On October 25-29th, PSI will join thousands of tropical medicine and global health professionals in Philadelphia, PA for the 64th American Society for Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (ASTMH) Annual Meeting. PSI will participate in a number of symposia and poster sessions with topics ranging from the implementation of market based sanitation service delivery to fever case management in the private sector.
The full schedule is below. Check back for more information; abstracts will be uploaded after they have been given in Philadelphia.
Follow us on Twitter @PSIimpact for live updates.
Come visit us anytime during the conference in Marriott Conference Suite II.
Symposium: Eliminating Malaria in the Greater Mekong – Acting on Multiple Fronts to Achieve Succes
Chris Lourenco (CHAI), Andrew Lover (UNSF), Abi Pratt (PSI/Cambodia), Ma Su (PSI Myanmar, chairs: Ricki Orford (PSI)/Thomas Kanyok (Gates Foundation)
Monday, October 26th
10:15 am – 12:00 pm
Marriott – Grand Ballroom Salon F
In November 2014, during the East Asia Summit in Myanmar, leaders from 18 countries in the region committed to eliminating malaria in the Asia Pacific by 2030, an ambitious goal saluted across the global public health community. Eliminating malaria from the region will not only curb the spread of malaria parasites resistant to artemisinin that threaten to undermine regional and global progress in malaria control, but also set the stage for the next step, eradicating the disease all together. Achieving the elimination goal requires acting on the disease on multiple fronts, using an arsenal of existing and new tools. In this symposium speakers will present early results from innovative, concrete interventions, focusing on essential topics such as surveillance and the involvement of the private sector.
Symposium: Market Development as an Approach to Scaling Up Rural and Urban Sanitation Service Delivery
Shankar Narayanan (PSI India), Lorelei Goodyear (PATH), Richard Rheingans (University of Florida), chair: Yasmin Madan (PSI)
Tuesday, October 27th
1:45 pm – 3:30 pm
Convention Center – Room 203AB
PSI, PATH and other development organizations have been working to understand and adopt market development and M4P (making markets work for the poor) approaches within the sanitation sector. These approaches provide private sector alternatives to traditional approaches, which within the sanitation sector have traditionally maintained a singular focus on infrastructure instead of systems. The assumption is that theses approaches provide better opportunities for sustainability and scale up because they identify gaps and pinpoint where the market is broken, allowing for a working market system that is capable of providing ongoing, high quality sanitation services versus one-off interventions. In this symposium, speakers will present their learning from implementing such approaches within the sanitation sector. Speakers will provide a landscape assessment and a decision making framework that will allow sanitation sector practitioners to understand the relevance, significance and use of market development approaches.
Poster Session B
Tuesday, October 27th
12:00 pm – 1:45 pm
Convention Center – 100AB
- Greater impact at a lower cost: Prioritizing support to Patent and Proprietary Medicine Vendors for increased quality fever case management in Ebonyi State, Nigeria
- A tale of two providers: differences in fever case management practices and performance among private clinicians and private pharmacy providers on the Kenyan coast
- SP Availability and (Mis)use in sub-Saharan Africa: Antimalarial market data from eight countries
- Transforming the private sector market for quality malaria case management in Kinshasa: results from baseline surveys and monitoring activities
Poster Session C
Wednesday, October 28th
12:00 pm – 1:45 pm
Convention Center – 100AB
- Malaria rapid diagnostic test market trends in sub-Saharan Africa, 2009-2014
- Private sector providers, key partners in improving quality of fever case management – insights from Madagascar
- Comparison of malaria diagnostic testing and treatment outcomes at outlets participating in a project to support private sector RDT adoption in Mbeya, Morogoro and Tanga, Tanzania: results from client exit interviews