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Roll Back Malaria? The scarcity of international aid for malaria control

Vasant Narasimhan1 email and Amir Attaran2 email

Harvard Medical School, Boston MA, 02115 USA

Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA

author email corresponding author email

Malaria Journal 2003, 2:8doi:10.1186/1475-2875-2-8

Published: 15 April 2003

Abstract

The WHO announced the Roll Back Malaria (RBM) movement in 1998, with the goal of halving malaria deaths by 2010, and halving again by 2015. It is widely agreed that reaching this goal requires a major increase in international aid funding for malaria control, to a budget of perhaps $1.5 – $2.5 billion annually. To ascertain whether progress is being made, we compiled data self-reported by the donors to the Development Assistance Committee of OECD, and also to ourselves directly. We find that, in fact, the total amount of international aid dedicated to malaria control, from the 23 richest donor countries plus the World Bank, remains in the range of $100 million annually – a figure that is virtually unchanged since the start of RBM. This lack of progress toward increasing funding very seriously threatens RBM and demands that WHO regularly audit and report on malaria control funding, with the certainty that RBM will fail to meet its deadline of 2010 if this is not done.


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