Participate in ethics and data sharing community  | ​  Learn More 

Grand Challenges 2019 Ethiopia

The Public Health Alliance for Genomic Epidemiology (PHA4GE) was launched at the Grand Challenges Annual Meeting (GC) hosted at the United Nations Conference Center in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia from 27-30 October 2019.  The GC meeting is a convening of more than 1000 key leaders from across the global community to share best practices, and to seek solutions to common challenges affecting global health.


The scientific track session pertinent to PHA4GE at this conference was “Leveraging pathogen genetic sequencing in Africa”. During this track session applications of pathogen sequencing in resource limited settings reinforced the value addition of including sequencing as part of the strategy to respond to disease outbreaks.


On the last day of this scientific track a few speakers shared ideas of how the scientific community can come together to leverage existing technological advances to support a global initiative that would collectively respond to public health needs. Presentations by Alli Black (Next strain), Bronwyn MacInnis (Broad Institute), and David Aanensen (Pathogen Watch) were then followed by an outline of the PHA4GE consortium by Alan Christoffels and Duncan MacCannell.

Subscribe to the PHA4GE Newsletter

We're committed to your privacy. PHA4GE uses the information you provide to us to contact you about our relevant content. You may unsubscribe from these communications at any time.

Follow PHA4GE

Related Articles

Wastewater Contextual Data Specification

The PHA4GE Wastewater Contextual Data Specification Package is scoped for data collection and sharing (within organizations, within networks and if desired, with public repositories) of both pathogen-agnostic genomics contextual data and genotypic attributes (such as antimicrobial resistance genes) derived from amplicon-based, WGS, and metagenomic sequencing approaches.

Wastewater Surveillance Guidance and Resources

This repository hosts guidance documents and resources developed by the PHA4GE Wastewater Surveillance Working Group. These documents address core challenges involved in designing effective wastewater surveillance strategies, analyzing wastewater pathogen sequencing and quantification data, and sharing this data with the global public health community.