Khaleej Times

‘No local malaria cases in UAE for 10 years’

- Asma Ali Zain

dubai — At least 4,600 imported cases of malaria were detected in the UAE last year, even as the country has been free from local cases for the past 10 years.

The last indigenous positive case was discovered in an Emirati in 1997 in the Masfoot area, said officials on Tuesday while observing World Malaria Day.

Dr Aisha Suhail, Director of Primary Health Care (PHC) at the Ministry of Health and Prevention (MoHP), said that most cases came from the African continent, India, Pakistan, Iran, Sudan, Nepal and the Philippine­s.

She said the ministry had been taking concrete steps to keep the country free from the disease.

“World Malaria Day is an occasion to highlight the continual need for efforts to mobilise the commitment to the prevention and control of the disease as well as to increase awareness among individual­s on avoiding the infection.”

She said that the ministry’s strategy had been effective in protecting the community from communicab­le diseases and controllin­g them through an efficient preventive healthcare system.

“The UAE was one of the first countries in the Middle East that was declared officially free of malaria in 2007 by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and that there have been no locally recorded cases of the disease since 1997,” she added.

“We have a robust malaria surveillan­ce programme to detect and treat cases as well as the detection and control of insects in cooperatio­n with neighbouri­ng countries.”

The ministry has also set up traveller’s clinics at the primary healthcare centres preventive medicine department that will provide free vaccinatio­ns and medicine for various infectious diseases to citizens and residents.

“The clinic also offers health education and preventive medicines for malaria to people who are travelling to countries where malaria is endemic.”

Mosallem Aahmed Kamra, coordinato­r of the Technical Committee for Malaria at the ministry, said: “Keeping the country free of the disease was the bigger challenge.”

The ministry has already put in place an early detection system. “We approach companies and get blood samples from workers who have recently travelled. This way we can know if they have the disease or not,” Mosallem told Khaleej Times.

Malaria is a non-communicab­le disease which is spread when the female mosquito bites a human. Currently, there is no vaccine for malaria.

“We have the oral tablets that are given to patients,” said Mosallem.

asmaalizai­n@khaleejtim­es.com

We have a robust malaria surveillan­ce programme to detect and treat cases as well as the detection and control of insects in cooperatio­n with neighbouri­ng countries.” Dr Aisha Suhail, Director of Primary Health Care at MoHP

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