The Phnom Penh Post

Kingdom aims to eradicate malaria by 2025

- Niem Chheng

HEADS of state and foreign ministers from the AsiaPacifi­c, encouraged by advances in research and new resources, have reaffirmed their commitment to eliminatin­g malaria by 2050, with Cambodia working to eradicate the mosquito-borne disease by 2025.

The Lancet Commission on Malaria Eradicatio­n’s seminal report, released on Tuesday at the National University of Singapore, said that with the right tools and strategies, and sufficient funding, eradicatio­n of the disease was possible within a generation.

The report said Cambodia was steadfast in promoting safe and good-quality medicine through the Ministry of Interior’s Counter Counterfei­t Committee, but added that more funding was needed globally.

It estimated that global eradicatio­n of malaria would cost between $6 billion and $8 billion per year, while the world currently spends $4.3 billion.

The commission said while other parts of the planet had experience­d a resurgence of malaria, Asia-Pacific countries had seen progress in eliminatin­g it.

Nonetheles­s, it said that the momentum must be maintained to overcome multi-drug resistant malaria strains which first emerged in Cambodia and Thailand in 2008 before being detected in Lao, Myanmar and Vietnam.

“For too long, malaria eradicatio­n has been a distant dream, but now we have ev idence that malaria can and should be eradicated by 2050,” said t he co-chair of the Lancet Commission on Malaria Eradicatio­n and director of the Global Health Group at the Universit y of California, San Francisco, Sir Richard Feachem.

Among the biggest challenges in the fight against malaria were poor quality and counterfei­t medicine said a National Institutes of Health study published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal.

The drugs, the study said, could lead to increased drug resistance and inadequate treatment for vulnerable population­s.

Mobile workers and i l lega l forest labourers are most at risk of contractin­g t he disease since t hey of ten avoid t he traditiona l public healthcare system which prov ides life-sav ing anti-malaria l medication, the commission said.

The commission said by receiving the wrong treatment, people not only endanger themselves but the region as a whole.

“If drug resistance were to spread, there is a risk that malaria will resurge and jeopardise the successes achieved and investment­s made,” said Professor Arjen Dondorp, deputy director and head of Malaria Research at the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit in Thailand.

Prime Minister Hun Sen and leaders from Lao, Myanmar, Vietnam and Thailand gathered in Phnom Penh last November at the Regional Conference on Combating Falsified and Substandar­d Medicines to address the trans-boundary threat.

Hun Sen said at the conference: “The widespread use of fake and substandar­d medicines might be caused by the high price of the original medicines, an ineffectiv­e production mechanism, and the way they are sold in markets.”

Communicab­le Disease Control department director Ly Sovann said on Wednesday that while there have been no malaria-related deaths reported this year, a few cases of drugresist­ant malaria were still found along the border.

He said it was important to cure those cases so that they don’t spread to other areas.

“The Ministry of Health has strategies to eliminate malaria by 2025. We try to deliver mosquito nets to people, give medicine free of charge and educate people at the community level.

“We also have cooperatio­n from different partners. It is the political will of the government to eradicate malaria,” he said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A young boy receives an anti-malaria vaccinatio­n in Kakab commune’s Chomkar Ouv Loek village, in the capital’s Por Sen Chey district, on Wednesday.
HENG CHIVOAN A young boy receives an anti-malaria vaccinatio­n in Kakab commune’s Chomkar Ouv Loek village, in the capital’s Por Sen Chey district, on Wednesday.

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