Against Malaria News
Join us in the fight against malaria

Past the 9 million dollar milestone!

Saturday, 31 December 2011 16:36 by General
We have just passed the $9 million mark on New Year's Eve 2011. What a great way to end the year.
 
We passed the $7 million milestone back in September, $8 million 13 weeks later and $9 million only 9 days after that. We have also been mentioned in a New York Times article by Nicholas Kristof about holiday giving.
 
Every donation from every person counts as the total of $9,008,000 from nearly 45,000 donations and transactions, in 161 countries, indicates. 100% buys nets.
 
Our best wishes to all in 2012. 
  
Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Currently rated 5.0 by 1 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:   ,
Categories:   General
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

We are now GiveWell's #1 rated charity globally!

Tuesday, 29 November 2011 17:53 by General

After thousands of hours of investigation, evaluation and review - covering internal documents, interviews and on-site visits - the independent charity evaluator GiveWell has just announced its new top-rated charity: Against Malaria!

Read their announcement and the detailed review of our charity for more details.

Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:  
Categories:   General
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

1 million dollar donation for nets

Wednesday, 23 November 2011 15:50 by RobMather
The Souter Charitable Trust today announced a US$1 million donation to the UK charity the Against Malaria Foundation to fund long-lasting insecticide treated nets to protect people at risk from malaria.

This is one of the Trust's single largest donations to date.

Betty and Brian Souter commented:

"Malaria is a devastating killer of children under 5 and pregnant women. Yet a simple bed net can protect those at risk from falling sick and suffering or dying from the disease. These nets will protect half a million people. 

Important progress has been made in the fight against malaria over the last five years but funds for nets are still desperately needed.

The trust's purpose/mission is to support projects for the relief of human suffering and we have chosen the Against Malaria Foundation as the recipient of this donation because they are a highly effective charity in the ongoing efforts to combat malaria. They have a strong focus on transparency, accountability and efficiency in the way they operate. 100% of the funds we have donated will buy nets."

Rob Mather of the Against Malaria Foundation said:

"This is a fantastic donation which will allow us to protect half a million people as they sleep at night.

More specifically, the nets will be distributed from mid December 2011 to mid February 2012 in one of the 28 districts of Malawi to achieve universal coverage – all sleeping spaces covered – of a population of some 550,000 people. We expect this to have a significant impact in reducing malaria rates in a very badly affected area." 

Press Release (pdf 17.58 kb)

 

Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:   , ,
Categories:   Fundraisers | General
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

Nets instead of Christmas cards this year?

Wednesday, 16 November 2011 09:29 by AndrewGarner
Instead of sending Christmas cards this year why not donate nets for the equivalent money and let your friends and family know?
Of course, you could also choose to donate nets instead of giving or receiving birthday presents, wedding gifts etc.
 
Simply donate and leave a message! We then send you a link which you can share with others. If you want to send something tangible then you could print out one of our gift cards...
 
Every net matters.
 
Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:   ,
Categories:   Fundraisers | General
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

Past the 7 million dollar milestone!

Tuesday, 20 September 2011 14:29 by AndrewGarner

Wow! We have passed $7m raised! The James (DJ Sine) Brown Fund in England made the donation that took us past this milestone.

Every donation from every person counts as the total of $7,005,124 from 41,985 different donations and transactions, in 160 countries, and from 468,720 people participating indicates. 100% buys nets.

That's 1,608,757 nets, protecting more than 3.2 million people.

Every net matters.

Thank you for your continued support.

Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Currently rated 3.2 by 11 people

  • Currently 3.181818/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:   , , ,
Categories:   General
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

Giving by Text - 100% reaches us

Friday, 22 July 2011 15:22 by AndrewGarner
A new service has been launched in the UK which now means 100% of any donation made by text reaches the donor's chosen charity. 
 
We think this is an excellent development and because of this 100% element, we have signed up.
 
This service is thanks to a partnership between Vodafone and JustTextGiving, with particularly thanks to the Vodafone Foundation who are covering costs. 
 
100% of any text donation comes to us and 100% buys nets.
 
