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Modeling resource allocation strategies for insecticide-treated bed nets to achieve malaria eradication. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists have made good progress in reducing malaria around the world, but there isn’t enough money to keep improving and eventually get rid of it entirely.
  • Research showed that the best way to spend funds is to help areas with the highest number of malaria cases, which could reduce cases by up to 76% with the right support.
  • The study suggests that funding should mostly go to places with a lot of malaria cases, especially in Africa, but it also raises concerns about less money going to areas that need help to get rid of malaria completely.

Article Abstract

Large reductions in the global malaria burden have been achieved, but plateauing funding poses a challenge for progressing towards the ultimate goal of malaria eradication. Using previously published mathematical models of and transmission incorporating insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) as an illustrative intervention, we sought to identify the global funding allocation that maximized impact under defined objectives and across a range of global funding budgets. The optimal strategy for case reduction mirrored an allocation framework that prioritizes funding for high-transmission settings, resulting in total case reductions of 76% and 66% at intermediate budget levels, respectively. Allocation strategies that had the greatest impact on case reductions were associated with lesser near-term impacts on the global population at risk. The optimal funding distribution prioritized high ITN coverage in high-transmission settings endemic for only, while maintaining lower levels in low-transmission settings. However, at high budgets, 62% of funding was targeted to low-transmission settings co-endemic for and . These results support current global strategies to prioritize funding to high-burden -endemic settings in sub-Saharan Africa to minimize clinical malaria burden and progress towards elimination, but highlight a trade-off with 'shrinking the map' through a focus on near-elimination settings and addressing the burden of .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10957170PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.88283DOI Listing

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