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Malaria is by far the world's most important tropical parasitic disease, and kills more people than any other communicable disease except tuberculosis. In many developing countries, and in Africa especially, malaria exacts an enormous toll in lives, in medical costs, and in days of labour lost. The causative agents in humans are four species of single-celled parasites. Of these, P.falciparum accounts for the majority of infections and is the most lethal.
Prevalence The emergence of multi-drug resistant strains of parasite is also exacerbating the situation. Via the explosion of easy international travel, imported cases of malaria are now more frequently registered in developed countries. Malaria is now re-emerging in areas where it was previously under control or eradicated e.g., in the Central Asian Republics of Tajikistan and Azerbaijan, and in Korea. The current global picture
Other high-risk groups are women during pregnancy, and non-immune travellers, refugees, displaced persons and labourers entering endemic areas. Malaria epidemics related to political upheavals, economic difficulties and environmental problems also contribute in the most dramatic way to death tolls and human suffering. Malaria is endemic in a total of 101 countries and territories: 45 countries in WHO's African Region, 21 in WHO's Americas Region, 4 in WHO's European region, 14 in WHO's Eastern Mediterranean Region, 8 in WHO's South-East Asia Region, and 9 in WHO's Western Pacific Region. Symptoms Transmission Communities Affected Rural communities are particularly affected. In rural areas, the rainy season is often a time of intense agricultural activity, when poor families earn most of their annual income. Malaria can make these families even poorer. In children, malaria leads to chronic school absenteeism and there can be impairment of learning ability. Urban malaria is increasing due to unplanned development around large cities, particularly in Africa and South Asia. Malaria and Children
African children under five years of age are chronic victims of malaria, suffering an average of six bouts a year. Fatally-afflicted children often die less than 72 hours after developing symptoms. In those children who survive, malaria also drains vital nutrients from them, impairing their physical and intellectual development. Malarial sickness is also one of the principal reasons for poor school attendance. Yet protection of children can often be easy. Randomised control trials conducted in the Gambia, Ghana, Kenya and Burkina Faso, for example, show that about 30 per cent of child deaths could be avoided if children slept under bednets regularly treated with recommended insecticides such as pyrethroids. Unlike early insecticides such as DDT, pyrethroids are derived from a naturally occurring substance, and will remain effective for 6 to 12 months. Malaria is also particularly dangerous during pregnancy. It causes severe anaemia, and is a major factor contributing to maternal deaths in malaria endemic regions. Pregnant mothers who have malaria and are HIV-positive are more likely to pass on their HIV status to their unborn child. UNICEF recognises that malaria is one of the five major causes of under-five child mortality. The agency has made the disease a top priority, supporting malaria control programmes in 32 countries, 27 of which are in Africa. Economic Costs
Knowledge about malaria is markedly low among affected populations. In one recent survey in Ghana, for example, half the respondents did not know that mosquitoes transmit malaria. The direct and indirect costs of malaria in sub-Saharan Africa exceed $2 billion, according to 1997 estimates. According to UNICEF, the average cost for each nation in Africa to implement malaria control programmes is estimated to be at least $300,000 a year. This amounts to about six US cents ($.06) per person for a country of 5 million people. Malaria's reach is spreading "Global warming" and other climatic events such as "El Niño" also play their role in increasing risk of disease. The disease has now spread to highland areas of Africa, for example, while El Niño events have an impact on malaria because the associated weather disturbances influence vector breeding sites, and hence transmission of the disease. In today's international world, the phenomenon of "airport malaria", or the importing of malaria by international travellers, is becoming commonplace. The United Kingdom, for example, registered 2364 cases of malaria in 1997, all of them imported by travellers. 'Weekend malaria', which happens when city dwellers in Africa return to their rural settings, is becoming an increasing problem. Prevention and cure Measures which protect against disease but not against infection include chemoprophylaxis. In spite of drug resistance, malaria is a curable disease, not an inevitable burden. Although there is only a limited number of drugs, if these are used properly and targeted to those at greatest risk, malaria disease and deaths can be reduced, as has been shown in many countries. Disease management through early diagnosis and prompt treatment is fundamental to malaria control. It is a basic right of affected populations and needs to be available wherever malaria occurs. Children and pregnant women, on whom malaria has its greatest impact in most parts of the world, are especially important. In many countries, most cases of malaria are diagnosed and treated in the home or by private sector practitioners, often incompletely and with irrational regimens. This speeds up the spread of parasite resistance to antimalarial drugs, which poses another problem - a dramatic rise in the cost of treating uncomplicated malaria (which has been seen in some parts of the world). Whereas formerly malaria control depended on insecticide spraying, now the selective use of protection methods, including vector control, is proving cost-effective and more sustainable. So, whereas house-spraying is now restricted to specific high-risk and epidemic-prone areas, increasing use is being made of insecticide-treated bednets. Malaria control is everybody's business. Everyone should contribute to it, including community members and people working in education, environment, water supply, sanitation, and community development. It must be an integral part of national health development and community action for control must be sustained and supported by intersectoral collaboration at all levels and by monitoring, training and evaluation, and operational and basic research. Working to roll back malaria What has been achieved to date is both a political commitment to malaria control and a progressive strengthening of national and local capacities for assessing malaria situations and selecting appropriate measures aimed at reducing or preventing the disease. National plans of action have also been developed in more than 80% of malaria endemic countries. Recognizing the widespread political desire that had been building since the Amsterdam Summit of 1992 when the Global Malaria Control Strategy was adopted, Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, Director-General of World Health Organization, declared upon taking office in July 1998 that there should be a deeper commitment to win the fight against malaria. This was going to require not only the commitment of the health sector, but also other governmental sectors, the private sector where activities may directly or indirectly affect the malaria situation, NGOs, and affected communities themselves. Greater financial resources and a higher visibility for malaria campaigns would be necessary. It was thus that, through the offices of WHO, four UN-System agencies (UNDP, UNICEF, WHO and the World Bank) launched Roll Back Malaria on 30 October 1998. Roll Back Malaria (RBM) since then has led the global quest in fighting
malaria, and through its highly profiled actions, it already has result to
refer to. For more information about malaria and the fight against
malaria, you should visit the website of RBM. Source:
WHO
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