| Literature DB >> 22839432 |
David M Pigott1, Rifat Atun, Catherine L Moyes, Simon I Hay, Peter W Gething.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The last decade has seen a dramatic increase in international and domestic funding for malaria control, coupled with important declines in malaria incidence and mortality in some regions of the world. As the ongoing climate of financial uncertainty places strains on investment in global health, there is an increasing need to audit the origin, recipients and geographical distribution of funding for malaria control relative to populations at risk of the disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22839432 PMCID: PMC3444429 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-11-246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Criteria for evaluating population sizes at combinedRisk
| All Stable Risk | All Stable Risk | All Stable Risk | |
| Duffy Dependent* | All Unstable Risk | All Unstable Risk | |
| Duffy Positives Stable Risk | Duffy Positives Unstable Risk | None |
Figure 1Bar chart of amounts disbursed by different funding sources 2006–2010. The blue “Government” portion refers to the amounts disbursed by national governments within their own country.
Countries where government funding represents the major funding stream
| Countries receiving no external support | Belize, Costa Rica, Iraq, Malaysia, Panama, Paraguay, Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia, Turkey |
| Countries receiving < $50000 over 2006-10 | Argentina, Cape Verde, El Salvador, Mexico |
| Countries >50% of total funding from government sources, 2006-10 | Argentina, Belize, Bhutan, Botswana, Brazil, Cape Verde, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, India, Iran, Iraq, Malaysia, Mexico, Namibia, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Togo, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Vietnam |
Figure 2Scatter plots of populations at risk and patterns of funding. Panel A shows total funding over the period 2006–2010 against size of the population at risk of PfPv per country. Panel B shows annualized funding per capita against size of the population at risk of PfPv per country.
Regional proportions of funding and populations at risk
| Africa+ | 73.33% | 86.89% | 24.53% | 41.43% |
| CSE Asia | 17.93% | 11.47% | 70.40% | 55.27% |
| Americas | 8.74% | 1.64% | 5.07% | 3.30% |
Figure 3Bar chart of assessment of equitable funding in the Americas. Bars represent annualized per capita funding in each malaria endemic country in the region relative to the line of equity, defined as the theoretical level if regional funding was perfectly distributed to countries according to populations at risk. The divisions in the bar demonstrate the relative external and government contribution. For the Americas, the line of equity is US$0.93 per capita per year. Countries labelled in red are in the process of moving from controlled low-endemic malaria to elimination [53]. The y axis indicates by what factor the national per capita-at-risk funding differs from the line of equity.
Figure 4Bar chart of assessment of equitable funding in Africa+. Details as described for Figure 3. For Africa+, the line of equity is US$1.60.
Figure 5Bar chart of assessment of equitable funding in CSE Asia. Details as described for Figure 3. For CSE Asia, the line of equity is US$0.33.