| Literature DB >> 24964790 |
Prosper P Chaki1, Khadija Kannady, Deo Mtasiwa, Marcel Tanner, Hassan Mshinda, Ann H Kelly, Gerry F Killeen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Community-based service delivery is vital to the effectiveness, affordability and sustainability of vector control generally, and to labour-intensive larval source management (LSM) programmes in particular. CASE DESCRIPTION: The institutional evolution of a city-level, community-based LSM programme over 14 years in urban Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, illustrates how operational research projects can contribute to public health governance and to the establishment of sustainable service delivery programmes. Implementation, management and governance of this LSM programme is framed within a nested set of spatially-defined relationships between mosquitoes, residents, government and research institutions that build upward from neighbourhood to city and national scales. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: The clear hierarchical structure associated with vertical, centralized management of decentralized, community-based service delivery, as well as increasingly clear differentiation of partner roles and responsibilities across several spatial scales, contributed to the evolution and subsequent growth of the programme.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24964790 PMCID: PMC4082415 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1The origin, developmental and subsequent reforms of responsibilities among partners and stakeholders of the UMCP, and the Urban Health Project in Dar es Salaam over the period described herein. BMGF; Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, CMOH; City Medical Office of Health, DU; Durham University, EU; European Union, GEL; Grupo Empresarial Labiofam; IHI; Ifakara Health Institute, IMC; Ilala Municipal Council, IMOH; Ilala Medical Office of Health, IVCC; Innovative Vector Control Consortium, JICA; Japan International Cooperation Agency, KMC; Kinondoni Municipal Council, KMOH; Kinondoni Medical Office of Health, LSTM; Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, MoHSW; Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, NIMR; National Institute for Medical Research, NMCP; National Malaria Control Programme, PU; Princeton University, RTI; Research Triangle International, Swiss TPH; Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, TMC; Temeke Municipal Council, TMOH; Temeke Medical Office of Health, USAID; United States Agency for International Development, VBC; Valent Biosciences Corporation, WT; Wellcome Trust).
Figure 2The scaling up and subsequent distribution of UMCP responsibilities among different stakeholders at the various administrative levels as well as spatial and temporal scales.
Lessons Learned and recommendations from the large scale larval control program
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