A research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.

Monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance measure how well public health programs operate over time and achieve their goals. As countries approach malaria elimination, these activities will need to shift from measuring reductions in morbidity and mortality, to detecting infections (with or without sy...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: malERA Consultative Group on Monitoring, Evaluation, and Surveillance
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS Medicine
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21311581/pdf/?tool=EBI
id doaj-691fadffa0bb425d8fd1254185ae7028
record_format Article
spelling doaj-691fadffa0bb425d8fd1254185ae70282021-04-21T18:28:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Medicine1549-12771549-16762011-01-0181e100040010.1371/journal.pmed.1000400A research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.malERA Consultative Group on Monitoring, Evaluation, and SurveillanceMonitoring, evaluation, and surveillance measure how well public health programs operate over time and achieve their goals. As countries approach malaria elimination, these activities will need to shift from measuring reductions in morbidity and mortality, to detecting infections (with or without symptoms) and measuring transmission. Thus, the monitoring and evaluation and surveillance research and development agenda needs to develop the tools and strategies that will replace passive surveillance of morbidity with active and prompt detection of infection, including confirmation of interruption of transmission by detecting present and past infections, particularly in mobile populations. The capacity to assess trends and respond without delay will need to be developed, so that surveillance itself becomes an intervention. Research is also needed to develop sensitive field tests that can detect low levels of parasitaemia, together with strategies for their implementation. Other areas to explore include the rigorous evaluation of the utility of more detailed maps of disease and infection incidence and prevalence, the development of new maps to inform programmatic responses and the use of surveillance technologies based on cell phone or real-time internet Web-based reporting. Because any new strategies for monitoring and evaluation and surveillance for eradication have major implications for program implementation, research is also needed to test systems of delivery for acceptability, feasibility, efficiency, cost-effectiveness, and community engagement. Finally, there is a clear need to systematically review the information from past elimination efforts for malaria and other infectious diseases.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21311581/pdf/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author malERA Consultative Group on Monitoring, Evaluation, and Surveillance
spellingShingle malERA Consultative Group on Monitoring, Evaluation, and Surveillance
A research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.
PLoS Medicine
author_facet malERA Consultative Group on Monitoring, Evaluation, and Surveillance
author_sort malERA Consultative Group on Monitoring, Evaluation, and Surveillance
title A research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.
title_short A research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.
title_full A research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.
title_fullStr A research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.
title_full_unstemmed A research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.
title_sort research agenda for malaria eradication: monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Medicine
issn 1549-1277
1549-1676
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Monitoring, evaluation, and surveillance measure how well public health programs operate over time and achieve their goals. As countries approach malaria elimination, these activities will need to shift from measuring reductions in morbidity and mortality, to detecting infections (with or without symptoms) and measuring transmission. Thus, the monitoring and evaluation and surveillance research and development agenda needs to develop the tools and strategies that will replace passive surveillance of morbidity with active and prompt detection of infection, including confirmation of interruption of transmission by detecting present and past infections, particularly in mobile populations. The capacity to assess trends and respond without delay will need to be developed, so that surveillance itself becomes an intervention. Research is also needed to develop sensitive field tests that can detect low levels of parasitaemia, together with strategies for their implementation. Other areas to explore include the rigorous evaluation of the utility of more detailed maps of disease and infection incidence and prevalence, the development of new maps to inform programmatic responses and the use of surveillance technologies based on cell phone or real-time internet Web-based reporting. Because any new strategies for monitoring and evaluation and surveillance for eradication have major implications for program implementation, research is also needed to test systems of delivery for acceptability, feasibility, efficiency, cost-effectiveness, and community engagement. Finally, there is a clear need to systematically review the information from past elimination efforts for malaria and other infectious diseases.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/21311581/pdf/?tool=EBI
work_keys_str_mv AT maleraconsultativegrouponmonitoringevaluationandsurveillance aresearchagendaformalariaeradicationmonitoringevaluationandsurveillance
AT maleraconsultativegrouponmonitoringevaluationandsurveillance researchagendaformalariaeradicationmonitoringevaluationandsurveillance
_version_ 1714664918101262336