Towards malaria control and elimination in Ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planning

Ghana is classified as being in the malaria control phase, according to the global malaria elimination program. With many years of policy development and control interventions, malaria specific mortality among children less than 5 years old has declined from 14.4% in 2000 to 0.6% in 2012. However, t...

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Main Authors: Timothy Awine, Keziah Malm, Constance Bart-Plange, Sheetal P. Silal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Global Health Action
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2017.1381471
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spelling doaj-fc24f129adcc4705ae7ba1d5fad3de9a2020-11-25T00:43:17ZengTaylor & Francis GroupGlobal Health Action1654-97161654-98802017-01-0110110.1080/16549716.2017.13814711381471Towards malaria control and elimination in Ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planningTimothy Awine0Keziah Malm1Constance Bart-Plange2Sheetal P. Silal3University of Cape TownMinistry of HealthMinistry of HealthUniversity of Cape TownGhana is classified as being in the malaria control phase, according to the global malaria elimination program. With many years of policy development and control interventions, malaria specific mortality among children less than 5 years old has declined from 14.4% in 2000 to 0.6% in 2012. However, the same level of success has not been achieved with malaria morbidity. The recently adopted 2015–2020 Ghana strategic action plan aims to reduce the burden of malaria by 75.0%. Planning and policy development has always been guided by evidence from field studies, and mathematical models that are able to investigate malaria transmission dynamics have not played a significant role in supporting policy development. The objectives of this study are to describe the malaria situation in Ghana and give a brief account of how mathematical modelling techniques could support a more informed malaria control effort in the Ghanaian context. A review is carried out of some mathematical models investigating the dynamics of malaria transmission in sub-Saharan African countries, including Ghana. The applications of these models are then discussed, considering the gaps that still remain in Ghana for which further mathematical model development could be supportive. Because of the collaborative approach adopted in their development, some model examples Ghana could benefit from are also discussed. Collaboration between malaria control experts and modellers will allow for more appropriate mathematical models to be developed. Packaging these models with user-friendly interfaces and making them available at various levels of malaria control management could help provide the decision making tools needed for planning and a platform for monitoring and evaluation of interventions in Ghana.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2017.1381471Malariamathematical modelsinterventionspolicyplanningcontrol
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Timothy Awine
Keziah Malm
Constance Bart-Plange
Sheetal P. Silal
spellingShingle Timothy Awine
Keziah Malm
Constance Bart-Plange
Sheetal P. Silal
Towards malaria control and elimination in Ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planning
Global Health Action
Malaria
mathematical models
interventions
policy
planning
control
author_facet Timothy Awine
Keziah Malm
Constance Bart-Plange
Sheetal P. Silal
author_sort Timothy Awine
title Towards malaria control and elimination in Ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planning
title_short Towards malaria control and elimination in Ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planning
title_full Towards malaria control and elimination in Ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planning
title_fullStr Towards malaria control and elimination in Ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planning
title_full_unstemmed Towards malaria control and elimination in Ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planning
title_sort towards malaria control and elimination in ghana: challenges and decision making tools to guide planning
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Global Health Action
issn 1654-9716
1654-9880
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Ghana is classified as being in the malaria control phase, according to the global malaria elimination program. With many years of policy development and control interventions, malaria specific mortality among children less than 5 years old has declined from 14.4% in 2000 to 0.6% in 2012. However, the same level of success has not been achieved with malaria morbidity. The recently adopted 2015–2020 Ghana strategic action plan aims to reduce the burden of malaria by 75.0%. Planning and policy development has always been guided by evidence from field studies, and mathematical models that are able to investigate malaria transmission dynamics have not played a significant role in supporting policy development. The objectives of this study are to describe the malaria situation in Ghana and give a brief account of how mathematical modelling techniques could support a more informed malaria control effort in the Ghanaian context. A review is carried out of some mathematical models investigating the dynamics of malaria transmission in sub-Saharan African countries, including Ghana. The applications of these models are then discussed, considering the gaps that still remain in Ghana for which further mathematical model development could be supportive. Because of the collaborative approach adopted in their development, some model examples Ghana could benefit from are also discussed. Collaboration between malaria control experts and modellers will allow for more appropriate mathematical models to be developed. Packaging these models with user-friendly interfaces and making them available at various levels of malaria control management could help provide the decision making tools needed for planning and a platform for monitoring and evaluation of interventions in Ghana.
topic Malaria
mathematical models
interventions
policy
planning
control
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2017.1381471
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