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How to Strengthen Uganda's COVID-19 Response and Protect Health Services

TDDA engages communities, such as the one in pictured in Chad, in the fight against COVID-19. Photo courtesy of the TDDA program.


With updated training, increased supplies, and a new home-based care system.


COVID-19 infections in Uganda are rising fast. The country recorded its first case of the coronavirus in March 2020 and in the early stages of the pandemic most cases were identified at the borders among people traveling from other countries. Since then, however, the country has seen a rapid increase in community transmission and clusters of infection nationwide. As of January 20, Uganda’s Ministry of Health had recorded 38,806 cases and 316 deaths—almost certainly an underestimate of the true prevalence and impact, given the challenges of detection and reporting.

The Ugandan government has worked hard to develop plans to protect its population, but implementation has been hampered by a lack of resources and expertise. The efforts required to contain COVID-19 are straining an already overstretched health system. As Uganda’s hospitals experience an influx of patients, there is an increasing risk of hospital-acquired infection and infection of health staff. Indeed, the high number of new infections is making it extremely difficult for the health system to care for both COVID and non-COVID patients, let alone execute critical activities such as case investigation, contact tracing, and laboratory testing.

Given the urgent need to support COVID-19 response in Uganda, UKaid’s Tackling Deadly Diseases in Africa (TDDA) programme—led by DAI Global Health—is funding two new projects. Implemented by the Infectious Disease Institute (IDI) and African Field Epidemiology Network (AFENET), in collaboration with Uganda’s Ministry of Health, these targeted initiatives are designed to:

  • Protect health workers in Eastern Uganda; and
  • Strengthen the COVID-19 response through home-based care and community testing in the Masaka district.

“This support is timely and will strengthen the country’s ability to respond better and build confidence among a wide spectrum of responders at this critical phase of the COVID-19 epidemic,” says Winyi Kaboyo, country coordinator, TDDA.


TDDA engages communities in the fight against COVID-19.

Health Worker Protection in Eastern Uganda

The number of health care workers diagnosed with COVID-19 is increasing much more rapidly than in the general population. As of January 20, the Ministry of Health had recorded 1,873 cases among health professionals, and there’s growing concern that this contagion among health workers is having an adverse effect on the provision of routine health services such as reproductive, maternal, and newborn care.

Infection prevention and control (IPC) is critical in containing the virus—but in Uganda, IPC capacity varies widely across the country. Disparities are due in part to each region’s history of fighting previous outbreaks of deadly disease such as Ebola. While Eastern Uganda reported the nation’s first COVID-19 death and was the first region to experience widespread community transmission, investment in IPC capacity there has historically been significantly lower than elsewhere. As a result, technical and financial support are needed to allow eastern districts to scale up their IPC capacity.

TDDA is partnering with IDI to provide technical and financial assistance to rural districts in the Mbale and Karamoja regions of Eastern Uganda. Our support:

  • Provides training and mentoring to health workers;
  • Enables IDI to provide emergency supplies such as personal protective equipment and laboratory sampling kits;
  • Supports investigations of COVID-19 clusters in individual health facilities; and
  • Supports health workers to improve IPC, surveillance, and behavior change activities.

Strengthening Home-Based Care

Clusters of COVID-19 infections have been identified across 135 of Uganda’s 136 districts. As Uganda’s outbreak evolved from predominantly imported cases to widespread community transmission, the Ministry of Health moved from border-focused interventions to a decentralized approach, making each district responsible for its own local response. With many hospitals inundated by COVID-19 patients, home-based care for mild and asymptomatic COVID-19 cases was adopted as a more sustainable strategy for combatting the epidemic.

Many rural districts lack the technical expertise and resources to cope with these new responsibilities, however. Local efforts to contain the epidemic are made more challenging because communities have yet to fully understand the part they can play in preventing the spread of infection. As a result, adherence to preventative measures such as mask-wearing, social distancing, and isolation is generally low.

TDDA is partnering with AFENET, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, to support the rollout of a home-based care system—following the model established in the capital, Kampala—to the high-risk Masaka district. The TDDA-AFENET initiative is helping to:

  • Conduct a sensitization program to deepen understanding of IPC among local leaders;
  • Train district health care teams and frontline health workers in IPC, surveillance, and home-based isolation and care, so that this approach can be cascaded to village health teams and households;
  • Focus on early detection, isolation care, and infection prevention within communities and homes;
  • Support specimen collection from health facilities and communities for testing at regional laboratory hubs, to enhance rapid case detection;
  • Assist district-level rapid response teams by providing personal protective equipment; and
  • Engage and educate communities in the steps they can take to minimise transmission, through radio and television publicity campaigns and public health information materials.

“We’re proud to offer urgently needed, targeted support for Uganda’s efforts to contain the devastating spread of COVID-19,” says Jeffrey Mecaskey, TDDA team leader, who described both the IDI and AFENET initiatives as vital contributions to Uganda’s disease response. “In this pandemic, we rise and fall together. Vulnerabilities in one region or one country are everyone’s vulnerability. While our attention is focused on COVID-19, here and now, we are working to ensure our efforts strengthen systems to respond to other events in the future as well.”

TDDA is improving health systems, disease preparedness, and emergency response in Cameroon, Chad, Côte d’Ivoire, Mali, Niger, and Uganda.

Catherine Shrimpton provides communications support for TDDA.

This article was originally published on DAI Developments. You can find it here