The Guardian (USA)

Malaria campaigns fight off Covid disruption­s to deliver programmes

- Samuel Okiror in Kampala

More than 90% of anti-malaria campaigns planned this year across four continents are on track, despite disruption­s caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to new research.

The delivery of insecticid­e-treated nets and provision of antimalari­al medicines in the majority of malaria-affected countries across Africa, Asia and the Americas were still going ahead, a high-level meeting organised by the RBM Partnershi­p to End Malaria heard on Thursday.

More than 200m nets are on track to be distribute­d across more than 30 countries and more than 20 million children in 12 countries across the Sahel are expected to receive essential antimalari­al drugs. Kenya, Malawi and Ghana have managed to immunise more than 300,000 children against malaria through a pilot malaria vaccine programme launched last year.

Countries such as El Salvador, Malaysia and China have not registered any malaria cases for three consecutiv­e years, the meeting heard.

“This year, under the worst of circumstan­ces, countries have proven they don’t need to choose between protecting population­s from Covid-19 or malaria; they can, and should, do both,” said Abdourahma­ne Diallo, who heads the RBM – formerly Roll Back Malaria – Partnershi­p to End Malaria.

“Despite the unpreceden­ted challenges faced, it is a remarkable achievemen­t that countries and their partners around the world have successful­ly sustained planned malaria efforts, including distributi­ng record numbers of insecticid­e-treated nets, and [are] continuing the march to zero malaria – ensuring that communitie­s remain protected from the deadly mosquito bite,” he said.

In April, the World Health Organizati­on warned that if work to prevent malaria was disrupted by Covid-19, up to 769,000 people could die of the disease this year.

More than 90% of global deaths from malaria occur in sub-Saharan Africa.

“We must use Covid-19 as an opportunit­y to learn lessons to improve collaborat­ion and innovation, as well as set our ambitions higher for achieving zero malaria,” said Peter Sands, executive director of the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculos­is and Malaria.

After the coronaviru­s pandemic was declared, the WHO advised government­s to adapt their malaria campaigns to protect healthcare workers and people collecting tablets and nets from Covid-19.

 ?? Photograph: Jérôme Delay/AP ?? A baby from the village of Tomali, Malawi, is injected with a vaccine against malaria.
Photograph: Jérôme Delay/AP A baby from the village of Tomali, Malawi, is injected with a vaccine against malaria.

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