Note: This page summarizes the rationale behind a GiveWell grant to Malaria Consortium. Malaria Consortium staff reviewed this page prior to publication.
In a nutshell
In September 2024, GiveWell recommended a 2-year $2.75m grant from the Top Charities Fund to support Malaria Consortium in delivering seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) to children in five districts of the Karamoja subregion of Uganda in 2025 and 2026.
Malaria Consortium began supporting SMC delivery in the Karamoja subregion of Uganda in 2021 and 2022 as part of a small-scale implementation and research pilot co-funded by GiveWell, and we granted them further funding for SMC implementation in the subregion in 2023. (more)
Our recommendation for this grant was based on:
- Cost-effectiveness. We currently model the cost-effectiveness of this program as right around our funding bar for Top Charities. We've erred on the side of continuing to fund the program while we continue to further investigate several parameters in our cost-effectiveness analysis, which could increase or decrease our cost effectiveness estimate. (more)
- Malaria Consortium as the grantee. Malaria Consortium has a strong track record of SMC delivery programs, and we have a highly positive impression of them as an organization. (more)
Our key reservations included:
- Uncertainty about the future of this program. Based on the results of our continued research on uncertain parameters in our cost-effectiveness analysis, we may decide not to continue funding this program in Karamoja. It's possible that, if so, an earlier decision would be better for the grantee and other stakeholders. We plan to communicate a decision about whether to end our funding for this program by mid-2025 (more).
Published: January 2025
Table of Contents
The organization
Seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) involves giving children monthly courses of antimalarial medicines during the high malaria season, in areas where malaria is seasonal. For more on this intervention, see our SMC intervention report.
Malaria Consortium's SMC program is one of GiveWell's top charities. We have made previous grants to Malaria Consortium, including grants supporting SMC delivery in Karamoja, Uganda. Malaria Consortium began supporting SMC delivery in the Karamoja subregion in Uganda in 2021 as part of a small-scale implementation and research pilot co-funded by GiveWell1 . After the pilot’s conclusion in 2022, we granted funds to support continued implementation of SMC programs in the subregion in 2023 and 2024.2 These funds have supported SMC delivery in five districts of Karamoja, with delivery in the four remaining districts being funded through the Global Fund.3
The grant
Grant activities
This grant will continue to fund Malaria Consortium’s delivery of SMC to children in five districts of the Karamoja subregion of Uganda during the 2025 and 2026 malaria seasons.4 We describe SMC in further detail in our intervention report, and Malaria Consortium's role in SMC programs in this section of our Malaria Consortium top charity review.
Budget for grant activities
We are recommending $2,731,480 from the Top Charities Fund for this grant, which will cover both the 2025 and 2026 malaria seasons.
Malaria Consortium’s budget for the 2025-2026 SMC program is $2,653,771, broken down as follows:5
- $687,190 for SMC delivery, including community engagement, training, administration, and supervision costs
- $569,996 for medicines and other SMC commodities, including freight and supply management costs
- $491,108 for staff and consultants
- $288,133 for monitoring and evaluation
- $284,333 for grant management
- $223,012 for operational costs, including digitalization and external relations
- $110,000 for research costs
Factoring in projected above-country costs,6 we recommended a total grant of $2,731,480.7
The case for the grant
For a general overview of why we consider SMC to be a cost-effective intervention, see our intervention report here. For further detail on why we consider SMC appropriate for Karamoja, Uganda, see our previous grant page here.
We are recommending this grant for SMC delivery during the 2025-2026 malaria seasons in Karamoja for the following reasons:
- Cost-effectiveness. Our current best estimate of the cost-effectiveness of SMC in Karamoja is approximately 8 times that of unconditional cash transfers, right around our current bar for grantmaking to top charities. We have decided to err on the side of continuing to fund the program while we do further work on several parameters that may push our updated estimate above, or further below, our bar (more).
