When households in sub-Saharan Africa don
When households in sub-Saharan Africa don't have an adequate number of insecticide-treated bed nets, pregnant women and children under five are the most likely family members to sleep under the ones they have, leaving men and school-aged children more exposed to malaria, new Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs (CCP) research suggests. CCP is based at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
The effect of insecticide-treated bed nets on the incidence and prevalence of malaria in children in an area of unstable seasonal transmission in western Myanmar, Malaria Journal
Malaria progress stall continues, but more pregnant women and kids protected
Bed Nets Help Prevent Malaria in Nigeria
Frontiers Utilization of long-lasting insecticide-treated net and its associated factors among pregnant women in Dawo district, Southwest Shoa Zone, Oromia, Ethiopia, 2023
Congo distributes 3 million mosquito nets in anti-malaria campaign
MALARIA CONTROL IN PREGNANT WOMEN AND CHILDREN UNDER FIVE YEARS OF AGE IN RESOURCE-LIMITED COUNTRIES, PERSPECTIVE FROM TANZANIA AND ITS RELATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE, by Planetary Health Alliance
Malaria Rates Surge After Mosquito Net Changes Complicate Global Fight - Bloomberg
Almost 3 in 10 young kids may have malaria in Sub-Saharan Africa
Night Guard: Unfolding the Protective Effects of the Mosquito Net, by USAID, U.S. Agency for International Development
Free bednets to fight malaria The Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab
Insecticide-treated bed nets - Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs
Malaria During Pregnancy: Symptoms, Treatment & Prevention
Protecting Pregnant Women from Malaria, by USAID, U.S. Agency for International Development
Gender dynamics of malaria's impact on communities is under-researched, ignored
Malaria - Children for Health