Africa: MFWA, Partners Train 500 Media Professionals to Foster Information Integrity in West Africa: [MFWA] The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA), in partnership with the ECOWAS Commission and the German Development Cooperation (GIZ), has provided professional capacity enhancement training to 500 journalists across West Africa. http://newsfeed.facilit8.network/TRHn1w #MediaIntegrity #JournalismTraining #WestAfrica #MediaProfessionals #CapacityBuilding

Evaluation of a capacity building intervention on malaria treatment for children

The study by Ayodele Jegede and colleagues “Evaluation of a capacity building intervention on malaria treatment for under-fives in rural health facilities in Niger State, Nigeria” provides a rigorous evaluation of a standard “cascade training” intervention.

The intervention followed the classic global health model where national experts trained state trainers who then trained local government area facilitators who were supposed to train frontline health workers.

The results expose deep structural flaws in this approach.

The most damning finding was the “reach gap.”

Despite the intervention being fully funded and implemented, the cascade broke down before reaching the frontline.

Only 54% of the health workers who actually treat febrile children reported receiving the training.

The transmission of knowledge stopped at the facility in-charge level and did not filter down to the lower-level cadres who manage the bulk of the patient load.

Consequently, the study found no statistically significant difference in appropriate treatment practices between the intervention and control groups.

The study also illuminated the persistence of the “know-do” gap.

Even where testing rates increased, appropriate treatment did not necessarily follow.

A critical finding was that while health workers in the intervention arm correctly withheld artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) from children who tested negative for malaria, they frequently substituted them with other inappropriate antimalarials or antibiotics.

This suggests that the training taught them the technical rule (“no ACT for negatives”) but failed to teach the adaptive clinical skill of how to manage a negative diagnosis and patient expectations.

Finally, the study highlighted the futility of training in the absence of system support.

Significant stock-outs of Rapid Diagnostic Tests (RDTs) and ACTs occurred in the intervention facilities.

On many visit days, half the facilities had no ACTs available.

The authors conclude that capacity building cannot be an isolated activity and must be embedded within a functioning supply chain and health system.

Analysis through the lens of learning science

This study provides the empirical “counter-factual” that justifies TGLF’s evidence-based rejection of the cascade training model.

It illustrates precisely why a digital-first and direct-to-learner approach is necessary from an epidemiological and operational perspective.

Overcoming transmission loss

The finding that the cascade reached only 54% of workers is a powerful argument for TGLF’s networked learning approach.

By using digital platforms to connect directly with individual health workers on their own devices, TGLF bypasses the “frozen middle” layers of hierarchy where cascade training stalls.

TGLF does not rely on a facility manager to pass on a message but invites both the frontline worker and the manager to join the conversation directly.

From rote compliance to critical thinking

The behavior of the health workers who stopped giving ACTs but switched to other inappropriate drugs demonstrates the failure of “single-loop” learning.

They learned the what (do not give ACT) but not the why or the how (clinical reasoning and stewardship).

TGLF’s “double-loop” learning model addresses this by engaging workers in peer dialogue about why they feel compelled to prescribe drugs for negative cases.

This might include patient pressure or fear of complications.

The model helps them develop strategies to manage those pressures rather than just memorizing a guideline.

Resilience in the face of system failure

The study shows that stock-outs rendered the training ineffective.

In a traditional model, the health worker is a passive victim of these stock-outs.

In TGLF’s “challenge-based” learning model, a worker is likely to be the first one to identify “frequent stock-outs” as their primary challenge.

The network would then connect them with peers who have solved similar supply chain issues.

This might be through better forecasting, redistribution from nearby clinics or advocacy with district officials.

TGLF aims to transform the worker from a passive recipient of training into an active agent of system change who can navigate the very barriers that defeated the intervention in Niger State.

