Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

An effective alliance could combat malaria

At the heart of the problem is growing resistance to the drug artemisini­n, the mainstay of malaria treatment worldwide

- Benjamin Rolfe Benjamin Rolfe is executive secretary, Asia Pacific Leaders Malaria Alliance The views expressed by the author are personal

As all eyes focus on the Ebola crisis unfolding in West Africa, few have noticed the world’s arrival at a new tipping point in the response to another global health threat: malaria. With about 200 million people contractin­g the disease each year, the drug used as the first line of defence throughout the world could become ineffectiv­e within a few years. This could potentiall­y trigger a significan­t rise in malaria-related deaths.

At the heart of the problem is growing resistance to the drug artemisini­n, the mainstay of treatment worldwide for the most dangerous form of malaria. Signs of resistance were first reported in western Cambodia, and the problem has now also been identified in Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam.

The number of malaria cases in these areas is relatively low, but experts predict that if artemisini­n resistance was to take a hold on the Indian subcontine­nt or, worse still, in subSaharan Africa, the consequenc­es could be incalculab­le. The gains of over two decades of global struggles against malaria could possibly be undone and hundreds of millions of dollars in investment squandered.

Current headlines describing the consequenc­es of hesitating in response to infectious diseases offer some timely advice. Asia must launch an urgent, all-out offensive against malaria and drug resistance or suffer the after-effects for years to come. A collective, high-level engagement of government­s across the Asia-Pacific region is essential, as well as that of key malaria partners and funders.

All eyes are turning to the ninth East Asian Summit (EAS), to be held next week in Naypyidaw, the newly built capital of Myanmar. With the agenda yet to be finalised, health experts are pushing for recognitio­n by the region’s leaders that malaria poses more than just a health threat — if unchecked, it could quickly become a drag on regional economic developmen­t.

Australia and Vietnam are leading campaigner­s in the anti-malaria cause. They will be urging colleagues attending the summit to collective­ly adopt an ambitious, yet feasible target: complete eliminatio­n of the disease in Asia Pacific in the next 15 years.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott of Australia and Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung of Vietnam are co-chairs of the Asia Pacific Leaders Malaria Alliance (APLMA), a firstof-its-kind grouping of heads of government devoted to battling malaria. The Alliance, hosted by the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB), is focusing on tackling the problem of shrinking financial support for the malaria effort and on improving access to highest quality malaria medicines.

Myanmar, as the current chair of ASEAN (the 10-nation Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations) and host of the East Asian Summit in November, has a pivotal role in setting the agenda of the Naypyidaw gathering. While ASEAN economic integratio­n — scheduled for next year — is likely to dominate discussion­s, Myanmar is expected to show that after years of isolation, it is also now emerging as a regional leader in the fight against malaria.

And with good cause. Of the countries in the Greater Mekong Sub-region, Myanmar has the highest overall malaria burden. The disease is highly endemic across the country, especially towards the eastern and western border areas. At the same time, the emergence of artemisini­n resistance along the Myanmar-Thailand border is proving to be an unwelcome obstacle in efforts to bring the disease under control.

The fact that resistance to artemisini­n has extended from its presumed point of origin, at the Thailand–Cambodia border, to as far west as Myanmar is a particular cause for concern. If resistance reaches India, as has happened with previous front-line antimalari­al medicines, the task of controllin­g its global spread will be exponentia­lly more difficult.

Myanmar’s malaria response has been vigorous, including through the Myanmar Artemisini­n Resistance Containmen­t (MARC) initiative, which focuses on malaria case detection and management in hard-toreach areas, and scaling up of rapid diagnostic tests. Neverthele­ss, Myanmar also knows that Asia — and the global health community — is looking towards the summit as an opportunit­y to accelerate the regional response to this rapidly evolving threat.

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