The Roll Back Malaria Partnership : Defining the role of the World Bank

Malaria kills over one million people and causes 300-500 million episodes of illness each year. The majority of the 3,000 deaths each day and ten new cases every second occur in Africa. The disease not only takes a high human toll; it also impedes development. Malaria has economic impacts through labor efficiency and land use; adversely affects school attendance, performance and cognitive ability; and translates in monetary costs in terms of expenditures by households and the public health sector. The poor are affected most, as they have less access to services, information and protective measures (e.g. nets, screens, prophylaxis), and have less power to avoid living or working within malaria-affected areas. Malaria is on the rise. While efforts to control malaria in the past fifty years have achieved a decline in malaria mortality and morbidity in some regions, the gains have often not been sustained (e.g. Madagascar, Sri Lanka, Central Asia). Emerging drug and pesticide resistances threaten to reduce the availability of effective and affordable prevention and treatment of malaria. Recent epidemics indicate a resurgence of the disease in previously low-risk areas (e.g. the highlands of Kenya), and climate changes are expected to lead to further changes in intensity of transmission. While there is no magic bullet for malaria, a range of cost-effective interventions exists, namely antimalarials for treatment, prophylaxis, insecticide treated materials and residual spraying with insecticide. New tools are available and are continually being developed, such as treatment for severe malaria, rapid diagnostic tests, and combination drug therapy to prevent resistance. As access to prevention, diagnosis and treatment are essential to reducing the burden; malaria can only be effectively controlled within the context of broader health sector development. The main strategies for addressing malaria are timely care-seeking, diagnosis and effective treatment, the use of prophylaxis during pregnancy, and the use of insecticide-treated bednets and materials.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC 1999-10
Subjects:ACCESS TO TREATMENT, ANTIMALARIALS, BACK MALARIA, BED NETS, DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS, DIAGNOSIS, DISEASE, DRUGS, EARLY CHILDHOOD, EARLY DETECTION, ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT, EPIDEMICS, EXISTING RESOURCES, HEALTH IMPACT, HEALTH SECTOR, HEALTH SECTOR REFORM, HEALTH SYSTEMS, HIV/AIDS, HOSPITALIZATION, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, HYGIENE, ILLNESS, INSECTICIDE-TREATED BEDNETS, INSECTICIDES, INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY, MALARIA BURDEN, MALARIA CONTROL, MALARIA CONTROL ACTIVITIES, MALARIA MORTALITY, MALARIA PROBLEM, MALARIA RISK, MEDICINES, MORBIDITY, NATIONAL EFFORTS, NETS, NUTRITION, OUTPATIENT CARE, PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES, PHARMACEUTICALS, POLICY FRAMEWORK, POPULATION MOVEMENT, PREGNANCY, PROGRESS, PROPHYLAXIS, PUBLIC HEALTH, RESIDUAL SPRAYING, RESOURCE FLOWS, SANITATION, SCHOOL ATTENDANCE, SEVERE MALARIA, SOCIAL MARKETING, THERAPY, TREATMENT, TREATMENT OF MALARIA, TROPICAL MEDICINE, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, VECTOR CONTROL,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1999/10/12389540/roll-back-malaria-partnership-defining-role-world-bank
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9854
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spelling dig-okr-1098698542021-04-23T14:02:47Z The Roll Back Malaria Partnership : Defining the role of the World Bank World Bank ACCESS TO TREATMENT ANTIMALARIALS BACK MALARIA BED NETS DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS DIAGNOSIS DISEASE DRUGS EARLY CHILDHOOD EARLY DETECTION ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT EPIDEMICS EXISTING RESOURCES HEALTH IMPACT HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SECTOR REFORM HEALTH SYSTEMS HIV/AIDS HOSPITALIZATION HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HYGIENE ILLNESS INSECTICIDE-TREATED BEDNETS INSECTICIDES INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY MALARIA BURDEN MALARIA CONTROL MALARIA CONTROL ACTIVITIES MALARIA MORTALITY MALARIA PROBLEM MALARIA RISK MEDICINES MORBIDITY NATIONAL EFFORTS NETS NUTRITION OUTPATIENT CARE PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES PHARMACEUTICALS POLICY FRAMEWORK POPULATION MOVEMENT PREGNANCY PROGRESS PROPHYLAXIS PUBLIC HEALTH RESIDUAL SPRAYING RESOURCE FLOWS SANITATION SCHOOL ATTENDANCE SEVERE MALARIA SOCIAL MARKETING THERAPY TREATMENT TREATMENT OF MALARIA TROPICAL MEDICINE URBAN DEVELOPMENT VECTOR CONTROL Malaria kills over one million people and causes 300-500 million episodes of illness each year. The majority of the 3,000 deaths each day and ten new cases every second occur in Africa. The disease not only takes a high human toll; it also impedes development. Malaria has economic impacts through labor efficiency and land use; adversely affects school attendance, performance and cognitive ability; and translates in monetary costs in terms of expenditures by households