Sustaining Fragile Gains: The Need to Maintain Coverage with Long-Lasting Insecticidal Nets for Malaria Control and Likely Implications of Not Doing So

被引:7
作者
Paintain, Lucy Smith [1 ]
Kolaczinski, Jan [2 ]
Renshaw, Melanie [3 ]
Filler, Scott [2 ]
Kilian, Albert [4 ]
Webster, Jayne [1 ]
Lokko, Kojo [5 ]
Lynch, Matthew [5 ]
机构
[1] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Dept Dis Control, London WC1, England
[2] Global Fund Fight AIDS TB & Malaria, Strategy Investment & Impact Div, Geneva, Switzerland
[3] African Leaders Malaria Alliance, Geneva, Switzerland
[4] Trop Hlth LLP, Montagut, Girona, Spain
[5] Johns Hopkins Univ, Ctr Commun Programs, Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Baltimore, MD USA
来源
PLOS ONE | 2013年 / 8卷 / 12期
关键词
TREATED NETS; PROTECTIVE EFFICACY; UNIVERSAL COVERAGE; CHILD-MORTALITY; MOSQUITO NETS; IMPACT; SURVIVAL; TANZANIA; AFRICA; MODEL;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0083816
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Global commitment to malaria control has greatly increased over the last decade. Long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) have become a core intervention of national malaria control strategies and over 450 million nets were distributed in sub-Saharan Africa between 2008 and 2012. Despite the impressive gains made as a result of increased investment in to malaria control, such gains remain fragile. Existing funding commitments for LLINs in the pipeline to 2016 were collated for 40 sub-Saharan African countries. The population-based model NetCALC was used to estimate the potential LLIN coverage achievable with these commitments and identify remaining gaps, and the Lives Saved Tool (LiST) was used to estimate likely consequences for mortality impact if these gaps remain unfilled. Overall, countries calculated a total need of 806 million LLINs for 2013-16. Current funding commitments meet just over half of this need, leaving approximately 374 million LLINs unfunded, most of which are needed to maintain coverage in 2015 and 2016. An estimated additional 938,500 child lives (uncertainty range: 559,400-1,364,200) could be saved from 2013 through 2016 with existing funding (relative to 2009 LLIN coverage taken as the 'baseline' for this analysis); if the funding gap were closed this would increase to 1,180,500 lives saved (uncertainty range: 707,000-1,718,900). Overall, the funding gap equates to approximately 242,000 avoidable malaria-attributable deaths amongst under-fives. Substantial additional resources will need to be mobilized to meet the full LLIN need of sub-Saharan countries to maintain universal coverage. Unless these resources are mobilized, the impressive gains made to date will not be sustained and tens of thousands of avoidable child deaths will occur.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] How many mosquito nets are needed to achieve universal coverage? Recommendations for the quantification and allocation of long-lasting insecticidal nets for mass campaigns
    Albert Kilian
    Marc Boulay
    Hannah Koenker
    Matthew Lynch
    Malaria Journal, 9
  • [32] How many mosquito nets are needed to achieve universal coverage? Recommendations for the quantification and allocation of long-lasting insecticidal nets for mass campaigns
    Kilian, Albert
    Boulay, Marc
    Koenker, Hannah
    Lynch, Matthew
    MALARIA JOURNAL, 2010, 9
  • [33] Traditional Nets Interfere with the Uptake of Long-Lasting Insecticidal Nets in the Peruvian Amazon: The Relevance of Net Preference for Achieving High Coverage and Use
    Grietens, Koen Peeters
    Muela Ribera, Joan
    Soto, Veronica
    Tenorio, Alex
    Hoibak, Sarah
    Rosas Aguirre, Angel
    Toomer, Elizabeth
    Rodriguez, Hugo
    Llanos Cuentas, Alejandro
    D'Alessandro, Umberto
    Gamboa, Dionicia
    Erhart, Annette
    PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (01):
  • [34] Evaluation of the coverage and effective use rate of long-lasting insecticidal nets after nation-wide scale up of their distribution in Benin
    Tokponnon, Filemon T.
    Aholoukpe, Bruno
    Denon, Eric Y.
    Gnanguenon, Virgile
    Bokossa, Alexis
    N'guessan, Raphael
    Oke, Mariam
    Gazard, Dorothee Kinde
    Akogbeto, Martin C.
