Frederick Farley Kamara is a researcher with 15 years of experience working on social science studies and has acquired experience and skills in qualitative and quantitative survey design and data collection. Frederick has worked extensively on data collection, analysis and ICT4D innovation with aim of strengthen real-time data availability to inform policy and programming. In my previous assignment with World Vision International Sierra Leone, I piloted and rollout a mobile innovation that provides remote training for Community Health Workers during disease outbreak like Ebola and also used the CommCare application to monitor pregnant women for ANC visits during pregnancy and first 40 days after delivery using Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system to collect data at community level. Frederick also worked extensively on the EBODAC project in supporting the clinical trial of the Ebola vaccine in Sierra Leone and during this engagement, I significantly contributed in designing and developing data collection tools for clinical research like Connect4Life (biometric verification). My role as monitoring & evaluation officer under the Skills Development Fund Project was to support the M&E systems of the project funded by World Bank. Currently, I am providing coordinating and training support for surveys and studies at The Economic Forum
Frederick holds a Bachelor degree in Sociology from the Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra Leone.