In Papua New Guinea, access and use of primary health care services is a challenge: 85% of the population live in rural area, 30-40% of aidposts are closed and outpatient visits to public health facilities have declined by 30% in a three-year period. The Home-based Management of Malaria (HMM) program managed by Population Services International (PSI) attempted to bridge the malaria service gap in three high burden provinces (East Sepik, East New Britain and Sandaun) using a network of volunteer community-based distributors (CBD). PSI selected provinces based on malaria incidence, access to other health facilities and level of support by the Provincial Health Administration (PHA). The HMM program covered an estimated population of 616,559 with 1,000 active CBDs trained by PSI.
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