Request for Proposals for Strengthening Animal Health Laboratory Capacity, Thailand Surveillance Systems, and Outbreak Response at the National Institute of Animal Health (NIAH), Department of Livestock Development AMENDMENT 1

Project Information

Bid Title
Request for Proposals for Strengthening Animal Health Laboratory Capacity, Thailand Surveillance Systems, and Outbreak Response at the National Institute of Animal Health (NIAH), Department of Livestock Development AMENDMENT 1
Issuing Agency
FHI 360
Location
District of Columbia
Published Date
Jun 26, 2026
Closing Date
Jul 3, 2026
Government Level
State & Local
Status
Closed
Ref. #
2026-017-Thailand_RFP_02
Original Source
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Project Description

Request for Proposals for Strengthening Animal Health Laboratory Capacity, Thailand Surveillance Systems, and Outbreak Response at the National Institute of Animal Health (NIAH), Department of Livestock Development
RFP No.: 2026-017-Thailand_RFP_02

Issue date: 20 May, 2026
Closing date: 3 Jul, 2026

Solicitation file(s):
Tender for GHS Thailand 5.20.2026.pdf (298 KB)
Attachment A-Budget Proposal.xlsx (63 KB)

Modification file(s):
AMENDMENT 1_Tender for GHS Thailand 6.26.2026.pdf (300 KB)

