KAMPALA – In the capital Kampala, applause filled a modest graduation hall on January 29 as 19 Ugandans stepped forward to receive certificates that carry weight far beyond the room. They were not doctors in white coats or politicians in suits. They were disease detectives, epidemiologists, and laboratory leaders trained to spot outbreaks early, trace their spread, and stop them before they spiral into national or global crises.
In a world still marked by the scars of COVID-19, and as outbreaks of Ebola, cholera, measles, malaria, and mpox (formerly monkeypox) continue to test public health systems, the moment felt quietly consequential. These graduates represent the front line of a strategy that links Uganda’s health security directly to that of the United States, and, by extension, the rest of the world.
The ceremony on January 29 marked the graduation of 19 fellows from two U.S.-supported programs: the Advanced Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP) and the Laboratory Leadership Program (LLP). Together, they form the backbone of Uganda’s capacity to detect and respond to infectious disease threats at their source, before they cross borders.
“This afternoon, we congratulate 19 additional expert disease detectives on their graduation,” U.S. Ambassador William W. Popp told the gathering. “They reflect decades of bringing American innovation to Uganda’s health systems and our strategic cooperation to strengthen Uganda’s ability to detect, control, and stop disease threats that affect Uganda, the United States, and the world.”
That sentence captures the deeper logic behind the investment. Under the U.S. government’s America First Global Health Strategy, the goal is not charity, but prevention. Stopping outbreaks early, in places where they are most likely to emerge, makes Americans safer, reduces the need for emergency responses later, and strengthens partner countries’ health systems so they are less dependent over time.
Uganda has long been a testing ground for this approach. Its geography, porous borders, dense urban centers, and history of viral outbreaks make it both vulnerable and strategically important. Over the past two decades, the U.S. government, through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has worked alongside Uganda’s Ministry of Health, the Uganda National Institute of Public Health, and Makerere University School of Public Health to build a pipeline of local expertise.
The numbers tell part of the story. Nearly 1,000 epidemiologists have graduated from Uganda’s FETP and are now deployed across the country. The program operates at three levels: a two-year Advanced track, also known as the Public Health Fellowship Program, with 136 graduates to date; a nine-month Intermediate course for mid-level professionals, with about 100 graduates; and a three-month Frontline program that has trained more than 700 district-level health workers.
This year’s cohort included 13 Advanced FETP fellows and six LLP fellows, reflecting a deliberate shift toward integrating epidemiology with laboratory leadership. That integration matters. Detecting an outbreak quickly is only half the battle; confirming it through strong laboratory systems is what turns suspicion into action.
The implications reach far beyond Uganda. In an age of constant travel and trade, viruses do not respect borders. An undetected outbreak in a rural district can, within days, become an international emergency. Training local experts to recognize warning signs early, unusual clusters of illness, unexplained deaths, patterns that do not fit, is one of the most cost-effective ways to protect global health.
For Uganda, the benefits are immediate and long-term. A stronger surveillance system means faster responses, fewer deaths, and less economic disruption when outbreaks occur. It also builds institutional confidence: health systems that can manage crises earn public trust and reduce panic. For young professionals, the programs offer a career path rooted in public service, research, and leadership, critical in a country where health challenges are constant but resources are finite.
For the United States, the payoff is quieter but no less significant. Every outbreak stopped early in Uganda is one less emergency requiring billions of dollars, emergency deployments, and global coordination later. It is an investment in foresight rather than reaction.
As the graduates posed for photographs, certificates in hand, the symbolism was clear. Global health security is no longer built only in Washington or Geneva. It is built in districts, laboratories, and communities, by people trained to see danger before it explodes.
In that sense, the ceremony was not just an ending. It was a reminder that in a connected world, protecting one country’s health often begins by strengthening another’s.
