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Rolling Back Malaria in Tanzania
Tanzania has more than 30 million people
at risk from malaria. It is estimated
that there are 16 million cases of malaria
each year, contributing to approximately
80,000 deaths annually of children under
the age of five. Economic losses due to
malaria are estimated to equal approximately
3.4 percent of the country’s gross
domestic product each year.
Local studies
demonstrate that the use of insecticide-
treated nets can reduce malariarelated
mortality by almost 27 percent
and halve the number of malaria-related
illnesses. Accordingly, the government of
Tanzania was the first in Africa to lift all
taxes and related duties on imported,
insecticide-treated nets for the prevention
of malaria.
A Global Fund grant of US$12 million
payable over two years makes possible an
innovative public-private partnership
whereby 90 percent of pregnant women
will have access to subsidized insecticidetreated
nets. Financing is supporting the
National Malaria Control Program’s plan
to subsidize people’s purchase of insecticide-
treated nets from commercial retailers.
Under the plan, vouchers will be distributed
throughout Tanzania to pregnant
women who attend antenatal care clinics.
Women will present these vouchers to
commercial retailers, who in turn will be
reimbursed by a consortium of non-governmental
organizations for the cost of the
nets.
The scheme will also ensure that at least
one commercial outlet for insecticidetreated
nets operates in each village in
which malaria is a threat. Moreover, free
insecticide treatment kits—used to sustain
the efficacy of insecticide-treated nets—
will be distributed by immunization centers
to mothers of children under 18
months of age.
The design of this program
ensures broad coverage of distribution in
a manner that leverages the reach of the
private sector and provides active links to
other health interventions. The voucher
scheme encourages pregnant women to
attend antenatal clinics, which will lead to
better prenatal care and the associated
health benefits for both mother and child.
This innovative scheme not only increases
access to insecticide-treated nets, but it
also has stimulated the private-sector production
of insecticide-treated nets in Tanzania.
Virtually all of the nets used in this
program are locally produced, procured
and distributed.
The program aims to supply 60 percent of
all pregnant women and all children
below five years of age with insecticidetreated
nets—compared with 7 percent in
2001—and to increase the number of
households with at least one insecticidetreated
net from 11 percent in 2001 to 70
percent in 2006.
An initial disbursement
of US$500,000 from the Global Fund has
permitted partners in Tanzania to begin to
purchase and distribute the first of many
thousands of insecticide-treated nets to
pregnant women and their families.
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