{"id":45353,"date":"2020-02-25T18:40:15","date_gmt":"2020-02-25T18:40:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/joblistghana.com\/?p=45353"},"modified":"2020-02-25T18:41:42","modified_gmt":"2020-02-25T18:41:42","slug":"path-recruiting-now-2020","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/joblistghana.com\/path-recruiting-now-2020.html","title":{"rendered":"PATH Recruiting Now 2020"},"content":{"rendered":"

PATH is a global organization that works to accelerate health equity by bringing together public institutions, businesses, social enterprises, and investors to solve the world\u2019s most pressing health challenges. With expertise in science, health, economics, technology, advocacy, and dozens of other specialties, PATH develops and scales solutions\u2014including vaccines, drugs, devices, diagnostics, and innovative approaches to strengthening health systems worldwide. Learn more at www.path.org.<\/p>\n

Vaccine wastage is a critical factor for those managing vaccine procurement to understand, in order to correctly quantify the amount of vaccine that is needed for purchase and hence reduce the risk of stockouts or overstocking. Vaccine wastage may be due to avoidable causes, such as exposure to inappropriate temperature or damage of vials during transport, or unavoidable causes, such as the number of children presenting for immunization being fewer than the number of doses in a multi-dose vial. Research shows that country-specific, viral-specific, and vaccine formulation-specific wastage rates data are very limited and that with more expensive vaccines entering the system and the availability of the multi-dose vial policy, health workers are taking a more complex approach that acknowledges the tradeoff between coverage and wastage and takes into account issues of immunization equity.<\/p>\n

Job Description<\/strong><\/p>\n

Job Title:\u00a0Study Supervisor, Vaccine Wastage\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n

PATH is undertaking a mixed-methods study in Ghana to better quantify closed and open-vial wastage rates for vaccines used in the Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI) as well as understand the major drivers behind the occurrence of wastage and their impact. The study includes the collection of retrospective and 3-month prospective data on vaccine wastage and conducting interviews with EPI staff working at various levels of the vaccine supply chain and service delivery level. The study will also contribute to establishing methodologies for estimating context-specific wastage rates. The study supervisor will lead and coordinate the data collection activities in Ghana for this study. This work will be done in collaboration and coordination with the Ghana EPI.<\/p>\n

Specific Duties And Responsibilities<\/strong><\/p>\n