah.willey@umassmed.edu

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
UMass Chan Medical School. (2015, October 6). UMMS, academic partners awarded $20 million CDC grant to prevent ebola outbreak in Liberia. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LR5YRXR8/umms-academic-partners-awarded-20-million-cdc-grant-to-prevent-ebola-outbreak-in-liberia.html
MLA:
"UMMS, academic partners awarded $20 million CDC grant to prevent ebola outbreak in Liberia." Brightsurf News, Oct. 6 2015, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LR5YRXR8/umms-academic-partners-awarded-20-million-cdc-grant-to-prevent-ebola-outbreak-in-liberia.html.