Journal
BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH
Volume 6, Issue 5, Pages -Publisher
BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006035
Keywords
COVID-19; health policy; health systems
Categories
Funding
- Wellcome Trust [091909/Z/10/Z, 206545/Z/17/Z]
- Wellcome Trust [091909/Z/10/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust
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Malawi responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with a multisectoral approach, implemented through 15 focused working groups feeding into a central committee. Key policies included international travel ban, school closures, cancellation of public events, mandatory face coverings, and testing for symptomatic individuals. Supportive interventions focused on risk communication, community engagement, access to water and sanitation, nutrition, and social-cash transfers for vulnerable households.
Malawi declared a state of national disaster due to the COVID-19 pandemic on 20th March 2020 and registered its first confirmed coronavirus case on the 2 April 2020. The aim of this paper was to document policy decisions made in response to the COVID-19 pandemic from January to August 2020. We reviewed policy documents from the Public Health Institute of Malawi, the Malawi Gazette, the Malawi Ministry of Health and Population and the University of Oxford Coronavirus Government Response Tracker. We found that the Malawi response to the COVID-19 pandemic was multisectoral and implemented through 15 focused working groups termed clusters. Each cluster was charged with providing policy direction in their own area of focus. All clusters then fed into one central committee for major decisions and reporting to head of state. Key policies identified during the review include international travel ban, school closures at all levels, cancellation of public events, decongesting workplaces and public transport, and mandatory face coverings and a testing policy covering symptomatic people. Supportive interventions included risk communication and community engagement in multiple languages and over a variety of mediums, efforts to improve access to water, sanitation, nutrition and unconditional social-cash transfers for poor urban and rural households.
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