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Prioritizing pregnant women in malaria endemic regions for bed nets from clinics

Date:
September 9, 2014
Source:
PLOS
Summary:
Donors, Ministries of Health, implementing agencies, and other partners should prioritize providing pregnant women in malaria endemic regions with long-lasting insecticide treated nets through antenatal care clinics to help prevent malaria and its adverse effects on mother and infant, according to experts.
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Donors, Ministries of Health, implementing agencies, and other partners should prioritise providing pregnant women in malaria endemic regions with long-lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs) through antenatal care clinics to help prevent malaria and its adverse effects on mother and infant, according to experts from the UK and US, writing in this week's PLOS Medicine.

Jenny Hill, from the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, and colleagues from the London School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, and the Malaria Control and Elimination Program at PATH in Seattle, explain that LLINs are a powerful public health tool to help improve maternal, neonatal, and infant health but that the use of these nets is well below national and international targets.

The authors argue that routine antenatal care (ANC) services are an important delivery channel that ensures that pregnant women who attend an ANC clinic have use of a LLIN from their first ANC visit in each pregnancy. Unfortunately, although LLINs should be routinely delivered to pregnant women through ANC clinics, the nets are sometimes re-allocated to population-wide campaigns leaving pregnant women and their babies at risk of malaria.

The authors say: "Receiving a net as an integral part of antenatal care and sends a powerful message to a pregnant woman that this tool is important to protect herself and her child. "

They continue: "Going forward, national malaria programmes and donors alike need to ensure that routine LLIN distribution through antenatal clinics continue un-interrupted during national campaigns, and where funding or supplies of LLINs is limited, they will have to make difficult decisions to balance costs with the benefits and impact of LLINs."

The authors add: "Where choices must be made, high-risk groups (pregnant women and children under 5 years of age) should be prioritized."


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Materials provided by PLOS. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Jenny Hill, Jenna Hoyt, Anna Maria van Eijk, Feiko O. ter Kuile, Jayne Webster, Richard W. Steketee. Prioritizing Pregnant Women for Long-Lasting Insecticide Treated Nets through Antenatal Care Clinics. PLoS Medicine, 2014; 11 (9): e1001717 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001717

Cite This Page:

PLOS. "Prioritizing pregnant women in malaria endemic regions for bed nets from clinics." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 9 September 2014. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/09/140909152742.htm>.
PLOS. (2014, September 9). Prioritizing pregnant women in malaria endemic regions for bed nets from clinics. ScienceDaily. Retrieved April 15, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/09/140909152742.htm
PLOS. "Prioritizing pregnant women in malaria endemic regions for bed nets from clinics." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/09/140909152742.htm (accessed April 15, 2024).

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