and the public health sector. The poor are affected most, as they have less access to services, information and protective measures (e.g. nets, screens, prophylaxis), and have less power to avoid living or working within malaria-affected areas. Malaria is on the rise. While efforts to control malaria in the past fifty years have achieved a decline in malaria mortality and morbidity in some regions, the gains have often not been sustained (e.g. Madagascar, Sri Lanka, Central Asia). Emerging drug and pesticide resistances threaten to reduce the availability of effective and affordable prevention and treatment of malaria. Recent epidemics indicate a resurgence of the disease in previously low-risk areas (e.g. the highlands of Kenya), and climate changes are expected to lead to further changes in intensity of transmission. While there is no magic bullet for malaria, a range of cost-effective interventions exists, namely antimalarials for treatment, prophylaxis, insecticide treated materials and residual spraying with insecticide. New tools are available and are continually being developed, such as treatment for severe malaria, rapid diagnostic tests, and combination drug therapy to prevent resistance. As access to prevention, diagnosis and treatment are essential to reducing the burden; malaria can only be effectively controlled within the context of broader health sector development. The main strategies for addressing malaria are timely care-seeking, diagnosis and effective treatment, the use of prophylaxis during pregnancy, and the use of insecticide-treated bednets and materials. 2012-08-13T09:42:32Z 2012-08-13T09:42:32Z 1999-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1999/10/12389540/roll-back-malaria-partnership-defining-role-world-bank http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9854 English Africa Region Findings & Good Practice Infobriefs; No. 144 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic ACCESS TO TREATMENT
ANTIMALARIALS
BACK MALARIA
BED NETS
DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE
DRUGS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EARLY DETECTION
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
EPIDEMICS
EXISTING RESOURCES
HEALTH IMPACT
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HIV/AIDS
HOSPITALIZATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HYGIENE
ILLNESS
INSECTICIDE-TREATED BEDNETS
INSECTICIDES
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
MALARIA BURDEN
MALARIA CONTROL
MALARIA CONTROL ACTIVITIES
MALARIA MORTALITY
MALARIA PROBLEM
MALARIA RISK
MEDICINES
MORBIDITY
NATIONAL EFFORTS
NETS
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES
PHARMACEUTICALS
POLICY FRAMEWORK
POPULATION MOVEMENT
PREGNANCY
PROGRESS
PROPHYLAXIS
PUBLIC HEALTH
RESIDUAL SPRAYING
RESOURCE FLOWS
SANITATION
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SEVERE MALARIA
SOCIAL MARKETING
THERAPY
TREATMENT
TREATMENT OF MALARIA
TROPICAL MEDICINE
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
VECTOR CONTROL
ACCESS TO TREATMENT
ANTIMALARIALS
BACK MALARIA
BED NETS
DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE
DRUGS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EARLY DETECTION
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
EPIDEMICS
EXISTING RESOURCES
HEALTH IMPACT
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HIV/AIDS
HOSPITALIZATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HYGIENE
ILLNESS
INSECTICIDE-TREATED BEDNETS
INSECTICIDES
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
MALARIA BURDEN
MALARIA CONTROL
MALARIA CONTROL ACTIVITIES
MALARIA MORTALITY
MALARIA PROBLEM
MALARIA RISK
MEDICINES
MORBIDITY
NATIONAL EFFORTS
NETS
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES
PHARMACEUTICALS
POLICY FRAMEWORK
POPULATION MOVEMENT
PREGNANCY
PROGRESS
PROPHYLAXIS
PUBLIC HEALTH
RESIDUAL SPRAYING
RESOURCE FLOWS
SANITATION
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SEVERE MALARIA
SOCIAL MARKETING
THERAPY
TREATMENT
TREATMENT OF MALARIA
TROPICAL MEDICINE
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
VECTOR CONTROL
spellingShingle ACCESS TO TREATMENT
ANTIMALARIALS
BACK MALARIA
BED NETS
DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE
DRUGS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EARLY DETECTION
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
EPIDEMICS
EXISTING RESOURCES
HEALTH IMPACT
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HIV/AIDS
HOSPITALIZATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HYGIENE
ILLNESS
INSECTICIDE-TREATED BEDNETS
INSECTICIDES
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
MALARIA BURDEN
MALARIA CONTROL
MALARIA CONTROL ACTIVITIES
MALARIA MORTALITY
MALARIA PROBLEM
MALARIA RISK
MEDICINES
MORBIDITY
NATIONAL EFFORTS
NETS
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES
PHARMACEUTICALS
POLICY FRAMEWORK
POPULATION MOVEMENT
PREGNANCY
PROGRESS
PROPHYLAXIS
PUBLIC HEALTH
RESIDUAL SPRAYING
RESOURCE FLOWS
SANITATION
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SEVERE MALARIA
SOCIAL MARKETING
THERAPY
TREATMENT
TREATMENT OF MALARIA
TROPICAL MEDICINE
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
VECTOR CONTROL
