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HP+ supported Kenya’s National Malaria Control Programme to develop the next iteration of its national malaria strategy—one that includes, for the first time, a financial sustainability plan. The resulting costed Kenya Malaria Strategy (KMS) 2019-2023 guides the country’s malaria control strategy for the next five years and informs the Ministry of Health’s planning and prioritization of key malaria interventions. The financial sustainability plan outlines resource needs, resource availability, and funding opportunities to help close the identified Ksh 24 billion funding gap. The Kenyan government estimates that three-quarters of its population is at risk for malaria and, through the KMS, aims to reduce malaria incidence and death by at least 75% (of 2016 levels) by 2023.
HP+ supported Kenya’s National Malaria Control Programme to develop the next iteration of its national malaria strategy—one that includes, for the first time, a financial sustainability plan. The resulting costed Kenya Malaria Strategy (KMS) 2019-2023 guides the country’s malaria control strategy for the next five years and informs the Ministry of Health’s planning and prioritization of key malaria interventions. The financial sustainability plan outlines resource needs, resource availability, and funding opportunities to help close the identified Ksh 24 billion funding gap. The Kenyan government estimates that three-quarters of its population is at risk for malaria and, through the KMS, aims to reduce malaria incidence and death by at least 75% (of 2016 levels) by 2023.
HP+ supported Kenya’s National Malaria Control Programme to develop the next iteration of its national malaria strategy—one that includes, for the first time, a financial sustainability plan. The resulting costed Kenya Malaria Strategy (KMS) 2019-2023 guides the country’s malaria control strategy for the next five years and informs the Ministry of Health’s planning and prioritization of key malaria interventions. The financial sustainability plan outlines resource needs, resource availability, and funding opportunities to help close the identified Ksh 24 billion funding gap. The Kenyan government estimates that three-quarters of its population is at risk for malaria and, through the KMS, aims to reduce malaria incidence and death by at least 75% (of 2016 levels) by 2023.
HP+ supported Kenya’s National Malaria Control Programme to develop the next iteration of its national malaria strategy—one that includes, for the first time, a financial sustainability plan. The resulting costed Kenya Malaria Strategy (KMS) 2019-2023 guides the country’s malaria control strategy for the next five years and informs the Ministry of Health’s planning and prioritization of key malaria interventions. The financial sustainability plan outlines resource needs, resource availability, and funding opportunities to help close the identified Ksh 24 billion funding gap. The Kenyan government estimates that three-quarters of its population is at risk for malaria and, through the KMS, aims to reduce malaria incidence and death by at least 75% (of 2016 levels) by 2023.
HP+ supported Kenya’s National Malaria Control Programme to develop the next iteration of its national malaria strategy—one that includes, for the first time, a financial sustainability plan. The resulting costed Kenya Malaria Strategy (KMS) 2019-2023 guides the country’s malaria control strategy for the next five years and informs the Ministry of Health’s planning and prioritization of key malaria interventions. The financial sustainability plan outlines resource needs, resource availability, and funding opportunities to help close the identified Ksh 24 billion funding gap. The Kenyan government estimates that three-quarters of its population is at risk for malaria and, through the KMS, aims to reduce malaria incidence and death by at least 75% (of 2016 levels) by 2023.