Modelling for Decisions in a Dynamic Africa

Grantholders

  • Dr Susan Rumisha

    Ifakara Health Institute, Tanzania

  • Dr Adedapo Adeogun

    Nigerian Institute of Medical Research, Nigeria

  • Prof Emery Metelo

    Institut National de Recherche Biomedicale, Democratic Republic of Congo

  • Prof Nick Golding

    Telethon Kids Insititute, Australia

  • Dr Punam Amratia

    Ifakara Health Institute, Tanzania

  • Dr Samson Kiware

    Ifakara Health Institute, Tanzania

Project summary

Africa’s climate is changing in divergent and uncertain ways, driving drastic changes in the population dynamics, distribution, and seasonal abundance of mosquitoes, with consequential impacts on human disease risk. The effects of extreme weather on rapid human population growth, behaviour, livelihoods and urbanisation, may intensify vector-borne disease transmission and challenge health systems. To meet these challenges, countries must understand and assess how the effectiveness of health systems for disease control, the adaptability of public health decision-makers to emerging threats, and the distribution and seasonality of key vectors will react to these changes. Proactive prevention requires optimized interventions, functional early warning tools, and robust evidence-based decision-making systems. Effective, robust and adaptable modelling can facilitate achieving this. We propose a collaborative African network to deliver model-based evidence, advice and forecasting, tailored to support public health decision-making for mosquito-borne diseases, initially focussing on malaria in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria and Tanzania. Our approaches will i) deliver on the relationships between environmental change, vector, disease and health systems, ii) provide solutions to optimise performance of new and existing malaria interventions, iii) generate outputs for immediate utility and impact. and, iv) enable pathways to engage and capacitate decision-makers and scientists across Africa.