Reference

Jegede, A., Willey, B., Hamade, P., Oshiname, F., Chandramohan, D., Ajayi, I., Falade, C., Baba, E., Webster, J., 2020. Evaluation of a capacity building intervention on malaria treatment for under-fives in rural health facilities in Niger State, Nigeria. Malar J 19, 90. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-020-03167-y

Reda Sadki (2024). Why does cascade training fail?. Reda Sadki: Learning to make a difference. https://doi.org/10.59350/j8vg0-yng46

Reda Sadki (2024). What is double-loop learning in global health?. Reda Sadki: Learning to make a difference. https://doi.org/10.59350/s4xtw-b7274

#AyodeleJegede #capacityBuilding #cascadeTraining #doubleLoopLearning #knowDoGap #malaria #Nigeria #peerLearning

✨ A historic first! #Syria prepares to launch its first digital sampling frame after a regional UNICEF–MICS–WorldPop workshop in Amman.

Learn more: https://www.worldpop.org/blog/advancing-national-survey-data-with-geospatial-innovation-in-the-arab-states/

#OfficialStatistics #SDGs #MICS #Geospatial #DataForGood #UNICEF #CapacityBuilding

Advancing National Survey Data with Geospatial Innovation in the Arab States

A regional UNICEF–MICS–WorldPop workshop shows how geospatial innovation is transforming survey data and strengthening SDG monitoring.

WorldPop
Help us support #capacitybuilding in cybersecurity and incident response by sponsoring #FIRSTUZ26 today! 🌏Sponsorships available at🔗https://go.first.org/4DUc5 #Uzbekistan #CentralAsia #symposium #cybersecurity
2026 FIRST Regional Symposium for Central Asia

FIRST — Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams

🌍Cameroon | Census innovation & capacity building

WorldPop is supporting UNFPA and BUCREP with a 7-day in-person training on spatial statistics and hybrid census methods in Yaoundé.

By building local expertise, we’re helping ensure everyone is counted — even in hard-to-reach areas — to support evidence-based development and policy decisions.

📊
#Census #DataForDevelopment #Geospatial #CapacityBuilding #Cameroon #RGPH4 #RGAE #UNFPA_Cameroon

Collector Riju Bafna Emphasizes Coordination at IRS Disaster Response Workshop

During a one-day IRS workshop in Shajapur, Collector Riju Bafna stressed inter-departmental coordination, CPR training, and safety measures during disasters.

mumbaitimes.org
One-Day IRS Workshop Conducted in Shajapur to Strengthen Disaster Response

A one-day workshop on the Incident Response System (IRS) was held at the Shajapur Collectorate to enhance disaster preparedness of district and tehsil-level officers.

Tycoon World

🧩 Meet some of the challenges tutors guiding the problem-solving sessions of the Joint Winter School “AI for Earth System, Hazards & Climate Extremes”.

This Winter School brings together an exceptional group of tutors from the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA) and the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry.

🌐 Discover the full tutor profiles on the website: https://ai4pex.org/Training/School2026/

#AIWinterSchool2026 #MeDiTwin #AI4PEX #capacitybuilding

Urban - or rural? The answer matters more than you may think. 🏙️🌾
Countries are learning to map it better than ever.
🚀📊 Our DEGURBA training is building skills that power smarter policies - now and for the future.

Read more: https://www.worldpop.org/blog/skills-for-smarter-planning-how-degurba-capacity-building-is-empowering-countries/

#LMICs #DEGURBA #CapacityBuilding #GeospatialData #Urbanisation #DataForDevelopment #SDGs #NationalStatistics #Cameroon #Zambia

Skills for Smarter Planning: How DEGURBA Capacity Building Is Empowering Countries 

Empowering governments with DEGURBA training to map urban–rural areas accurately, improve data-driven planning, and advance progress toward global development goals.

WorldPop

🧠 Meet the Zero To Hero tutors behind the AI Winter School!
Experts in AI, EO & climate analytics guiding hands-on sessions.

📅 March 16–20, 2026, NTUA Athens Campus, Greece
🔗 Registration now open - https://buff.ly/dOFMhWy

#AIWinterSchool2026 #AI4PEX #MeDiTwin #Mentorship #CapacityBuilding