- Malaria Consortium as the grantee. Malaria Consortium has a strong track record of SMC delivery programs, and we have a highly positive impression of them as an organization.8 From other SMC stakeholders, we've also heard positive, and often strongly positive, feedback about Malaria Consortium, including that Malaria Consortium is a good partner to work with and that it delivers high-quality programs.9 For our review of Malaria Consortium, see here.
Cost-effectiveness
Cost-effectiveness is a major consideration in our grantmaking decisions. Our current model projects that the costs of Malaria Consortium’s SMC program in Karamoja are likely to decrease in the next few years10 , and taking Malaria Consortium’s cost projections at face value, the program’s steady-state cost-effectiveness will be around 8 times that of unconditional cash transfers ("x cash"), just below our cost-effectiveness bar for top charities. A simple version of our cost-effectiveness model is below (see our full analysis here):
What we are estimating | Best guess (rounded) | Confidence intervals (25th - 75th percentile) | Implied cost-effectiveness |
---|---|---|---|
Donation to Malaria Consortium (arbitrary value) | $2,731,480 | ||
Cost per child reached with SMC (excluding government costs) | $10 | $7 - $13 | 6x - 11x |
Number of children receiving SMC | 273,000 | ||
Percent of children who would have received SMC without mass distribution | 0% | ||
Annual mortality rate from malaria and associated causes among children who do not receive SMC | 0.42% | 0.17% - 0.67% | 3x - 12x |
Proportion of malaria mortality occurring in SMC season | 62% | 50% - 74% | 6x - 9x |
Reduction in malaria mortality from receiving SMC | 64% | 51% - 77% | 6x - 9x |
Initial cost-effectiveness estimate | |||
Cost per death averted (child mortality only) | ~$6,000 | ||
Moral weight for each death averted | 116 | ||
Initial cost-effectiveness estimate (child mortality only) | 6x | ||
Summary of primary benefits (% of modeled benefits) | |||
Reduced child mortality | 69% | ||
Reduced mortality among older children and adults | 2% | ||
Income increases in later life | 28% | ||
Additional adjustments | |||
Adjustment for additional program benefits and downsides | 28% | 15% - 41% | 7x - 8x |
Adjustment for grantee-level factors | -8% | -14% - -2% | 7x - 8x |
Adjustment for diverting other actors’ spending into SMC (“leverage”) | -1% | ||
Adjustment for diverting other actors’ spending away from SMC (“funging”) | -21% | -38% - -4% | 6x - 9x |
Overall cost-effectiveness (multiples of cash transfers) | 8x | 3x - 13x |
However, there are several parameters we are still investigating, which may shift this cost-effectiveness analysis substantially (more). In order to allow Malaria Consortium time to acquire SMC drugs in advance of the upcoming malaria season in Uganda, we made our grant decision while those investigations are still ongoing, and decided in favor of making this grant despite our current cost-effectiveness estimate landing below our funding bar. We did so because (a) we believe it is generally good practice not to suddenly end funding to programs we have supported without an exit grant, for reasons of reducing harm to staff, partners, and program beneficiaries, as well as allowing the organization and its partners time to explore other funding sources or manage a graceful phaseout period; and (b) there is a meaningful chance that further work in our ongoing investigations will, in the next six months, lead us to believe that the program is above our bar, and we do not want the program to be discontinued while we continue learning more.
At the time of our prior grant to this program, we estimated cost-effectiveness at 10x cash. The factors that have lowered this estimate include:
- Higher costs than projected. Our previous estimates of cost-effectiveness were benchmarked off of the costs of Malaria Consortium’s SMC programs elsewhere.11 Our current model has now switched to Uganda-specific cost projections because we think, and Malaria Consortium agrees, that costs are approaching a steady-state level.12 These costs are meaningfully higher ($2.24) than those in the larger programs in the Sahel ($1.1-$1.9). As Karamoja has less seasonality in malaria transmission than most of the Sahel, and thus receives five SMC cycles13 rather than four, this implies a cost per child fully treated of $11.21 (including government costs), as compared to $5-8 in the Sahel. This is the primary driver of our lowered cost-effectiveness estimate.