    PARASITES & VECTORS, 2013, 6
  • [35] Combining long-lasting insecticidal nets and indoor residual spraying for malaria prevention in Ethiopia: study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial
    Deressa, Wakgari
    Loha, Eskindir
    Balkew, Meshesha
    Hailu, Alemayehu
    Gari, Taye
    Kenea, Oljira
    Overgaard, Hans J.
    Gebremichael, Teshome
    Robberstad, Bjarne
    Lindtjorn, Bernt
    TRIALS, 2016, 17
  • [36] Preventive effect of permethrin-impregnated long-lasting insecticidal nets on the blood feeding of three major pyrethroid-resistant malaria vectors in western Kenya
    Kawada, Hitoshi
    Ohashi, Kazunori
    Dida, Gabriel O.
    Sonye, George
    Njenga, Sammy M.
    Mwandawiro, Charles
    Minakawa, Noboru
    PARASITES & VECTORS, 2014, 7
  • [37] Challenges and opportunities for use of long-lasting insecticidal nets to prevent malaria during overnight travel in Uganda: a qualitative study
    Ekusai-Sebatta, Deborah
    Arinaitwe, Emmanuel
    Mpimbaza, Arthur
    Nankabirwa, Joaniter I.
    Drakeley, Chris
    Rosenthal, Philip J.
    Staedke, Sarah G.
    Muyinda, Herbert
    MALARIA JOURNAL, 2021, 20 (01)
  • [38] Challenges and opportunities associated with the introduction of next-generation long-lasting insecticidal nets for malaria control: a case study from Burkina Faso
    Tesfazghi, Kemi
    Traore, Adama
    Ranson, Hilary
    N'Fale, Sagnon
    Hill, Jenny
    Worrall, Eve
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2016, 11
  • [39] Implications of insecticide resistance for malaria vector control with long-lasting insecticidal nets: trends in pyrethroid resistance during a WHO-coordinated multi-country prospective study
    Cook, Jackie
    Tomlinson, Sean
    Kleinschmidt, Immo
    Donnelly, Martin James
    Akogbeto, Martin
    Adechoubou, Alioun
    Massougbodji, Achile
    Oke-Sopoh, Mariam
    Corbel, Vincent
    Cornelie, Sylvie
    Ogouyemi-Hounto, Aurore
    Etang, Josiane
    Awono-Ambene, Herman Parfait
    Bigoga, Jude
    Mandeng, Stanislas Elysee
    Njeambosay, Boris
    Tabue, Raymond
    Kouambeng, Celestin
    Fondjo, Etienne
    Raghavendra, Kamaraju
    Bhatt, Rajendra M.
    Chourasia, Mehul Kumar
    Swain, Dipak K.
    Uragayala, Sreehari
    Valecha, Neena
    Mbogo, Charles
    Bayoh, Nabie
    Kinyari, Teresa
    Njagi, Kiambo
    Muthami, Lawrence
    Kamau, Luna
    Mathenge, Evan
    Ochomo, Eric
    Kafy, Hmooda Toto
    Ismail, Bashir Adam
    Malik, Elfatih M.
    Elmardi, Khalid
    Sulieman, Jihad Eltaher
    Abdin, Mujahid
    Subramaniam, Krishanthi
    Thomas, Brent
    West, Philippa
    Bradley, John
    Knox, Tessa Bellamy
    Mnzava, Abraham Peter
    Lines, Jonathan
    Macdonaldand, Michael
    Nkuni, Zinga Jose
    PARASITES & VECTORS, 2018, 11
  • [40] Long-lasting insecticidal nets provide protection against malaria for only a single year in Burundi, an African highland setting with marked malaria seasonality
    Van Bortel, Wim
    Marien, Joachim
    Jacobs, Bart K. M.
    Sinzinkayo, Denis
    Sinarinzi, Pierre
    Lampaert, Emmanuel
    D'hondt, Rob
    Mafuko, Jean-Marie
    De Weggheleire, Anja
    Vogt, Florian
    Alexander, Neil
    Wint, William
    Maes, Peter
    Vanlerberghe, Veerle
    Leclair, Corey
    BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH, 2022, 7 (12):