22-24 November 2011
Community Engagement for Malaria Elimination Workshop
Centara Duangtawan Hotel, Chiang Mai, Thailand
APMEN (asia pacific malaria elimination network)
• The Asia Pacific Malaria Elimination Network (APMEN) was established in 2009 to bring attention and support to the under-appreciated and little-known work of malaria elimination in Asia Pacific, with a particular focus on Plasmodium vivax.
• APMEN is composed of eleven Asia Pacific countries (Bhutan, China, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Republic of Korea, the Solomon Islands, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vanuatu) that are pursuing malaria elimination, as well leaders and experts from key multilateral and academic agencies.
APMEN (asia pacific malaria elimination network)
• The mission of this diverse but cohesive Network is to collaboratively address the unique challenges of malaria elimination in the region through leadership, advocacy, capacity building, knowledge exchange, and building the evidence base.
Aims and Objectives Workshop
• To showcase current/ active examples of community engagement and participation for malaria control/ elimination within the APMEN Country Partners.
• To review historical examples of community engagement and participation in infectious disease elimination programs.
• To draw lessons from these examples and begin building consensus on good practice for the design of scalable models of community engagement for malaria elimination.
• To explore the additional challenges of achieving synchronous cross-border community engagement for malaria elimination.
National Malaria Elimination Plan
Goal: Malaysia to be certified malaria free (eliminated) by 2020
Objectives:1. Malaria elimination in Peninsular Malaysia by 2015 and in
Sabah & Sarawak by 20202. 20% annual reduction of local malaria incidence in
Peninsular Malaysia3. 15% annual reduction of local malaria cases in
Sabah/Sarawak4. Reduction of malaria deaths - 50% annually
Malaria cases :Sarawak 42% and Sabah 40%
0.4% pop. at risk19.7% pop. at risk
24.5% pop. at risk
What we want to achieve in Communication and Community Engagement
• Improved knowledge and awareness among population at risk
• Empowerment community mobilization to control malaria
• To assist in case surveillance, vector control, early detection and prompt treatment, and response to outbreak
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Advocacy to increase awareness and commitment to the elimination program1
Moving from questions of What and Why to How
How?
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Supportive environment - decentralization of resources and local decision making, adequate human resources
2
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Identifying and mobilising local stakeholders and social networks through consensus building processes3
Considering the realities of people
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Intersectoral collaboration (Agriculture, Education, private sector, development agencies etc.)4
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Local-level action-orientated research (where there are gaps) as part of an initial scoping mission that will build community partnerships and inform community mobilisation and behaviour change communication strategies
5
Intervention planning based on dialogue
“world cafe”
“world cafe”
“world cafe”
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Integration of malaria interventions with activities addressing other community health and disease priorities (Primary Health Care approach);• Village Health Representative Program (WKK) in Sarawak• Basic Health Care Volunteers Program (SPKA) in Sabah• Primary Health Care Volunteers in Peninsular Malaysia
6
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Targeted implementation of locally-appropriate, multi-level behaviour change communication to maintain attention and motivation for participation in malaria elimination
7Unknown how intervention will be: not based on assumptions!
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Reporting systems that support community feedback to decision makers and the flow of information on program progress to communities
8Basic principle: one size does not fit all
Community engagement for malaria elimination
Monitoring and evaluation of community participation activities9
Learning from experiences
Key BCC achievements
• Excellent coordination between two country teams
• Harmonized/bi-lingual IEC materials
• Cross-border training on innovative approaches
• Coordinated activities on special events• Use of innovative BCC approach on mobile and
migrant workers i.e. use of malaria corners (engagement of private sector)
Successes Malaria Elimination in Malaysia
• Involvement and commitment of community leaders• Established and well organized of Village Health Workers
Program
Challenges Malaria Elimination in Malaysia
• Inaccessible area• Sustainability of volunteer • Incentive for volunteer – Monetary incentive due to
administrative issue. • Resistance and communication break-down (plantation
community)
Next Step…
• Increasing of volunteer • Increasing the scope of volunteer roles (e.g.
microscopy and other aspects of primary health care)• Extend participation within plantation community• Involvement of volunteer in environmental
management (e.g. maintenance of drainage system, automatic siphon, subsoil drainage control drains and streams etc for larva control
Think out of box
THANK YOU