Malaria Consortium attributes this difference in cost to a number of factors, including the relatively higher wage commanded by community distributors in Uganda,14 the remoteness of Karamoja, and the smaller scale of this program, which we believe is unlikely to scale up meaningfully.15 The Karamoja sub-region is reported to have a higher malaria burden than most in Uganda, and is the only region recommended for SMC.16 Within the Karamoja sub-region, the Global Fund is funding SMC in four out of nine districts, with our grants to Malaria Consortium supporting the rest.17
- Adjustment for malaria vaccines. While we’re highly uncertain about what scale-up will look like, we do expect the rollout of the R21 malaria vaccine to lead to a decrease in malaria-attributable child mortality.18 This is a moderate reduction in our cost-effectiveness estimate.
- Greater funging risk. We slightly increased our estimate of the funging risk – the risk that in making a grant we are merely displacing funding that would come from other actors – to 40% from 30%. We think that it’s fairly plausible that the Global Fund could and would fund these districts in our absence (more). We now overall reduce our estimate of the value generated by this grant by approximately -20% to account for funging risk. This parameter change led to a small decrease in our estimate.
- Cost per child. We have based our figure for steady-state costs on Malaria Consortium's budget for the program, and Malaria Consortium may be able to reduce costs more than their or our current projections suggest.
- Malaria burden and malaria vaccine adjustment. Our model attempts to estimate sub-national malaria burden in a small portion of the country,19 which is also an area that reports suggest has an unusually high malaria burden for Uganda.20 We find it plausible that we could be off by a factor of two in either direction.
Similarly, we add an adjustment for vaccination effects on malaria burden, and we could be underestimating cost-effectiveness of the SMC program if this adjustment is overstated. This figure is sensitive to projected vaccination coverage, which is challenging to predict because malaria vaccines are in early stages of rollout globally and in Uganda.21
- SMC efficacy in Karamoja. Our current estimates for the effectiveness of SMC in Uganda are modestly lower than in the Sahel: 64% vs. 79% effective at reducing deaths during the malaria season, with 62% vs. 70% of malaria deaths occurring in that season. Though we think it is implausible that SMC would be more effective in Karamoja than in the Sahel,22 it would be a meaningful increase in our cost-effectiveness estimate if we believed SMC was approximately as effective in Karamoja as we model it in the Sahel.
- Funging risk and outside funding. We could be overestimating the likelihood of these districts receiving Global Fund support in the long term (more). If we model a 20% funging risk, rather than the 40% that we currently assume, the program would meet our funding bar.23
Risks and reservations
Our main reservation about this grant is:
- Uncertainty about the future of this program. This may be our last grant for the SMC program in Karamoja. If so, we would want to share that decision with Malaria Consortium and other stakeholders as early as possible to give them time to plan and to seek other funding sources. For more on why we may decide to exit, see (below).
Exit Decision
We intend to let Malaria Consortium know by mid-2025 whether we have decided against renewing this grant, based on factors including updated cost-effectiveness estimates (more), the funding landscape (more), and the program’s room for more funding.24 If we decide not to renew funding, this grant will serve as an exit grant for the program.
Funding landscape
In our model, we assume a 40% chance that the Global Fund, or another funder, would replace the funding we direct to SMC in Karamoja if we were to exit. This figure reflects our sense, explained further below, that the Global Fund is well-positioned to take over funding for the districts of Karamoja that we currently fund, as well as an understanding that there are many competing priorities for the limited malaria funding in Uganda.
The Global Fund is currently funding four of the nine SMC-eligible districts of Karamoja, where GiveWell is funding the remainder.25 If the Ugandan National Malaria Control Program (NMCP), in consultation with the Global Fund, decides that SMC is a high priority, it will likely have the option to allocate Global Fund funding to cover all nine districts in Karamoja in the next Global Fund allocation cycle (2027-2029). Currently, the Global Fund provides $2.4m to fund SMC programs in those four districts.26 For comparison, in the 2024-2026 cycle, the Ugandan National Malaria Control Program (NMCP) requested $136m of Global Fund funding for vector control, and $98m for case management.27 We think this makes it plausible that the NMCP could request additional funding for SMC for the next Global Fund funding cycle (2027-2029) and that the Global Fund would approve the request.
