While Nigeria has made significant progress in the control of HIV, TB and malaria (ATM) over the last two decades, the three infectious diseases continue to constitute major public health problems in the country. Over the years, the country has established various platforms and mechanisms to review its performance in the three disease areas and offer policy and programmatic recommendations for improvement. The Joint Annual Programme Review (APR) seeks to consolidate the contributions of these platforms, and to harmonize and build consensus on key issues to inform policy and programming at all levels of service delivery… Read more
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PUBLICATIONS & ARTICLES
- The E-2020 initiative of 21 malaria-eliminating countries: 2019 progress report | WHO
- A community-based education programme to reduce insecticide exposure from indoor residual spraying in Limpopo, South Africa | Malaria Journal
- Shifting Burdens Malaria Risks in a Hotter Africa | USAID
- Compendium of WHO malaria guidance – prevention, diagnosis, treatment, surveillance and elimination | WHO
- Manual for developing national malaria strategic plans | WHO
- Business as Usual Will Not Save the Planet | HBR
NEWS
- Takeda Makes First Private Sector Pledge for Global Fund Replenishment
- AngloGold Ashanti Malaria Control completes 2019 indoor residual spraying campaign
- Promising results from malaria-prevention medication among children in Borno State, Nigeria
- Engineers crack the code to quickly diagnose anti-malarial drug resistance
- WHO and Monaco forge new links to end malaria in Sahel
- Algeria and Argentina certified malaria-free by WHO
- Five countries had zero malaria cases in 2018: WHO
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