map of Mali

The CDC office in Mali was established in 1995 to work with the government and other partners to reduce HIV, malaria, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and neglected tropical diseases. CDC-Mali helps the government strengthen information systems, integrate comprehensive lab services nationwide, respond to public health emergencies, develop tools for STI treatment and lab quality control, and conduct surveillance, surveys, and studies.

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iconStaff

CDC office (physical presence)
2 U.S. Assignees
7 Locally Employed
 

iconMali at a Glance

Population: 15,200,000
Per capita income: $1,090
Life expectancy at birth women/men: 53 /50 yrs
Infant mortality rate: 116/1000 live births
 

iconTop 10 Causes of Death

Source: GBD Compare, 2010
  1. Malaria 24%
  2. Lower Respiratory Infections 6%
  3. Diarrheal Diseases 6 %
  4. Protein-Energy Malnutrition 5%
  5. Sepsis 5%
  6. Preterm Birth Complications 4%
  7. Meningitis 43%
  8. HIV 3%
  9. Cancer 3%
  10. Tuberculosis 2%

What CDC Is Doing

Impact in Mali expanded

  • Mali has not detected a case of WPV since June 2011
  • 8,800 Malians screened and treated for sexually transmitted infections
  • 62,555 women tested for HIV in clinics specializing in preventing mother to child transmission of HIV
  • 167,000 Malians received behavioral change communication messages through community outreach programs

CDC Ebola Updates

	Ebola outbreak


Latest Outbreak Info

The 2014-2015 Ebola epidemic is the largest in history, affecting multiple countries in West Africa. Worldwide, the World Health Organization has reported 28,637 cases of Ebola and 11,315 deaths. CDC and partners are working together to stop the epidemic…read more

Syndicated Content Details:
Source URL: http://www.cdc.gov/globalhealth/countries/mali/default.htm
Source Agency: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Captured Date: 2016-05-23 22:07:50.0

 

 

 

 

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