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©
2005
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Updated
20 Nov 2005
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BEDNETS
Grabowsky M, Nobiya T, Ahun M, Donna R, Lengor M, Zimmerman D, Ladd H, Hoekstra
E, Bello A, Baffoe-Wilmot A, Amofah G. Distributing insecticide-treated bednets
during measles vaccination: a low-cost means of achieving high and equitable
coverage. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 83(3): 195-201, 2005.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To achieve high and equitable
coverage of insecticide-treated bednets by integrating their distribution into a
measles vaccination campaign. METHODS: In December 2002 in the Lawra district in
Ghana, a measles vaccination campaign lasting 1 week targeted all children aged
9 months-15 years. Families with one or more children less than five years old
were targeted to receive a free insecticide-treated bednet. The Ghana Health
Service, with support from the Ghana Red Cross and UNICEF, provided logistical
support, volunteer workers and social mobilization during the campaign.
Volunteers visited homes to inform caregivers about the campaign and encourage
them to participate. We assessed pre-campaign coverage of bednets by
interviewing caregivers leaving vaccination and distribution sites. Five months
after distribution, a two-stage cluster survey using population-proportional
sampling assessed bednet coverage, retention and use. Both the pre-campaign and
post-campaign survey assessed household wealth using an asset inventory.
FINDINGS: At the campaign exit interview 636/776 (82.0%) caregivers reported
that they had received a home visit by a Red Cross volunteer before the campaign
and that 32/776 (4.1%) of the youngest children in each household who were less
than 5 years of age slept under an insecticide-treated bednet. Five months after
distribution caregivers reported that 204/219 (93.2%) of children aged 9 months
to 5 years had been vaccinated during the campaign; 234/248 (94.4%) of
households were observed to have an insecticide-treated bednet; and 170/249
(68.3%) were observed to have a net hung over a bed. Altogether 222/248 (89.5%)
caregivers reported receiving at least one insecticide-treated bednet during the
campaign, and 153/254 (60.2%) said that on the previous night their youngest
child had slept under a bednet received during the campaign. For households in
the poorest quintile, post-campaign coverage of insecticide-treated bednets was
10 times higher than pre-campaign coverage of households in the wealthiest
quintile (46/51 (90.2%) versus 14/156 (9.0%)). The marginal operational cost was
0.32 US dollars per insecticide-treated bednet delivered. CONCLUSION: These
findings suggest that linking bednet distribution to measles vaccination
campaigns may provide an important opportunity for achieving high and equitable
coverage of bednets.
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