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Young man training on gym equipment, pulling handle on cables. Source: theartofphoto - Fotolia (refer to: Training programme)

Training programme

Within the framework of the ESTICOM project a training programme for MSM Community Health Workers will be developed and piloted in ten European countries. Our preliminary definition of MSM Community Health Workers includes all people who currently provide sexual health services in a community setting directly to gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (MSM). Sexual health services for us include services related with HIV/STI and/or viral hepatitis (Hep B & C), drug use, and mental health.

Robert Koch-Institute (RKI), Germany

Consortium lead and Work package 1

MSM review

The Robert Koch Institute (RKI) is the central federal institution in Germany responsible for disease control and prevention and the central federal reference institution for both applied and response-orientated research as well as for the Public Health Sector.

The tasks of the Robert Koch Institute comprise:

  • The identification of politically important health problems and associated scientific issues
  • Applied and response-orientated research to resolve these issues
  • The assessment of scientific results through analysis of current international developments in the respective scientific areas
  • Informing and the advising political decision makers and the scientific sector
  • Executive tasks defined by special laws, in particular with regard to protection from infection
  • The topical realisation and coordination of federal health reporting.

Apart from the enforcement of special laws, the tasks at the RKI include the legal obligation to compile scientific findings as a basis for political decisions concerning health issues. The RKI therefore communicates and cooperates with partners in the scientific sector, the Public Health Service and the Health Care Sector. The institute has major responsibilities in the field of scientific investigation, epidemiologic and medical analysis and evaluation of dangerous diseases and those with a high prevalence or of increased public or health-related political significance.

With the passing of the Law for the Prevention of Infection (Infektionsschutzgesetz, IfSG), the RKI was given the responsibilities of a federal epidemiological centre for infectious diseases, combined with the construction of an expert-based registration system plus other novel and enhanced tools for data generation, prevention, surveillance and research.

ESTICOM coordinator, senior scientist:

Ulrich Marcus studied Medicine in Berlin from 1977 until 1984. 1984 he started his professional career at the Robert Koch-Institute (RKI) in Berlin in a working group dealing with the unfolding HIV/AIDS epidemic. He continued working in the HIV/AIDS field in different positions at the RKI or related institutions. Since 2001 he has been employed as a senior epidemiologist in the HIV/STI/Hepatitis unit of the newly created Department for Epidemiology of Infectious Diseases at the Robert Koch-Institute, which is the federal institute responsible for disease surveillance in Germany. He represents the RKI in the German committee on HIV guidelines, served as lead in the HIV-PEP guideline committee, represented Germany in the HIV/AIDS expert group of the Baltic Sea Task Force, and the HIV and associated infections expert group of the Northern Dimension Partnership.

He was principal investigator of several large national and international European studies dealing with sexually transmitted infections, HIV, and sexual behaviour among men having sex with men:

  • KABaSTI (knowledge, attitudes and behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) as to sexually transmitted infections), (2006 – 2007, Germany)
  • PARIS (pharyngeal and rectal infection screening), assessing prevalence of pharyngeal and rectal infections with Neisseria gonorrhoea and Chlamydia trachomatis among MSM in Germany, (2009 – 2011)
  • EMIS (European MSM Internet Survey), an EU-funded project collecting data in 38 countries, (03/2009 – 11/2011)
  • SIALON II, an EU-funded project on capacity building in combining targeted prevention with meaningful HIV surveillance among MSM, collecting HIV prevalence data among MSM recruited in community settings, (12/2011 – 02/2015)

Links:

www.emis-project.eu
www.sialon.eu


Susi (Susanne Barbara) Schink is an infectious disease epidemiologist by training. She has worked on national and international projects on HIV and STI affecting key populations, contact tracing, as well as on outbreaks and surveillance of various bacterial and viral pathogens at the national public health institute in Germany. With WHO, Susi joined the Ebola effort in francophone West Africa. She has also researched and taught at Emory University, Atlanta, GA as well as at Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin. In addition to her postgraduate training in applied epidemiology, Susi also holds master’s degrees in psych (UCL) and critical theory (Sussex).