For a text donation from a UK registered mobile to Against Malaria simply text NETS42 followed by your amount £3 /£5 /£10 to 70070. For example, for a £5 donation, text NETS42 £5 to 70070. Simple!
 
 
Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:   , ,
Categories:   Fundraisers | General
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

Where do we buy our nets?

Wednesday, 6 July 2011 09:40 by RobMather
We are often asked some very good questions by interested members of the public. Recently Alan asked us a great question about the source of our nets and whether it was possible to buy them from sources local to the distributions:
 
Hi,
I'm interested in your charity, but I'm wondering what companies or countries your nets are purchased from. That info was not immediately evident on your site, only that you pay very low prices for them...
Thanks,
Alan 
 
Hi Alan-
 
The vast majority of the nets, long-lasting insecticide treated nets, LLINs, the only type we buy, that we have bought are from Verstergaard Frandsen (PemaNet nets) and Sumitomo Chemical (Olyset nets).
 
Any net we buy must be WHOPES Phase II approved (see this page for more details).
 
The nets we buy are manufactured in Vietnam, Thailand, China and Tanzania. This is where the large net manufactures have their facilities. We have also bought nets in Malawi but these were manufactured in Tanzania.
 
As nets are a textile, manufacturing economies of scale are significant. There are relatively few, large production facilities and it is not economic, for the cost of the net, to have small or medium sized manufacturing facilities in many different, for example African, countries. Shipping costs at US$0.20-0.40 per net are a relatively small element of the total distribution cost of a net. A net is US$4-5 and an additional $1-2 (including the $0.2-0.4) can be considered the non-net distribution cost total, including pre-distribution and post-distribution follow-up costs. Beyond the Sumitomo technology-sharing that led to the Tanzanian facility (run by AtoZ Textiles), manufacturers have plans for manufacturing facilities in Nigeria and Ethiopia. When we funded 120,000 nets for distribution to some 400 boarding schools in Tanzania and 120,000 nets for Malawi, these were/are being sourced from Tanzania.  
 
I hope this is of interest and helps.
 
Kind rgds
Rob
 
 
Hi Rob,
 
Thanks very much for your comprehensive answer. My main concern is (as I have read) that floods of foreign-sourced charitable nets have actually had the unfortunate negative effect of putting african mosquito net manufacturers out of business. As you probably know, Africa's health, environmental, social, political and economic woes are largely tied together. This concern is mentioned in Dambisa Moyo's book entitled "Dead Aid". I'm not sure if you're familiar with this argument but I felt compelled to contact you regarding this issue, since it can potentially make a difference for the lives of Africans. I would suggest that as whole it might be of greater benefit to Africans to make sure they manufacture the nets they use - that way the charity $$$ would pay dividends of creating jobs which would help lift them out of the poverty which makes them so vulnerable. What do you think?

-Alan
 
 
Dear Alan-
 
Yes, I think this is an important issue.
 
It must be a better situation if long-lasting insecticide treated nets (LLINs) are manufactured in the countries in which they are needed. That would bring two advantages. First, reduced transport costs. Second, local employment. There is a manufacturing facility in Tanzania, a Sumitomo-AtoZ textiles joint venture, so 'local' production, and the employment this brings, is possible.
 
We are alive to this issue and, where we can, act in a way to support local enterprise. We have bought tens of thousands of nets that way when it has been 'near-economic' to do so.
 
However, there are challenges to the speed of local capacity development and the number of facilities that could be developed.
 
First, economies of scale mean only a small number of large factories are required to produce world demand. Micro-factories, located in each net-consuming country would not be economic. The number of countries that could benefit from locally located facilities therefore would be small. Some countries benefiting would be better than none of course.
 
Second, domestic markets are often not enough to sustain a production facility: nets are required to be exported. This leads to a problem, or inefficiency, in that shipping and transport from some African countries to others can be more difficult and more expensive than shipping from Asia to many African countries given established shipping routes. This raises overall prices for net buyers and reduces the number of nets that can bought for a given level of funds.
 
