Progress towards malaria elimination: Insights from Cambodia's mobile malaria workers during the COVID-19 pandemic

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Resources: Journal article

Authors: Emma K Manning, Rekol Huy, Sovannaroth Siv, Po Ly, James K Tibenderana, Lieven Vernaeve

This lesson from the field describes Malaria Consortium's community-centred approach which helped to ensure the maintenance of malaria services in remote areas of Cambodia during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Significant progress has been made in Cambodia towards malaria control and the goal of achieving elimination of all species by 2025. These efforts require constant vigilance and agility in malaria programming to maintain forward momentum. During the COVID-19 pandemic, these achievements were threatened by restrictive pandemic control measures, necessitating swift action from the National Center for Parasitology, Entomology and Malaria Control and partners to safeguard critical malaria services, primarily case detection and treatment by mobile malaria workers (MMWs) among hard-to-reach populations. As malaria cases have declined in Cambodia, infections are increasingly focused among remote populations further from primary healthcare services. Thus, the greatest threat to malaria control during the pandemic consisted of the logistical and communication challenges faced by MMWs travelling to remote regions while movement was restricted. Through locally tailored implementation of these services and close communication with health authorities, Malaria Consortium's MMWs were able to minimise disruption of Cambodia's malaria control programme while ensuring staff and beneficiaries were protected.

Published in International Health

Citation: International Health, 2025: ihaf080.

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