“…Effectiveness (benefits) have been assessed based on, (i) field activities or nonclinical outcomes such as doses administered, rounds of treatments (or doses) per year or season, nets distributed, cases tested, cases diagnosed (presumptively, rapid diagnostic test (RDT), microscopy), cases treated (complicated, severe, uncomplicated), degree of coverage, and retention in care or follow-up; (ii) clinical outcomes such as a reduction in transmission rate, parasitemia, new infections, and adverse events and serious adverse events (AE/SAE); and (iii) utility outcomes such as quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained, life years (LY) saved, healthy life years (HLYs), DALYs averted, number of persons protected, infant deaths averted, Children under-5 protected, clinical cases or episode averted, etc. (Avanceña et al, 2022;Ayogu et al,2021;Conteh et al, 2021;Gunda, and Chimbari, 2017). Ezenduka et al (2017) estimate that treatment of uncomplicated malaria consumes about 25% of the annual budget of public health facilities in Nigeria at the cost of over US$31 per case, with personnel cost accounting for approximately 83% of the costs.…”