Attachment Preview
Request for Proposals
Request for Proposals for Strengthening Animal Health Laboratory Capacity,
Surveillance Systems, and Outbreak Response at the National Institute of
Animal Health (NIAH), Department of Livestock Development, Thailand
Solicitation Number: 2026-017-Thailand AMENDMENT 1
MODIFICATION # 1
To: Prospective Organizations
From: STRIDES Thailand
Contract Title: Technical Support to Strengthen Animal Health Laboratory
Capacity, Surveillance Systems, and Outbreak Response at the National
Institute of Animal Health (NIAH), Department of Livestock Development,
Thailand
Location: Thailand
Date Issued: May 21, 2026
Questions Due: May 29, 2026, 23:59 Eastern Daylight Time
Responses Posted: June 5, 2026, 23:59 Eastern Daylight Time
Submission Deadline: June 26, 2026, July 3, 2026, 23:59 Eastern Daylight Time
Submission Email: STRIDESProcurement@fhi360.org
Introduction
The Strengthening Infectious Disease Detection Systems (STRIDES) Activity
implemented by FHI 360 invites qualified organizations to submit proposals to
support the implementation of global health security (GHS) activities in Thailand.
STRIDES is a U.S. Department of Statefunded global initiative designed to strengthen
national and subnational systems to prevent, detect, and respond to infectious
disease threats in alignment with the International Health Regulations (IHR 2005) and
U.S. government global health security priorities. In Southeast Asia, STRIDES is
implemented in close coordination with the government of Thailand, U.S. Embassy
Bangkok, and other regional entities to strengthen laboratory systems, surveillance,
and outbreak preparedness with regional spillover benefits across Asia.
STRIDES has four core objectives:
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1. Strengthen detection capacity and systems across human and
animal laboratory networks, including biosafety and biosecurity.
2. Develop and enhance event-based and indicator-based surveillance
systems for timely detection of public health threats.
3. Improve data collection, analysis, interoperability, and reporting to
support evidence-based decision-making and outbreak response.
4. Provide targeted technical and operational support during
outbreaks, including surge assistance to laboratories and
surveillance systems.
This request for proposals (RFP), and any subsequent subcontract, focuses on the
intersection between animal and human disease management systems, laboratory
networks, zoonotic diseases, outbreak response, multisectoral health security
coordination, biosafety and security (BSS), and engagement with the Thailand
Department of Livestock Development (DLD).
STRIDES Scope of Work
STRIDES activities in Southeast Asia will implement a government of Thailand-led,
multi-sectoral, and tailored technical strategy aligned with Thailand’s National
Action Plan for Health Security (NAPHS 20232027) and priority gaps identified
through the 2022 Joint External Evaluation (JEE) and 2024 State Parties Annual Self-
Assessment Report (SPAR). The Activity strengthens core public health capabilities
in disease detection, reporting, and coordinated response with a deliberate focus
on high-risk border provinces. These locations are characterized by intense cross-
border mobility, migratory labor flows, zoonotic spillover risks, and recurring
infectious disease outbreaks. By enhancing early warning systems, strengthening
Point-of-Entry (PoE) surveillance, and equipping provincial rapid response teams
(RRT) and Emergency Operations Centers (EOC) with integrated tools and protocols,
STRIDES will enable Thailand to detect outbreaks earlier and respond with faster,
evidence-driven, multisectoral action.
Central to this approach is strengthening Thailand’s integrated laboratory and
surveillance systems across human and animal health sectors. STRIDES will work
with key Thai institutions, including the Department of Disease Control (DDC), the
Department of Medical Sciences (DMSC), Thai Red Cross Emerging Infectious
Diseases Clinical Center (TRC-EIDCC), Chulalongkorn University, and laboratories
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under the DLD to expand molecular diagnostics and genomic surveillance for
priority pathogens. Support will include upgrading critical infrastructure, reinforcing
quality assurance (QA)/quality control (QC) systems, and expanding surveillance for
high-risk zoonoses and priority pathogens, including wastewater-based surveillance
where appropriate. These improvements will increase Thailand’s ability to generate
accurate and timely laboratory data and integrate it effectively into national
surveillance systems to inform real-time risk assessments and targeted public
health measures.
Complementing these national-level investments, STRIDES will bolster emergency
preparedness, multisectoral coordination, and community engagement, ensuring
that the region can manage public health threats efficiently. STRIDES’ work includes
strengthening incident management systems and conducting simulation exercises
with human health, veterinary, border, immigration, and customs authorities.
Expanding regionally, STRIDES contributes to health security resilience by
strengthening cross-border surveillance, laboratory cooperation, and multisectoral
workforce development across the Greater Mekong Subregion and ASEAN
platforms. Leveraging Thailand’s technical expertise and strategic geographic
position, activities support the ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Animal Health and
Zoonoses (ACCAHZ) and bilateral coordination mechanisms with Cambodia, the Lao
People’s Democratic Republic (PDR), and Myanmar to improve data sharing, joint
outbreak investigation protocols, and PoE readiness. Regional laboratory quality
assurance, training, and genomic surveillance collaboration builds on Thailand’s
leadership within the region. Through strategic partnerships, STRIDES will help
cultivate a regional multisectoral workforce skilled in outbreak investigation,
biosafety, field epidemiology, and meeting 7-1-7 performance benchmarks.
Implementation Approach
Applicants should propose a technical and financial approach to implement the
scope of work and achieve the illustrative results defined in this RFP based on their
institutional strengths, technical expertise, and operational presence in Thailand
and/or the Southeast Asia region. Consortium applications are acceptable where
partners demonstrate complementary expertise, clearly defined roles, and effective
coordination and governance mechanisms.
Objective 1: Strengthen Detection Capacity and Laboratory Systems for
Human and Animal Health Networks
Reserved
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Objective 2: Develop Integrated and Sustainable Surveillance Systems Using
Event-Based and Indicator-Based Approaches
Applicants may propose activities that include, but are not limited to:
Provide targeted technical support to the DLD to institutionalize the 7-1-7
framework for detecting, reporting, and responding to high-risk zoonotic
disease events in livestock. This task will strengthen DLD’s capacity to identify
priority signals within 7 days, initiate investigation within 1 day, and
implement effective control measures within 7 days. Support may include
adapting 7-1-7 tools for livestock outbreak contexts, orienting provincial and
district veterinary teams on application of the framework, and establishing
mechanisms for rapid information flow between DLD, DDC, and cross-
sectoral partners during potential spillover events. This effort will enhance
early detection, accelerate response, and mitigate the risk of zoonotic
transmission to humans and wider animal populations.
Objective 3: Enhance Data Management, Interoperability, and Use for
Decision-Making
Reserved
Objective 4: Provide Targeted Outbreak Detection and Response Assistance
Applicants may propose activities that include, but are not limited to:
Conduct an in-depth assessment of DLD’s readiness to host the ASEAN
Coordinating Centre for Animal Health and Zoonoses (ACCAHZ). The review
will examine institutional structures, regional coordination workflows, rapid
reporting mechanisms, data and knowledge-management functions, human
resources, operational SOPs, information communications and technology
(ICT) systems, and surge/event-response capacity. Findings will identify
priority capacity gaps and guide the development of a structured roadmap
for DLD to assume full hosting responsibilities.
Provide targeted technical support to strengthen DLD’s capacity to manage
ACCAHZ’s day-to-day operations, including coordination with ASEAN Member
States, consolidation of regional outbreak intelligence, facilitation of
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multisectoral communication, and organization of technical or emergency
coordination meetings. Short-term experts (e.g., coordination specialists,
epidemiologists, data analysts) will be deployed during high-demand periods
to reinforce ACCAHZ’s operational readiness under DLD leadership.
Support DLD and ACCAHZ to refine and institutionalize regional SOPs for
outbreak notification, information exchange, specimen referral, rapid risk
assessment, and activation of cross-border joint investigations. Assistance
will also include strengthening governance processes, reporting templates,
regional situation-monitoring dashboards, and meeting facilitation tools. All
tools will align with ASEAN frameworks and be adapted to regional realities,
including wildlifelivestockhuman interfaces, migrant mobility, and informal
border-crossing dynamics.
Enhance Thailand’s regional Field Epidemiology Training Program for
Veterinarians (R-FETPV) as a regional hub that equips veterinarians and other
multi-sectoral responders with the skills needed to prevent, detect, and
respond to zoonotic threats before they spill over into human populations.
Support will enable international trainees to participate in the program,
supported by strengthened hosting systems including transparent selection,
clear orientation, streamlined logistics, and accessible English-learning
materials to ensure they can integrate quickly and learn effectively. Provide
focused assistance to update and deliver high-impact modules on zoonotic
outbreak investigation, rapid risk assessment, cross-border coordination,
surveillance signal interpretation, and field epidemiology decision-making
under emergency conditions. Facilitate high-quality practicums linked to real
or simulated outbreaks, ensuring trainees receive structured mentorship and
hands-on experience responding to threats with direct human-health
implications. These investments will build a capable regional workforce that
can mitigate spillover risks and safeguard communities from emerging
infectious diseases.
Support DLD and the R-FETPV Secretariat to strengthen mechanisms for
mobilizing R-FETPV graduates, including international cohorts for rapid
deployment in cross-border and regional outbreak investigations. Establish a
streamlined graduate roster, improve communication channels with national
and regional EOCs, and facilitate participation of trainees and graduates in
regional simulation exercises (e.g., ASEAN, FAO/WOAH). Document lessons
learned and recommend strategies to more fully integrate R-FETPV-trained
veterinarians into regional rapid-response systems, ensuring they can
contribute effectively to preventing zoonotic spillovers and protecting human
health.
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Commodity Codes
  • NAICS 541511Custom Computer Programming Services
  • NAICS 541611Administrative Management and General Management Consulting Services
  • NAICS 541690Other Scientific and Technical Consulting Services
  • NAICS 541990All Other Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services
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