Career Compass 2025
The Career Compass is one of EAN’s signature events during ESCAIDE: an informal Q&A session with public health professionals during which you can ask questions about speaker's careers and choices that shaped their trajectory.
Moderators:
Ioannis Karagiannis (WHO EURO):Ioannis Karagiannis is an epidemiologist working as a consultant with WHO EURO. After completing his fellowship, he was head of the Foodborne Diseases Unit at the National Public Health Institute in Greece before working as an EPIET coordinator and a UK-FETP senior scientific coordinator. He later worked as a field epidemiologist with the UK-PHRST and head of recruitment at the SIREN study in the UK before moving on to the Western Pacific Region Office and then the European Region Office of WHO to work with SARS-CoV-2 in the human-animal interface, food safety and the current global mpox outbreak. He has been the president of EAN since 2023.
Liza Coyer (GGD regio Utrecht):
Liza Coyer is an infectious disease epidemiologist at the Public Health Service of the Utrecht region (GGDrU), the Netherlands. She holds an MSc in Epidemiology from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a PhD on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis and STIs, followed by a postdoc on ethnic inequalities in SARS-CoV-2 at the Public Health Service of Amsterdam. She completed her EPIET fellowship (cohort 2021) at the Bavarian Health and Food Safety Authority in Germany, while continuing to contribute to hepatitis C projects in Cameroon for PharmAccess Foundation. After a career break for travel, she worked as a consultant for the World Health Organization on meningitis and epidemic bacterial diseases. At GGDrU, she focuses on surveillance, outbreak preparedness and response, and research on zoonoses and healthy living environments. She also serves on the boards of the EPIET Alumni Network and the Dutch Applied Infectious Disease Epidemiology Group.
Speakers:
Ewout Fanoy (GGD Regio Utrecht):
Ewout Fanoy is a medical doctor and epidemiologist (EPIET MS cohort 2013) at the Public Health Service Utrecht region in the Netherlands. He previously held leading roles in public health, including at PHS Rotterdam-Rijnmond and as head of the Infectious Diseases Department at PHS Amsterdam. Alongside his extensive experience in outbreak management, Fanoy has a longstanding interest in scientific research. His work covers a wide range of infectious disease outbreaks, with particular contributions to scabies research. He has studied the transmission dynamics of Sarcoptes scabiei and has been actively involved in testing and implementing molecular diagnostics (PCR) for scabies. In addition, he has contributed to innovative studies on wastewater surveillance for emerging pathogens, including SARS-CoV-2, measles and monkeypox virus. In addition to his public health practice and research, he currently serves as Editor-in-Chief of the Dutch scientific journal Infectieziektenbulletin.
Justine Schaeffer (Regional Health Agency, North-Eastern France):
Justine Schaeffer is a microbiologist and currently head of the outbreak investigation and control team at the Regional Health Agency in North-Eastern France. She was trained as a virologist and studied the immune response to viral haemorrhagic fever for her PhD. Deployed as a lab manager, she was involved in diagnostics and capacity building against Ebola and Lassa viruses in Western Africa. Her EUPHEM fellowship in the Austrian Health Agency started in 2019 and went through the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. After graduating, she joined Santé publique France (Public Health France) as an epidemiologist to work first on SARS-CoV-2 variants and later on the organisation of genomic surveillance in France. Three years later, she moved again to the Regional Health Agency where she manages a team of doctors and nurses in charge of infectious diseases investigation.
Louise Coole (UK Field Epidemiology Training Programme):
Louise Coole is the Director of the UK Field Epidemiology Training Programme. Following Medical and Public Health training she worked as a consultant in communicable disease control for 10 years before moving into a more epidemiology focused role in the North of England; leading a regional field epidemiology team which included supervising FETP fellows. From 2016 to 2020 Louise also worked part-time for ECDC as a scientific coordinator for the EPIET/EUPHEM programme. In 2019 she took on the leadership of the UKFETP as it transitioned from an EPIET Associates Programme (EAP) to a stand-alone programme. Her current focus is on strengthening links between FETP programmes in Europe and internationally.