ACCESS TO TREATMENT
ANTIMALARIALS
BACK MALARIA
BED NETS
DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE
DRUGS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EARLY DETECTION
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
EPIDEMICS
EXISTING RESOURCES
HEALTH IMPACT
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HIV/AIDS
HOSPITALIZATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HYGIENE
ILLNESS
INSECTICIDE-TREATED BEDNETS
INSECTICIDES
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
MALARIA BURDEN
MALARIA CONTROL
MALARIA CONTROL ACTIVITIES
MALARIA MORTALITY
MALARIA PROBLEM
MALARIA RISK
MEDICINES
MORBIDITY
NATIONAL EFFORTS
NETS
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES
PHARMACEUTICALS
POLICY FRAMEWORK
POPULATION MOVEMENT
PREGNANCY
PROGRESS
PROPHYLAXIS
PUBLIC HEALTH
RESIDUAL SPRAYING
RESOURCE FLOWS
SANITATION
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SEVERE MALARIA
SOCIAL MARKETING
THERAPY
TREATMENT
TREATMENT OF MALARIA
TROPICAL MEDICINE
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
VECTOR CONTROL
World Bank
The Roll Back Malaria Partnership : Defining the role of the World Bank
description Malaria kills over one million people and causes 300-500 million episodes of illness each year. The majority of the 3,000 deaths each day and ten new cases every second occur in Africa. The disease not only takes a high human toll; it also impedes development. Malaria has economic impacts through labor efficiency and land use; adversely affects school attendance, performance and cognitive ability; and translates in monetary costs in terms of expenditures by households and the public health sector. The poor are affected most, as they have less access to services, information and protective measures (e.g. nets, screens, prophylaxis), and have less power to avoid living or working within malaria-affected areas. Malaria is on the rise. While efforts to control malaria in the past fifty years have achieved a decline in malaria mortality and morbidity in some regions, the gains have often not been sustained (e.g. Madagascar, Sri Lanka, Central Asia). Emerging drug and pesticide resistances threaten to reduce the availability of effective and affordable prevention and treatment of malaria. Recent epidemics indicate a resurgence of the disease in previously low-risk areas (e.g. the highlands of Kenya), and climate changes are expected to lead to further changes in intensity of transmission. While there is no magic bullet for malaria, a range of cost-effective interventions exists, namely antimalarials for treatment, prophylaxis, insecticide treated materials and residual spraying with insecticide. New tools are available and are continually being developed, such as treatment for severe malaria, rapid diagnostic tests, and combination drug therapy to prevent resistance. As access to prevention, diagnosis and treatment are essential to reducing the burden; malaria can only be effectively controlled within the context of broader health sector development. The main strategies for addressing malaria are timely care-seeking, diagnosis and effective treatment, the use of prophylaxis during pregnancy, and the use of insecticide-treated bednets and materials.
format Publications & Research :: Brief
topic_facet ACCESS TO TREATMENT
ANTIMALARIALS
BACK MALARIA
BED NETS
DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE
DRUGS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EARLY DETECTION
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
EPIDEMICS
EXISTING RESOURCES
HEALTH IMPACT
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HIV/AIDS
HOSPITALIZATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HYGIENE
ILLNESS
INSECTICIDE-TREATED BEDNETS
INSECTICIDES
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
MALARIA BURDEN
MALARIA CONTROL
MALARIA CONTROL ACTIVITIES
MALARIA MORTALITY
MALARIA PROBLEM
MALARIA RISK
MEDICINES
MORBIDITY
NATIONAL EFFORTS
NETS
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES
PHARMACEUTICALS
POLICY FRAMEWORK
POPULATION MOVEMENT
PREGNANCY
PROGRESS
PROPHYLAXIS
PUBLIC HEALTH
RESIDUAL SPRAYING
RESOURCE FLOWS
SANITATION
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SEVERE MALARIA
SOCIAL MARKETING
THERAPY
TREATMENT
TREATMENT OF MALARIA
TROPICAL MEDICINE
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
VECTOR CONTROL
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title The Roll Back Malaria Partnership : Defining the role of the World Bank
title_short The Roll Back Malaria Partnership : Defining the role of the World Bank
title_full The Roll Back Malaria Partnership : Defining the role of the World Bank
title_fullStr The Roll Back Malaria Partnership : Defining the role of the World Bank
title_full_unstemmed The Roll Back Malaria Partnership : Defining the role of the World Bank
title_sort roll back malaria partnership : defining the role of the world bank
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 1999-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1999/10/12389540/roll-back-malaria-partnership-defining-role-world-bank
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9854
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