Malaria: '700 million cases' stopped in Africa

Mosquito 



Nearly 700 million cases of malaria have been prevented in Africa as a
result of concerted efforts to tackle the disease since 2000, a study
shows.  






The report published in the journal Nature showed that overall the number of infections fell by 50% across the continent.

Bed nets were responsible for the vast majority of the decrease.

There have also been calls to maintain funding to ensure the progress is not undone.

Meanwhile,
a report by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the charity Unicef
say malaria death rates have fallen 60% globally since 2000 and more
than six million lives have been saved.

The report said 13
countries that had malaria in 2000 reported no cases in 2014 while a
further six countries had fewer than ten cases.

However, Africa still accounts from 80% of cases and 78% of deaths.

Dr
Margaret Chan, the director general of the WHO, said: "Global malaria
control is one of the great public health success stories of the past 15
years.

"It's
a sign that our strategies are on target, and that we can beat this
ancient killer, which still claims hundreds of thousands of lives,
mostly children, each year."

The executive director of Unicef, Anthony Lake, argued: "We know how to prevent and treat malaria. Since we can do it, we must."

'Optimistic message'

The
researchers from the University of Oxford analysed data from 30,000
sites in sub-Saharan Africa to estimate that 663 million cases were
prevented over the past 15 years.

  • 68% of the reduction was down to the distribution of a billion insecticide-treated bed nets
  • 22% was attributed to the treatment artemisinin
  • 10% to spraying homes with insecticide
One of the researchers, Dr Samir Bhatt, told the BBC News website: "It's just phenomenal.

"Just
by putting in these interventions you've managed to save all these
cases, 700 million is a huge number and that's the reality of what
happened and that's why it's such an optimistic message."



 Bed nets 



But despite the progress, the job is far from done. A child still dies from malaria every minute in Africa.

The rate of improvement is also slowing - cases were falling by 9% a year up to 2011 but that has since fallen to 5%.

Dr
Bhatt added: "We need to really be careful that we don't start reducing
the number of interventions and keep driving forwards. We need to keep
redoubling efforts."

Drug resistance is also a worry. Dr Bhatt
describes mosquitoes being able to shrug off the effects of some
insecticides as an "absolutely huge" issue in Africa.

Meanwhile,
resistance to the drug artemisinin has been detected in south-east Asia
and would seriously hamper efforts to control the disease if resistance
spread to Africa.

Eight African countries are aiming to eliminate the disease by 2020 including Namibia.

The
country's former health minister Dr Richard Kamwi, whose brother died
from malaria, said there had been a "drastic reduction" in cases in his
country.

He warned that any cuts to funding "would be very unfortunate".

He
told the BBC News website: "I have seen some countries where
elimination was almost in sight and when they stopped indoor spraying we
have seen resurgence.

"I want to emphasise to big funders and government [the need] to keep up their support."

'Great success'

Meanwhile,
a report by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the charity Unicef
say malaria death rates have fallen 60% globally since 2000 and more
than six million lives have been saved.

The report said 13
countries that had malaria in 2000 reported no cases in 2014 while a
further six countries had fewer than ten cases.

However, Africa still accounts from 80% of cases and 78% of deaths.

Dr
Margaret Chan, the director general of the WHO, said: "Global malaria
control is one of the great public health success stories of the past 15
years.

"It's a sign that our strategies are on target, and that
we can beat this ancient killer, which still claims hundreds of
thousands of lives, mostly children, each year."

The executive director of Unicef, Anthony Lake, argued: "We know how to prevent and treat malaria. Since we can do it, we must."

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