Children under five with fever treated with any antimalarial drugs (%) - Human development - Development outcomes - African Development Indicators



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Malaria treatment refers to the percentage of children under age five who were ill with fever in the last two weeks and received any appropriate (locally defined) anti-malarial drugs. Source: UNICEF, State of the World's Children, Childinfo, and Demographic and Health Surveys by Macro International.
Children under five with fever treated with any antimalarial drugs (%) - Human development - Development outcomes - African Development Indicators (Most Recent Data)

Rank

Country

Value

1Comoros (2000)62.7
2Gambia (2006)62.6
3Uganda (2006)61.8
4Liberia (2007)58.8
5Cameroon (2006)58
6Central African Republic (2006)57
7Tanzania (2008)56.7
8Benin (2006)54
9Chad (2004)53
10Equatorial Guinea (2000)48.6
11Burkina Faso (2006)48
12Republic of the Congo (2005)48
13Togo (2006)47.7
14Guinea-Bissau (2006)45.7
15Guinea (2005)43.5
16Zambia (2008)43.3
17Ivory Coast (2006)36
18Madagascar (2004)34.2
19Nigeria (2008)33.3
20Niger (2006)33
21Mali (2006)31.7
22Sierra Leone (2008)30.1
23Burundi (2005)30
24Democratic Republic of the Congo (2007)29.8
25Angola (2007)28
26Sao Tome and Principe (2006)24.7
27Ghana (2008)24
28Kenya (2008)24
29Malawi (2006)23.9
30Mozambique (2007)23
31Senegal (2006)22
32Mauritania (2006)20.7
33Namibia (2007)9.8
34Ethiopia (2007)9.5
35Djibouti (2006)9.5
36Somalia (2006)7.9
37Rwanda (2008)5.6
38Zimbabwe (2006)4.7
39Swaziland (2007)0.6
Country Comparison Graph