NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Invest in research to curb malaria, govts urged

- BY NHAU MANGIRAZI

HEALTH advocates have called on African government­s to invest in research and innovation to deal with malaria as a public health threat.

The call was made during the commemorat­ions of World Malaria Day held under the theme Accelerati­ng the fight against malaria for a more equitable world.

In an interview, Community Working Group on Health executive director Itai Rusike said the fight against malaria was one of humanity’s most significan­t public health successes.

He noted the progress made in malaria control over the last two decades resulting in a reduction in overall cases and deaths.

“But after years of steady decline, malaria cases and deaths are on the rise. Climate change and increasing resistance to insecticid­es are affecting the significan­t gains that the Global Fund partnershi­p has fought to achieve over the last two decades,” Rusike said.

“The disease is particular­ly devastatin­g for pregnant women and young children in sub-Saharan Africa. Of the 608 000 people who died of malaria in 2022, 95% lived in the region, with most of them being children under five years of age.”

He called for equitable access to vaccines for children under the age of five.

“Innovation­s have the power to transform the fight against malaria. Vaccines for children, when thoughtful­ly deployed together with existing tools can also contribute to getting back on track to defeat malaria,” Rusike said.

Africa accounts for approximat­ely 94% of malaria cases and deaths worldwide.

Healthcare advocate Ngadzirisa Tariro Kutadza applauded Zimbabwe for eliminatin­g malaria in some districts.

“The government must continue distributi­ng nets to pregnant women and children under five years. Civil society organisati­ons are not doing enough on malaria awareness initiative­s as we still grapple with misuse of nets in communitie­s,” she said.

Science for Africa Foundation, a regional body, is funding malaria research to help the fight against a significan­t public health challenge in Africa.

The burden of the disease remains disproport­ionately high, according to latest data from the World Health Organisati­on.

In a statement during the commemorat­ions, the World Health Organisati­on called for action through strengthen­ing primary healthcare to reach outlying communitie­s.

“Funding should be prioritise­d for the most marginalis­ed population­s who are less able to access services and are hardest hit when they become ill.

“End discrimina­tion and stigma against these population­s and include malaria control interventi­ons in universal health coverage,” the UN agency said.

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