South-to-south mentoring as a vehicle for implementing sustainable health security in Africa
Loading...
Date
2023-03-07
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Background: While sustainability has become a universal precept in the development of global health security
systems, supporting policies often lack mechanisms to drive policies into regular practice. ‘On-paper’ norms and
regulations are to a great extent upheld by frontline workers who often lack the opportunity to communicate their
first-hand experiences to decisionmakers; their role is an often overlooked, yet crucial, aspect of a sustainable global
health security landscape. Initiatives and programs developing transdisciplinary professional skills support the
increased bidirectional dialogue between these frontline workers and key policy- and decisionmakers which may
sustainably narrow the gap between global health security policy design and implementation.
Methods: The International Federation of Biosafety Associations’ (IFBA) Global Mentorship Program recruits
biosafety and biosecurity champions across Africa to provide local peer mentorship to developing professionals in
their geographic region. Mentors and mentees complete structured one year program cycles, where they are
provided with written overviews of monthly discussion topics, and attend optional virtual interactive activities.
Feedback from African participants of the 2019–2020 program cycle was collected using a virtual Exit Survey, where
aspects of program impact and structure were assessed.
Results: Following its initial call for applications, the IFBA Global Mentorship Program received considerable interest
from professionals across the African continent, particularly in East and North Africa. The pilot program cycle
matched a total of 62 individuals from an array of professional disciplines across several regions, 40 of which were
located on the African continent. The resulting mentorship pairs shared knowledge, skills, and experiences towards
translating policy objectives to action on the front lines. Mentorship pairs embraced multidisciplinary approaches to
harmonize health security strategies across the human and animal health sectors. South-to-South mentorship
therefore provided mentees with locally relevant support critical to translation of best technical practices to local
capacity and work.
Conclusion: The IFBA’s South-to-South Global Mentorship Program has demonstrated its ability to form crucial links
between frontline biosafety professionals, laboratory workers, and policy- and decision-makers across several
implicated sectors. By supporting regionally relevant peer mentorship programs, the gap between health security
policy development and implementation may be narrowed.
Description
Keywords
Global mentorship, South-to-south, OneHealth, Biosafety, Biosecurity, Global health security, Frontline workers