
The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) is aiming to reach 939,729 children in 2025 with Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (SMC), a preventive intervention against malaria for children under five.
State Project Manager of the Philanthropic Funding Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (PF SMC) in the FCT, Dr Olutomi Sodipo, who disclosed this during a press conference yesterday in Abuja, said the intervention targeted children aged three to 59 months, those most vulnerable due to weaker immune systems.
The SMC was introduced in the FCT in 2022 under the coordination of the National Malaria Elimination Programme (NMEP) and the FCT Malaria Elimination Programme (FCT MEP).
The initiative received technical and financial support from Malaria Consortium, enabling its rollout and scale-up across communities within the territory.
Sodipo explained that the initiative used a door-to-door delivery method, with Community Drug Distributors administering a monthly three-day course of Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine and Amodiaquine (SPAQ) during the peak malaria season, from June to October.
“In 2022, we reached 689,283 children; in 2023, 917,586; and in 2024, 939,729 children,” she said, attributing the success to the work of more than 10,000 trained personnel.
“The first two cycles for 2025 have already been implemented with administrative coverage of 98.4 per cent and 99.6 per cent, respectively. Cycle three is scheduled for August 8–11.”
To expand access, Sodipo said faith-based organisations were being engaged as distribution points, alongside the door-to-door model.
She highlighted challenges such as inconsistent adherence to national guidelines, poor house-marking, and incomplete data capture, and called for sustained government support.
She urged caregivers to allow access to trained personnel and said they should ensure their children completed the full SPAQ regimen to remain protected during the high-risk season.
Also, the SMC Programme Officer for the FCT, Dr Iheoma Nzekwe, emphasised the importance of combining SMC with other malaria prevention methods, including the use of insecticide-treated nets.
The Programme Manager of the State Malaria Elimination Programme (SMEP) for the FCT, Hajiya Zainab Ibrahim, said the territory had recorded improvements in the SMC campaign, including better access to children in gated communities.
She described the media as a key partner in ensuring the public received timely and accurate information, emphasising its important role in reaching communities and shaping public understanding.



