Skip to main contentAbout USAID Locations Our Work Public Affairs Careers Business / Policy
USAID: From The American People Telling our Story Interactive radio show educates both pupils and teachers nationwide in Madagascar  - Click to read this story
Telling Our Story
Home »
Submit a story »
Calendars »
FAQs »
About »
Stories by Region
Asia »
Europe & and Eurasia »
Latin America & the Carribean »
Middle East »
Sub-Saharan Africa »
 
 
 


Senegal
USAID Information: External Links:

Namibia - Students engaged in a group activity   ...  Click for more stories...
Click for more stories
from Sub-Saharan Africa  
Search
 

 

Case Study

Trained volunteers improve health by detecting and treating malaria
Bringing Healthcare Closer to Home

Community health volunteer in the village of Dialocoto, Ma Badio (right), sells treated mosquito nets at a subsidized cost.
Photo: USAID/Heather Robinson
Community health volunteer in the village of Dialocoto, Ma Badio (right), sells treated mosquito nets at a subsidized cost.

“Thanks to the health worker placed in the village, there are fewer evacuations of women. And in each family compound, we have nets to protect us from mosquitoes.”

—Awa Mané

Challenge

Senegal’s annual rainy season brings both a blessing and a curse. While every drop is precious to the country’s farmers, rains also create a breeding ground for malaria-laden mosquitoes. Thousands of Senegalese die every year from the disease, and children and pregnant women are particularly vulnerable.

In the immense collective of Dialocoto in southeastern Senegal, malaria hits hard. Dialocoto has only one health worker, a nurse, to serve the needs of 14,000 people spread among 50 villages in a space larger than Delaware. For many patients, a trip to the nurse is an exhausting and expensive ordeal.

Initiative

In June 2002, residents of Dialocoto approached USAID for assistance in fighting the annual wave of malaria. They worked together to train community health workers to prevent malaria and to detect and treat minor cases, before residents became seriously ill. USAID also hired a Senegalese doctor who specializes in malaria to work with village leaders to refine their strategy. With USAID funds, the community paid for technical and management training, educational brochures, mosquito nets, disinfectants and medicines.

Results

By identifying and treating minor cases of malaria, trained village health workers helped reduce the number of patients seen by the nurse from 2,082 in 2001 to 1,234 in 2002. The number of serious cases of malaria also dropped sharply.

The prevention, early detection and treatment strategy has had important economic benefits as well, saving villagers time and money previously spent on transportation and treatment, and allowing them to tend to the fields from which they derive a livelihood. Between 2003 and 2004, Dialocoto’s success in combating malaria inspired 13 collectives in other regions of Senegal to develop and implement similar initiatives supported by USAID.

Print-friendly version of this page (62kb - PDF)

Click here for high-res photo

Back to Top ^

 

About USAID

Our Work

Locations

Public Affairs

Careers

Business/Policy

 Digg this page : Share this page on StumbleUpon : Post This Page to Del.icio.us : Save this page to Reddit : Save this page to Yahoo MyWeb : Share this page on Facebook : Save this page to Newsvine : Save this page to Google Bookmarks : Save this page to Mixx : Save this page to Technorati : USAID RSS Feeds Star