National malaria control and scaling up for impact: The Zambia experience through 2006

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Abstract

With its 2006-2011 National Malaria Strategic Plan, Zambia committed to control malaria at a national scale. This scale-up for impact approach was facilitated by sound business planning and financing in 2006 of approximately US$35 million. Compared with surveys in 2001 and 2004, a 2006 national survey of 14,681 persons in 2,999 households at the end of the transmission season showed substantial coverage increases for preventive interventions. Ownership and use rates of insecticide-treated mosquito nets (ITNs) among vulnerable groups doubled, with 44% of households owning ITNs and 23% of children less than five years of age and 24% of pregnant women using them. Roll Back Malaria Abuja targets for intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy (IPTp) were exceeded, with 62% of pregnant women receiving at least two doses of IPTp. As of 2006, Zambia is demonstrating substantial progress toward the national targets (80% population coverage rates for the interventions) and aspires to show that malaria need not be its leading health problem, and that malaria control is a sound national investment. Copyright © 2008 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

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APA

Steketee, R. W., Sipilanyambe, N., Chimumbwa, J., Banda, J. J., Mohamed, A., Miller, J., … Campbell, C. C. (2008). National malaria control and scaling up for impact: The Zambia experience through 2006. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 79(1), 45–52. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.2008.79.45

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