We also believe that this grant would be well timed to be an exit grant. The implementation period of the current Global Fund grant cycle runs through the end of 2026.28 Our understanding is that NMCPs will begin submitting funding applications for the next cycle, covering 2027-2029, in 2025. Because of this, we think providing two years of runway to cover 2025 and 2026, with an exit decision by mid-2025, is well-positioned to both ensure the program is stably funded through the end of the cycle, and to provide clear and early information to the NMCP and the Global Fund that these districts should be considered unfunded as of the next Global Fund cycle.
However, while the Global Fund and the Ugandan NMCP are presently supportive of SMC in Karamoja, it is not guaranteed that this will hold in the future. We’ve also heard repeatedly over the past few years that the Global Fund is increasingly funding-constrained, and we’ve seen recent evidence to that effect in the form of high-priority funding gaps across Africa.29 It’s possible that the Global Fund may become even more funding constrained in the next funding cycle, due to population growth, political outcomes in donor countries, or other factors, and it consequently may be less likely to fund SMC delivery in Karamoja in our absence than we have assumed.
Plans for follow up
- As with other grants to Malaria Consortium for SMC programs, we will have monthly (or more frequent) calls with Malaria Consortium to discuss operational updates, research questions, and future plans. Malaria Consortium provides details annually on spending, target populations, and coverage survey results.
- We will continue speaking with Malaria Consortium about target populations and economies of scale across areas where it is proposing support. Our sense from 2023 cost and coverage data is that we may have underestimated the share of campaign costs that are fixed at the country level, and thus underappreciated the importance of economies of scale. This may be leading us to overestimate the promise of SMC campaigns in regions where only small areas are eligible for coverage.
- We intend to continue investigating open questions on malaria burden, malaria vaccination coverage projections, and SMC efficacy outside the Sahel that may affect our model of the cost-effectiveness of this program.
- We plan to decide by mid-2025 whether to continue funding Malaria Consortium’s SMC delivery in Karamoja, and to communicate that plan to Malaria Consortium and other stakeholders.
Internal forecasts
For this grant, we are recording the following forecasts:
Confidence | Prediction | By time |
---|---|---|
25% | We will retrospectively assess the cost-effectiveness of the program in 2026 to be ≥10x, by September 2027. | April 2027 |
45% | We will retrospectively assess the cost-effectiveness of the program in 2026 to be ≤6x, by September 2027. | April 2027 |
Our process
- We updated our cost per cycle analysis with 2023 cost and coverage data, and included Uganda in the analysis for the first time.
- We had two calls with Malaria Consortium to discuss previous years’ costs, projections for the future, and potential exit strategies in light of unexpectedly high costs per child.
- We updated burden estimates and added an adjustment for malaria mortality averted by the malaria vaccine in SMC geographies.
- A program associate used the above components and Malaria Consortium’s cost projections for Uganda to estimate cost-effectiveness in 2025 and 2026, and a research associate reviewed. See our cost-effectiveness analysis here.
Sources
Source name | Link to source |
---|---|
GiveWell, Malaria Consortium | Source |
GiveWell, Non-Sahel SMC effect size recommendation, 2023 (public) | Source |
GiveWell, Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention | Source |
GiveWell, SMC Renewal in Uganda and Mozambique | Source |
Malaria Consortium, 2022 SMC Philanthropy Report | Source |
Malaria Consortium, 2023 Philanthropic Financial Report | Source |
Malaria Consortium, 2023 SMC Philanthropy Report | Source |
Malaria Consortium, Annex 1 - Detailed Budget 2025-26 | Source |
Malaria Consortium, Grant request: Supporting SMC in Uganda, 2025-2026 | Source |
Malaria Consortium, SMC Coverage Report 2023 | Source |
The Global Fund, Uganda 2023-2025 Malaria Funding Request | Source |