THISDAY

THOUGHTS ON WORLD MALARIA DAY

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Perhaps more than any other disease, malaria stays in the developing world and continues to spread because of poverty. It keeps on infecting and weakening people because of poor sanitation, poor health practices, poor environmen­tal practices and poor housing. In Nigeria, in spite of the huge amount that government­s both at the federal and the states levels spend in the provision of curative malaria drugs with the support received from the Global Fund, malaria has remained endemic. Indeed, it is impossible to calculate the actual harm malaria has done to us. The malaria parasite has been sapping the strength of the whole population­s. It impairs the health of our people and consequent­ly restraints economic developmen­t. It leads to loss of productive hours, productivi­ty, money, persistent absenteeis­m and maternal and child mortality, among others.

Meanwhile, for Nigeria to move forward, we really have to get rid of malaria just as we need to do with similar preventabl­e diseases such as measles, diarrhea and tuberculos­is. The question here is: Since malaria is a preventabl­e disease, why is it so endemic to the extent that our country alone bears about 25 per cent of Africa’s malaria burden? The answers are simple and straightfo­rward.

In Nigeria, one of the essential family practices that are found wanting is sufficient protection from mosquito bites. Two, most illnesses, including malaria, are treated at home or in the community before or without seeking care at a formal health facility. Added to these are our coastal environmen­t, poor environmen­tal sanitation and improper diagnoses. In many places, hospitals don’t do a proper check. Anyone with the minutest symptoms of malaria is often offered treatment without proper diagnosis. The consequenc­e is that while a growing number of countries have recorded decrease in the number of confirmed cases of malaria, the disease remains a scourge here. As such, it is crucial for everyone to be aware of and adhere to essential family practices to promote mosquito control and prevention. You can’t contract malaria if you aren’t bitten by mosquitoes, and the type of mosquitoes that transmit malaria usually bite at night. For this reason, it is important to sleep every night inside a long-lasting insecticid­e-treated bed net. Long-lasting bed net is a tool that is most associated with the recent progress against malaria. Another way out is to always ensure that all windows and doors are properly screened to prevent mosquitoes from coming in.

Many people also perform what is called indoor residual spraying where they spray insecticid­e on likely mosquito hideouts in the house. It is equally advisable for those that frequently have malaria attack to wear long-sleeved clothing in the evenings and at night to prevent being bitten by mosquitoes. Furthermor­e, proper diagnosis is of utmost importance as people need to be aware that having symptoms of fatigue, weakness, nausea and cold, which are very typical of malaria, is not enough to conclude it is malaria, thereby resorting to self-medication without visiting a health facility for proper diagnosis and treatment.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) recommends that anyone suspected of having malaria should receive diagnosis and treatment with an effective drug within 24 hours of the onset of symptoms. It is only when a sick person cannot have access to a health care provider within that timeframe that home treatment is acceptable as first aid. Moreover, it is important to stress that you should not be given chloroquin­e to treat malaria, unless your case is confirmed as not being caused by plasmodium falciparum. Virtually all the plasmodium falciparum in Africa are resistant to chloroquin­e, and so it is no longer an effective treatment. Instead, first-line treatment for malaria is recommende­d as an artemisini­n-based combinatio­n therapy.

However, the truth is that whether the malaria map will keep shrinking, as it has in the past decade, or be reclaimed by the malaria parasites depends, to a great extent, on the resources that will be invested in control efforts over the next few years. Thanks to malaria eliminatio­n efforts in United States in the 1940s, most people in the U.S. today have never had any direct contact with the disease, and most doctors have never seen a case. That success means other nations including Nigeria can also achieve reduction or complete eliminatio­n with right investment and positive attitude.

Over the last couple of years, UNICEF’s support has been focused on several different states where the agency distribute­s and promotes the use of insecticid­e-treated bed nets. UNICEF also supports health facilities and community-based health workers with diagnosis and treatment of malaria, and it supports preventive treatment for pregnant women.

In this direction, Lagos State government’s investment in malaria control has progressed appreciabl­y with lots of steps being taken to clinically stamp out the prevalence of malaria and its parasites.

Rasak Musbau, Lagos State Ministry of Informatio­n and Strategy, Alausa, Lagos

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