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Markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural Tanzania

BACKGROUND: Tanzania has a well-developed network of commercial ITN retailers. In 2004, the government introduced a voucher subsidy for pregnant women and, in mid 2005, helped distribute free nets to under-fives in small number of districts, including Rufiji on the southern coast, during a child hea...

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Autores principales: Khatib, Rashid A, Killeen, Gerry F, Abdulla, Salim MK, Kahigwa, Elizeus, McElroy, Peter D, Gerrets, Rene PM, Mshinda, Hassan, Mwita, Alex, Kachur, S Patrick
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2426705/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18518956
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-98
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author Khatib, Rashid A
Killeen, Gerry F
Abdulla, Salim MK
Kahigwa, Elizeus
McElroy, Peter D
Gerrets, Rene PM
Mshinda, Hassan
Mwita, Alex
Kachur, S Patrick
author_facet Khatib, Rashid A
Killeen, Gerry F
Abdulla, Salim MK
Kahigwa, Elizeus
McElroy, Peter D
Gerrets, Rene PM
Mshinda, Hassan
Mwita, Alex
Kachur, S Patrick
author_sort Khatib, Rashid A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Tanzania has a well-developed network of commercial ITN retailers. In 2004, the government introduced a voucher subsidy for pregnant women and, in mid 2005, helped distribute free nets to under-fives in small number of districts, including Rufiji on the southern coast, during a child health campaign. Contributions of these multiple insecticide-treated net delivery strategies existing at the same time and place to coverage in a poor rural community were assessed. METHODS: Cross-sectional household survey in 6,331 members of randomly selected 1,752 households of 31 rural villages of Demographic Surveillance System in Rufiji district, Southern Tanzania was conducted in 2006. A questionnaire was administered to every consenting respondent about net use, treatment status and delivery mechanism. FINDINGS: Net use was 62.7% overall, 87.2% amongst infants (0 to1 year), 81.8% amongst young children (>1 to 5 years), 54.5% amongst older children (6 to 15 years) and 59.6% amongst adults (>15 years). 30.2% of all nets had been treated six months prior to interview. The biggest source of nets used by infants was purchase from the private sector with a voucher subsidy (41.8%). Half of nets used by young children (50.0%) and over a third of those used by older children (37.2%) were obtained free of charge through the vaccination campaign. The largest source of nets amongst the population overall was commercial purchase (45.1% use) and was the primary means for protecting adults (60.2% use). All delivery mechanisms, especially sale of nets at full market price, under-served the poorest but no difference in equity was observed between voucher-subsidized and freely distributed nets. CONCLUSION: All three delivery strategies enabled a poor rural community to achieve net coverage high enough to yield both personal and community level protection for the entire population. Each of them reached their relevant target group and free nets only temporarily suppressed the net market, illustrating that in this setting that these are complementary rather than mutually exclusive approaches.
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spelling pubmed-24267052008-06-12 Markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural Tanzania Khatib, Rashid A Killeen, Gerry F Abdulla, Salim MK Kahigwa, Elizeus McElroy, Peter D Gerrets, Rene PM Mshinda, Hassan Mwita, Alex Kachur, S Patrick Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Tanzania has a well-developed network of commercial ITN retailers. In 2004, the government introduced a voucher subsidy for pregnant women and, in mid 2005, helped distribute free nets to under-fives in small number of districts, including Rufiji on the southern coast, during a child health campaign. Contributions of these multiple insecticide-treated net delivery strategies existing at the same time and place to coverage in a poor rural community were assessed. METHODS: Cross-sectional household survey in 6,331 members of randomly selected 1,752 households of 31 rural villages of Demographic Surveillance System in Rufiji district, Southern Tanzania was conducted in 2006. A questionnaire was administered to every consenting respondent about net use, treatment status and delivery mechanism. FINDINGS: Net use was 62.7% overall, 87.2% amongst infants (0 to1 year), 81.8% amongst young children (>1 to 5 years), 54.5% amongst older children (6 to 15 years) and 59.6% amongst adults (>15 years). 30.2% of all nets had been treated six months prior to interview. The biggest source of nets used by infants was purchase from the private sector with a voucher subsidy (41.8%). Half of nets used by young children (50.0%) and over a third of those used by older children (37.2%) were obtained free of charge through the vaccination campaign. The largest source of nets amongst the population overall was commercial purchase (45.1% use) and was the primary means for protecting adults (60.2% use). All delivery mechanisms, especially sale of nets at full market price, under-served the poorest but no difference in equity was observed between voucher-subsidized and freely distributed nets. CONCLUSION: All three delivery strategies enabled a poor rural community to achieve net coverage high enough to yield both personal and community level protection for the entire population. Each of them reached their relevant target group and free nets only temporarily suppressed the net market, illustrating that in this setting that these are complementary rather than mutually exclusive approaches. BioMed Central 2008-06-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2426705/ /pubmed/18518956 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-98 Text en Copyright © 2008 Khatib et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Khatib, Rashid A
Killeen, Gerry F
Abdulla, Salim MK
Kahigwa, Elizeus
McElroy, Peter D
Gerrets, Rene PM
Mshinda, Hassan
Mwita, Alex
Kachur, S Patrick
Markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural Tanzania
title Markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural Tanzania
title_full Markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural Tanzania
title_fullStr Markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural Tanzania
title_short Markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural Tanzania
title_sort markets, voucher subsidies and free nets combine to achieve high bed net coverage in rural tanzania
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2426705/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18518956
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-98
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