Diallo Ousmane Oumou, Diallo Abdourahamane, Toh Kok Ben, Diakité Nouman, Dioubaté Mohamed, Runge Manuela, Symons Tasmin, Diallo Elhadj Marouf, Gerardin Jaline, Galatas Beatriz, Camara Alioune
Department of Preventive Medicine and Institute for Global Health, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, USA.
Programme National de Lutte contre le Paludisme, Conakry, Guinea.
Malar J. 2025 Feb 25;24(1):62. doi: 10.1186/s12936-025-05302-z.
In the context of high malaria burden yet limited resources, Guinea's national malaria programme adopted an innovative subnational tailoring (SNT) approach, including engagement of stakeholders, data review, and data analytics, to update their malaria operational plan for 2024-2026 and identify the most appropriate interventions for each district considering the resources available.
Guinea's malaria programme triggered the SNT exercise with a list of decisions that could be informed with local data. The programme established an SNT team, which determined intervention targeting criteria; identified, assembled, and reviewed relevant data sources; stratified malaria risk and its determinants to inform geographical targeting for each intervention; and used mathematical modelling to predict the impact of different intervention mix scenarios. The SNT analysis was performed at the district level, excluding the urban area of Conakry.
Malaria incidence, malaria prevalence, and all-cause under-5 mortality were used for the epidemiological stratification of Guinea. Additional indicators relevant for decision-making including seasonality patterns, insecticide resistance, historical malaria interventions and vaccine coverage were also stratified. Stratified layers were used to inform the targeting criteria for each intervention to identify districts to prioritize for indoor residual spray, dual-action insecticide-treated nets, seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC), including number of cycles for each eligible district, malaria vaccine, and perennial malaria chemoprevention. Results of the SNT analysis were used to mobilize funding from the Global Fund for scale-up of dual-action nets and expansion of SMC.
SNT allowed Guinea's national malaria programme to adapt their intervention strategy at the health district level, an unprecedented approach in the country. The use of local data to inform eligibility and prioritization allowed the programme to identify the optimal mix of interventions for each district and to successfully mobilize resources to support their plans.
在疟疾负担沉重但资源有限的情况下,几内亚国家疟疾防治计划采用了一种创新的次国家级调整方法,包括利益相关者参与、数据审查和数据分析,以更新其2024 - 2026年疟疾行动计划,并根据可用资源为每个地区确定最合适的干预措施。
几内亚疟疾防治计划通过一系列可依据当地数据做出的决策启动了次国家级调整工作。该计划组建了一个次国家级调整团队,该团队确定干预目标标准;识别、收集和审查相关数据源;对疟疾风险及其决定因素进行分层,以为每项干预措施的地理定位提供信息;并使用数学模型预测不同干预措施组合方案的影响。次国家级调整分析在地区层面进行,不包括科纳克里市区。
疟疾发病率、疟疾患病率和5岁以下儿童全死因死亡率被用于几内亚的流行病学分层。与决策相关的其他指标,包括季节性模式、杀虫剂抗性、历史疟疾干预措施和疫苗接种覆盖率也进行了分层。分层结果被用于为每项干预措施确定目标标准,以确定优先开展室内滞留喷洒、双重作用杀虫剂处理蚊帐、季节性疟疾化学预防(SMC)的地区,包括每个符合条件地区的周期数、疟疾疫苗和常年疟疾化学预防。次国家级调整分析的结果被用于从全球基金筹集资金,以扩大双重作用蚊帐的规模和扩大季节性疟疾化学预防。
次国家级调整使几内亚国家疟疾防治计划能够在卫生区层面调整其干预策略,这在该国是一种前所未有的方法。利用当地数据来确定资格和优先次序,使该计划能够为每个地区确定最佳的干预措施组合,并成功筹集资源以支持其计划。