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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Open Access

Moving malaria in pregnancy programs from neglect to priority: experience from Malawi, Senegal, and Zambia

Elaine Roman, Michelle Wallon, William Brieger, Aimee Dickerson, Barbara Rawlins and Koki Agarwal
Global Health: Science and Practice January 2014, ghs1300136; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00136
Elaine Roman
aJhpiego, Maternal and Child Health Program (MCHIP), Baltimore, MD, USA
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  • For correspondence: elaine.roman{at}jhpiego.org
Michelle Wallon
bJhpiego-Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia
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William Brieger
cJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of International Health, Health Systems Program, Baltimore, MD, USA
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Aimee Dickerson
aJhpiego, Maternal and Child Health Program (MCHIP), Baltimore, MD, USA
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Barbara Rawlins
bJhpiego-Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia
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Koki Agarwal
dJhpiego, MCHIP, Washington, DC, USA
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Program areas that were generally working well in malaria in pregnancy programs (MIP) included: (1) integration of MIP interventions into antenatal care; (2) development of up-to-date policies; (3) active involvement of communities; and (4) development of capacity-building materials for training. Challenges remain in the areas of: (1) commodities; (2) quality assurance; (3) monitoring and evaluation; and (4) financing.

Abstract

Background: Pregnant women and infants are particularly vulnerable to malaria. National MIP programs in Malawi, Senegal, and Zambia were reviewed to identify promising strategies that have helped these countries achieve relatively high coverage of MIP interventions as well as ongoing challenges that have inhibited further progress.

Methods: We used a systematic case study methodology to assess health system strengths and challenges in the 3 countries, including desk reviews of available reports and literature and key informant interviews with national stakeholders. Data were collected between 2009 and 2011 and analyzed across 8 MIP health systems components: (1) integration of programs and services, (2) policy, (3) commodities, (4) quality assurance, (5) capacity building, (6) community involvement, (7) monitoring and evaluation, and (8) financing. Within each program area, we ranked degree of scale up across 4 stages and synthesized the findings in a MIP table of analysis to reveal common themes related to better practices, remaining bottlenecks, and opportunities to accelerate MIP coverage, strengthen MIP programs, and improve results.

Findings: Each of the 3 countries has malaria policies in place that reflect current MIP guidance from the World Health Organization. The 3 countries successfully integrated MIP interventions into a platform of antenatal care services, but coordination at the national level was disjointed. All 3 countries recognized the importance of having a MIP focal person to ensure collaboration and planning at national level, but only Malawi had appointed one. Commodity stockouts were frequent due to problems at all levels of the logistics system, from quantification to distribution. Lack of support for quality assurance and weak monitoring and evaluation mechanisms across all 3 countries affected optimal coverage.

Conclusions: MIP programs should address all 8 interconnected MIP health systems areas holistically, in the context of a health systems approach to building successful programs. The MIP table of analysis can be a useful tool for other malaria-endemic countries to review their programs and improve MIP outcomes.

  • Received: 2013 Sep 18.
  • Accepted: 2013 Dec 11.
  • © Roman et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly cited. To view a copy of the license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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Global Health: Science and Practice: 13 (1)
Global Health: Science and Practice
Vol. 13, No. 1
August 14, 2025
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Moving malaria in pregnancy programs from neglect to priority: experience from Malawi, Senegal, and Zambia
Elaine Roman, Michelle Wallon, William Brieger, Aimee Dickerson, Barbara Rawlins, Koki Agarwal
Global Health: Science and Practice Jan 2014, ghs1300136; DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00136

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Moving malaria in pregnancy programs from neglect to priority: experience from Malawi, Senegal, and Zambia
Elaine Roman, Michelle Wallon, William Brieger, Aimee Dickerson, Barbara Rawlins, Koki Agarwal
Global Health: Science and Practice Jan 2014, ghs1300136; DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00136
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  • Cross-Cutting Topics
    • Health Systems
  • Health Topics
    • Malaria
    • Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health
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