ARTICLE
OF INTEREST
Which
delivery systems reach the poor? A review of equity of coverage of
ever-treated nets, never-treated nets, and immunisation to reduce
child mortality in Africa.
Authors:
Webster J; Lines J; Bruce J; Armstrong Schellenberg JR; Hanson K
Abstract:
Insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) and childhood vaccination are two
of the most powerful interventions available to prevent childhood
mortality in Africa, but ITN coverage is still very low. Current debates
about how to increase ITN coverage are concerned with the roles of
different supply and delivery systems, in particular whether or not
commercial net markets have any useful role. Here, we review data
available on coverage and equity of coverage of three interventions
to prevent childhood mortality. We compiled and analysed data from
nationally representative surveys in 26 African countries to compare
equity of coverage of (1) the Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI),
(2) any net, (3) ever-treated nets (ie, ITNs), and (4) never-treated
nets (ie, untreated nets; UTNs). We assumed that ever-treated net
coverage mostly reflects the activities of public-health programmes
and projects, and that never-treated net coverage mostly reflects
the activity of local unsubsidised commercial markets. We discuss
the validity, limitations, and possible biases of these assumptions.
We estimate that 87% of the 8.4 million children protected by nets
used UTNs. We used the concentration index (CI) to assess equity of
coverage of the interventions. The data shows that never-treated net
coverage is surprisingly equitable: overall, and despite substantial
regional variations, it is comparable in equity to EPI (median CI(UTN)=0.166,
CI(EPI)=0.075; p=0.3). In almost all countries, coverage of ITNs is
strongly concentrated in the least poor households, and significantly
more inequitable than both UTNs (median CI(ITN)=0.435, mean CI(UTN)=0.158;
p<0.001) and EPI (median CI(ITN)=0.435, CI(EPI)=0.075; p<0.001).
These results suggest that the public-health value of commercial net
markets has been greatly underestimated, and that these markets have
so far contributed more to equitable and sustainable coverage of mosquito
nets, and hence to the prevention of malaria in Africa, than have
the ITNs delivered by public-health systems and projects.
Webster
J - Lancet Infect Dis - 01-NOV-2005; 5(11): 709-17
From NIH/NLM MEDLINE
NLM
Citation ID:
16253888 (PubMed ID)
Full
Source Title:
The Lancet Infectious Diseases
Publication
Type:
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; Review
Language:
English
Author
Affiliation:
Malaria Knowledge Programme, Disease Control and Vector Biology Unit,
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.