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Home >  Short Publications >  A Field Report of Uganda's Efforts to Build a Comprehensive Malaria Control Program
A Field Report of Uganda's Efforts to Build a Comprehensive Malaria Control Program
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By Roger Bate, Philip Coticelli, Richard Tren
Posted: Wednesday, September 5, 2007
PAPERS AND STUDIES
Africa Fighting Malaria Working Paper Series  
Publication Date: September 1, 2007

Malaria is the leading cause of illness and death in Uganda. AFM visited the country in February, 2007 to conduct interviews and gauge progress in fighting the disease. With the help of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, the World Bank, the US Agency for International Development, the UK Department for International Development and other donors, the national government is scaling up existing treatment and prevention efforts while also developing a country-wide indoor residual spraying program. Uganda's meager surveillance capacity, however, makes it difficult if not impossible to measure the true impact of these interventions. Donors and the national government have set malaria rate reduction targets without ensuring accurate baselines of measurement. Poor infrastructure poses problems for all aspects of malaria control, but particularly the decentralized administration of Artemisinin-based combination therapy drugs, anti-malarial drug resistance management, and the government's intention to use DDT with indoor residual spraying. Exporters are concerned that limited oversight will lead to residues on agricultural produce, jeopardizing trade with Europe, Japan and the United States. Donors are improving coordination and helping to forge solutions to these problems. . . .

Download file Click here to view the full text of this paper as an Adobe Acrobat PDF.

Richard Tren is the director of Africa Fighting Malaria. Roger Bate is a resident fellow at AEI. Philip Coticelli is the research and communications manager at Africa Fighting Malaria.

Related Links
Related book by Tren and Bate: Malaria and the DDT Story
Related paper on Africa Malaria Day 2007
Related Health Policy Outlook by Bate on malaria medicine
AEI Print Index No. 22145


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