Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/18913
Title: Use of a public-private partnership in malaria elimination efforts in Sri Lanka; a case study
Authors: Fernando, D.
Wijeyaratne, P.
Wickremasinghe, R.
Abeyasinghe, R.R.
Galappaththy, G.N.L.
Wickremasinghe, R.
Hapugoda, M.
Abeyewickreme, W.
Rodrigo, C.
Keywords: Malaria
Malaria-prevention & control
Malaria-epidemiology
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka-epidemiology
Public-Private Sector Partnerships
Disease Eradication-organization & administration
Case Reports
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: BioMed Central
Citation: BMC Health Services Research.2018;18(1):202
Abstract: BACKGROUND: In special circumstances, establishing public private partnerships for malaria elimination may achieve targets faster than the state sector acting by itself. Following the end of the separatist war in Sri Lanka in 2009, the Anti Malaria Campaign (AMC) of Sri Lanka intensified malaria surveillance jointly with a private sector partner, Tropical and Environmental Diseases and Health Associates Private Limited (TEDHA) with a view to achieving malaria elimination targets by 2014. METHODS: This is a case study on how public private partnerships can be effectively utilized to achieve malaria elimination goals. TEDHA established 50 Malaria Diagnostic Laboratories and 17 entomology surveillance sentinel sites in consultation with the AMC in areas difficult to access by government officials (five districts in two provinces affected by war). RESULTS: TEDHA screened 994,448 individuals for malaria, of which 243,867 were screened at mobile malaria clinics as compared to 1,102,054 screened by the AMC. Nine malaria positives were diagnosed by TEDHA, while the AMC diagnosed 103 malaria cases in the same districts in parallel. Over 13,000 entomological activity days were completed. Relevant information was shared with AMC and the data recorded in the health information system. CONCLUSIONS: A successful public-private partnership model for malaria elimination was initiated at a time when the health system was in disarray in war ravaged areas of Sri Lanka. This ensured a high annual blood examination rate and screening of vulnerable people in receptive areas. These were important for certification of malaria-free status which Sri Lanka eventually received in 2016.
Description: Indexed In MEDLINE
URI: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/18913
ISSN: 1472-6963 (Electronic)
1472-6963 (Linking)
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Articles

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