On World Malaria Day an ambitious UN chief, Ban Ki-moon launched a special drive to end malaria deaths in Africa .
An ambitious global drive led by UN chief Ban Ki-moon to end malaria deaths in Africa "in the near future" was to be launched Friday on World Malaria Day, according to Britain's leading medical journal.
The multi-billion dollar (euro) initiative will start with the delivery of 250 million insecticide-treated bednets by the end of 2010 to those parts of the continent where the deadly disease is endemic, The Lancet reported.Ban was to deliver a video message to kick off the program sometime Friday, the Secretary-General's office in New York confirmed.
Malaria severely sickens half-a-billion people in the world each year, and kills more than a million. Ninety percent of victims live in sub-Saharan Africa, and the vast majority of those are infants and children.
Each day, some 3,000 young lives -- one every 30 seconds -- are snuffed out by the mosquito-borne parasite that carries the disease, which provokes debilitating fever, headache and vomiting.
Malaria exacts a terrible economic cost as well, sapping more than a full percentage point from the annual economic growth of the most affected nations.
The new drive will not only target pregnant women and children, as has been done in the past, but anyone at risk, according to the authors of a special report.
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They also point to two concrete examples of how dramatic progress towards these goals can be made, even in resource-starved nations.
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Both countries adopted a two-pronged strategy, focused on prevention and treatment, through the use of insecticide-treated bed nets and artemisinin-based therapies.
Artemisinin is a drug derived from a traditional Chinese medicinal plant -- Artemisia annua, or sweet wormwood -- that has proved extremely effective as a treatment for malaria.
Since 2000, artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) have become the first-line treatment in the many African countries where drug-resistant strains of the disease have dramatically reduced the effectiveness of chloroquine and sulfadoxine.
Ethiopia was spurred to action by the worst malaria epidemic on record in 2003, when the number of cases doubled to 12 million, with an estimated 100,000 child deaths.
The government aggressively sought international funding for a project to distribute 20 million bed nets in three years, receiving help from the World Bank and the Global Fund.
"The pieces are increasingly in place to achieve the UN Secretary General's vision for universal coverage and make rapid gains toward ending malaria deaths in Africa," the report concluded.
It cautions, however, that climate change could pose a serious challenge to eradication efforts. Rising global temperatures threaten to spread the disease to parts of the continent -- and the world -- that are currently malaria-free.
Global Malaria Programme
Source-AFP
SPH/L