4.5 Article

Policy Implications of the Southern and Central Africa International Center of Excellence for Malaria Research: Ten Years of Malaria Control Impact Assessments in Hypo-, Meso-, and Holoendemic Transmission Zones in Zambia and Zimbabwe

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AMER SOC TROP MED & HYGIENE
DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.21-1288

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [U19AI089680]
  2. Bloomberg Philanthropies
  3. Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute

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The International Centers of Excellence for Malaria Research (ICEMR) were established to support malaria control programs worldwide. The Southern and Central Africa ICEMR conducted research in Zambia and Zimbabwe, leading to policy changes and providing information for malaria elimination programs. The findings of the ICEMR have had important implications for malaria control and elimination at the study sites.
The International Centers of Excellence for Malaria Research (ICEMR) were established by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases more than a decade ago to provide multidisciplinary research support to malaria control programs worldwide, operating in endemic areas and contributing technology, expertise, and ultimately policy guidance for malaria control and elimination. The Southern and Central Africa ICEMR has conducted research across three main sites in Zambia and Zimbabwe that differ in ecology, entomology, transmission intensity, and control strategies. Scientific findings led to new policies and action by the national malaria control programs and their partners in the selection of methods, materials, timing, and locations of case management and vector control. Malaria risk maps and predictive models of case detection furnished by the ICEMR informed malaria elimination programming in southern Zam-bia, and time series analyses of entomological and parasitological data motivated several major changes to indoor resid-ual spray campaigns in northern Zambia. Along the Zimbabwe-Mozambique border, temporal and geospatial data are currently informing investigations into a recent resurgence of malaria. Other ICEMR findings pertaining to parasite and mosquito genetics, human behavior, and clinical epidemiology have similarly yielded immediate and long-term policy implications at each of the sites, often with generalizable conclusions. The ICEMR programs thereby provide rigorous scientific investigations and analyses to national control and elimination programs, without which the impediments to malaria control and their potential solutions would remain understudied.

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