Vol. 1 No. X (2026)

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From Distribution to Utilization: Identifying Implementation Gaps and Strategic Entry Points for Long-Lasting Insecticidal Net (LLIN) Programmes in a Conflict-Affected County of South Sudan

Lual Kur Amum Ajak, School of Public Health, AMREF International University, Nairobi, Kenya Denis Butto, School of Public Health, AMREF International University, Nairobi, Kenya Tobijo Denis Sokiri Moses, School of Public Health, Upper Nile University, South Sudan
Published: July 17, 2026

Abstract

Background: Despite large-scale distribution of Long-Lasting Insecticidal Nets (LLINs) in South Sudan, utilization rates remain critically below the WHO 80% threshold. Fashoda County, Upper Nile State, presents a representative case of the wider implementation gap between net distribution and consistent household use in conflict-affected, resource-constrained settings. Methods: A cross-sectional analytical study was conducted among 334 households using probability-proportional-to-size (PPS) cluster sampling across four settlement types: IDP camps, returnee settlements, rural areas, and cattle camps. A programmatic cascade analysis and Health Belief Model (HBM) mapping were applied alongside Spearman rank correlation and ordinal logistic regression to identify implementation failure points and priority intervention entry points. Results: A programmatic coverage cascade revealed successive losses from distribution (89%) through ownership, hanging, and previous-night use to consistent utilization (50.3%) and whole-household coverage (44.3%)—well below the WHO 80% target. Regression analysis identified preference for government-supplied free nets (β = +45.10, p < 0.001), household economic ambiguity (β = −62.00, p < 0.001), and easy physical access (β = +6.19, p < 0.001) as the dominant implementation levers. Cultural discouragement independently suppressed utilization (β = −1.21, p = 0.027). A policy priority matrix identified Behaviour Change Communication and ANC-integrated continuous distribution as the highest-impact, most-feasible interventions. Conclusions: The distribution-to-utilization gap in Fashoda County reflects a systemic implementation failure across knowledge, economic, cultural, and logistical domains. Addressing this gap requires a paradigm shift from cam

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How to Cite

Lual Kur Amum Ajak, Denis Butto, Tobijo Denis Sokiri Moses (2026). From Distribution to Utilization: Identifying Implementation Gaps and Strategic Entry Points for Long-Lasting Insecticidal Net (LLIN) Programmes in a Conflict-Affected County of South Sudan. African Journal of Public Health and Health Systems, Vol. 1 No. X (2026).

Keywords

implementation gapLLINsmalariahealth systemsbehaviour changeconflict-affectedSouth Sudan

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Vol. 1 No. X (2026)
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African Journal of Public Health and Health Systems

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