Further, technology transfer is an issue with challenges around training a workforce and guarding against technology intellectual property loss, the latter being a reasonable concern of the primary manufacturer. Ensuring raw material, spare parts supply and quality control are also issues to overcome.
 
The first and second issues are the structural ones and present the greatest challenge. The other issues can be overcome as the Tanzania joint venture has indicated. With major capital investment required and the need to consider the long term viability of a new facility, these developments take year/s not months.
 
Another method of developing local capacity has been via shipping large rolls of netting from an African based manufacturing facility to another African country where the cutting and stitching of nets then takes place. This has some shipping cost savings and provides local employment. We have bought nets in this way also.
 
Note, we are only talking about LLINs here as that is the only sensible net to distribute. If part of the background to your comments is concern over local insecticide treated nets (ITNs, but not long-lasting, so an entirely different net), or untreated net production being threatened by the import of LLINs, the higher issue is going to be the need to protect people with LLINs rather than ITNs or untreated nets. This is because LLINs are much more effective than these other nets at protecting people from malaria. For information on different types of nets, see: http://www.againstmalaria.com/FAQ_Bednets.aspx
 
Our approach, therefore, is with our priority being to buy the most nets possible for the funds available. We keep a close eye on local-sourcing options and where it is 'near-economic' to do so, we do. Economics will drive manufacturers to locally locate and we can do our bit by applying this 'near-economic' approach.
 
I hope this helps.
 
Kind regards
 
Rob
Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Currently rated 3.0 by 5 people

  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:  
Categories:   General | Net distribution | Partners
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

41,000th donor!

Monday, 13 June 2011 14:55 by AndrewGarner
We have just reached our 41,000th donor! A donation from an Academy in Vermont USA took us over the 41,000 mark and is now immortalised on our milestones page - thank you!
Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Currently rated 3.0 by 10 people

  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:   , ,
Categories:   Fundraisers | General
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed

What happens to the plastic bags in which the nets are packaged?

Thursday, 28 April 2011 12:01 by RobMather
A question from Alex H (Australia)

"You have distributed a little over 1.4million nets. Each net comes in its own plastic bag. Does this mean there are 1.4 million used plastic bags now littering the areas in which the nets have been distributed?"
 
Our answer is as follows:
 
 
Plastic bags? 

No. Plastic bags are either:

a) removed before the nets are handed out. Sometimes but not always. (Estimate: 25% of cases.)

b) not removed at the time of distribution
  • ... but collected during the post-distribution follow-up by the distribution partner and taken away for disposal, typically landfill (Est: 15%)
  • ... and not collected post-distribution and
    • reused as bags/storage etc (Est: 10%)
    • thrown away (Est: 50%)
These are educated guesses based on some data and other anecdotal information.

Where possible, nets are handed out removed from the bags. This is to reduce either possible resale (albeit this doesn’t happen often) or avoid the beneficiary keeping the new net until a net currently being used, but worn out, is even more worn out. In the situation where it is removed, the plastic bag typically goes to landfill. However, bags are now increasingly biodegradable (see an example here).

What about the nets?

Obviously, the nets constitute a larger quantity of plastic. There is a study underway looking at the recycling options for nets as this is becoming a significant issue/opportunity. This is not an easy issue to resolve but there is a strong consensus a solution must be found. For example - pdf 1.5Mb
 
Summary
 
The obvious benefit of the nets protecting people from malaria leaves us all with the clear choice that, even absent of net recycling/organised disposal/bag disposal, it is worth distributing the nets. However, biodegradability is likely to be the way forward for the bags and recycling the way forward for the nets.

 
Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Should nets be recycled?

Thursday, 28 April 2011 09:37 by RobMather

We are sometimes asked whether nets are, or should be, recycled when new nets are distributed or reach the end of their working life. We asked Jo Lines, at the World Health Organisation, who is leads research this area.

Jo's summary advice is: "Don't do it."

The reasons he cites are, and we quote:

"First, there is no evidence there is a pressing need to do it.

Second, when people stop using a net for sleeping, they normally put the net to a lot of other uses.

Third, and perhaps the most important point: these are not our nets, and there are legal and ethical limits to our right to take them away.

Also, if you try to give new nets only to families where the old ones are gone or in bad condition, and not to the families where the nets are still in good condition, you are creating a strong and perverse incentive for people to hide, damage or destroy nets when the project staff are approaching."

The full email from Jo is reproduced below.

Our view is that recycling of nets is very likely to happen but achieving this is not simple. The obvious benefit of the nets protecting people from malaria leaves us all with the clear choice that, even absent of net recycling, it is worth distributing nets.

 

Jo's email: 

"We do have a couple of people in our team working on this and we are completing a SAICM and World Bank-supported three-country research project on it, with the help of an excellent team of consultants. There is also a long mailing list with a wide range of interested stakeholders - anyone who wants to join it should email Stephanie [guillaneuxs@who.int] or Aurelie [bottelina@who.int]. Many of the key questions cannot be given definitive answers until this research has been completed, but we do have some tentative and subject-to-revision observations and advice to offer in the meantime. 

Our interim advice is : "don't do it".

First there's no evidence for a pressing need to do it: although the total amount of plastic in all those nets sounds large, it represents about 1% of the total plastic entering the region, according to industry estimates. There are concerns that worn out nets might block the use of new ones, but these remain unsupported by solid evidence. The point is: not all old nets are useless. We do have evidence that when a new net is given to net-owning families, the new one is sometimes stored for later use, but this could be because the old net is still working, and we have no evidence to contradict that hypothesis.

Second, we know that when people stop using a net for sleeping, they normally put the old net to a lot of other uses.... OK fishing is not a good idea, but the other purposes - as padding under the sleeping mat, a room divider, a door curtain, crop protection, fencing for the chicken coop - are probably not at all risky, and probably do have significant benefits. These are extremely poor families, so if we want to take something useful away from them, we should have a very good reason... and that reason has not yet been established.

Third, and perhaps the most important point : these are not our nets, and there are legal and ethical limits to our right to take them away. We gave them away freely, with no contract agreed or implied. We can offer to take them away from householders who voluntarily want to get rid of them, but it would probably not be ethical to put them under any pressure. In particular, it is probably not good practice to make the gift of a new net conditional on the surrender of an old one; this would be legal, but it would penalise people whose net was lost for legitimate accidental reasons, and lead to a gradual decline in overall coverage.

It probably IS a good idea to think of whether it would be possible to set up plastic recycling mechanisms, but such schemes should probably be voluntary (or commercial), not compulsory, and should probably embrace a wide range of plastics, not just old nets.

Finally, a note on the coverage gaps that can be caused when campaign nets wear out more quickly than expected. Some programmes have responded to these gaps by carrying out repeat campaigns after an interval of much less than 3 years since a previous campaign. This may be necessary as an interim response, but there is a long-term solution that is expected to be more effective. First, we must recognise that the lifespan of nets in a cohort has a very wide range, with some disappearing very quickly and some remaining functional for more than 4 or 5 years . For this reason, there are inevitable limitations on the capacity of repeated campaigns to maintain full coverage without waste. If you try to give new nets only to families where the old ones are gone or in bad condition, and not to the families where the nets are still in good condition, you are creating a strong and perverse incentive for people to hide, damage or destroy nets when the project staff are approaching. There are rumours that this is exactly what happened in parts of West Africa. If you give nets to everyone, then timing is never good: repeating the campaign after a short interval minimises the coverage gap but is wasteful; repeating it later is less wasteful but leaves a long period when many people are unprotected. Hence our advice is to deliver nets for free to ALL pregnant women and all infants attending EPI. This rate of continuous input will replace a large proportion of the nets that are lost, and greatly reduce the size of the coverage gap. WHO recommendation is that this kind of distribution through routine services should be equal priority to campaigns. As in immunisation, we must plan that in places where there has so far been no routine LLIN distribution, "the catch-up campaign must be Day One of the routine keep-up service".

Hope this helps

Jo" 

Digg It!DZone It!StumbleUponTechnoratiRedditDel.icio.usNewsVineFurlBlinkList

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:  
Categories:   General | Malaria news | Net distribution
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (0) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed