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  • Malaria: '700 million cases' stopped in Africa

    Nearly 700 million cases of malaria have been prevented in Africa as a result of concerted efforts to tackle the disease since 2000, a study shows.

    The report published in the journal Nature showed that overall the number of infections fell by 50% across the continent.

    Bed nets were responsible for the vast majority of the decrease.

    There have also been calls to maintain funding to ensure the progress is not undone.

    The researchers from the University of Oxford analysed data from 30,000 sites in sub-Saharan Africa to estimate that 663 million cases were prevented over the past 15 years.

    68% of the reduction was down to the distribution of a billion insecticide-treated bed nets

    22% was attributed to the treatment artemisinin

    10% to spraying homes with insecticide

    One of the researchers, Dr Samir Bhatt, told the BBC News website: "It's just phenomenal.

    "Just by putting in these interventions you've managed to save all these cases, 700 million is a huge number and that's the reality of what happened and that's why it's such an optimistic message."

    But despite the progress, the job is far from done. A child still dies from malaria every minute in Africa.

    The rate of improvement is also slowing - cases were falling by 9% a year up to 2011 but that has since fallen to 5%.

    Dr Bhatt added: "We need to really be careful that we don't start reducing the number of interventions and keep driving forwards. We need to keep redoubling efforts."

    Drug resistance is also a worry. Dr Bhatt describes mosquitoes being able to shrug off the effects of some insecticides as an "absolutely huge" issue in Africa.

    Meanwhile, resistance to the drug artemisinin has been detected in south-east Asia and would seriously hamper efforts to control the disease if resistance spread to Africa.

    Eight African countries are aiming to eliminate the disease by 2020 including Namibia.

    The country's former health minister Dr Richard Kamwi, whose brother died from malaria, said there had been a "drastic reduction" in cases in his country.

    He warned that any cuts to funding "would be very unfortunate".

    He told the BBC News website: "I have seen some countries where elimination was almost in sight and when they stopped indoor spraying we have seen resurgence.

    "I want to emphasise to big funders and government [the need] to keep up their support."
    http://www.bbc.com/news/health-34260339

  • #2
    That number looks a bit odd. Africa has a total of 1.2 bn people.
    No such thing as a good tax - Churchill

    To make mistakes is human. To blame someone else for your mistake, is strategic.

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    • #3
      It's prevalent, even with the control measures there are still a couple of hundred million cases every year and hundreds of thousands of deaths.

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      • #4
        What a waste of money. If only this money could be used for more important venture like AIDS...

        /sarcasm
        "Only Nixon can go to China." -- Old Vulcan proverb.

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        • #5
          I'm still waiting for them to release those GM mosquitoes that possess a dominant gene that causes 98% to be born male into the wild.

          I'm not normally one to promote genocide, but in the case of mosquitoes, I'll make an exception.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by SteveDaPirate View Post
            I'm still waiting for them to release those GM mosquitoes that possess a dominant gene that causes 98% to be born male into the wild.

            I'm not normally one to promote genocide, but in the case of mosquitoes, I'll make an exception.
            Some positive results in tackling Dengue fever in Brazil using this method.

            GM tech attracts a lot of negative publicity, could be difficult in overcoming the PR element.

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            • #7
              Top academics warn that without a proactive approach to insecticide resistance, gains made in malaria prevention could be lost
              LSTM's Director Professor Janet Hemingway, along with 14 other eminent researchers in the field of vector biology, have put together an editorial outlining the need for a more urgent and proactive approach to insecticide resistance, if the gains made in malaria prevention in the 21st century are not to be lost. In an editorial in the journal The Lancet, Professor Hemingway and her colleagues, look at how the last 15 years of control measures and treatment have led to massive reductions in disease prevalence in Africa since 2000. However from the very beginning, the article warns of the looming public health catastrophe should the burden of resistance to insecticide continue to express.

              Following the first indication of malaria parasites becoming resistant to drugs, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended artemisinin combination as the front line treatment for malaria in order to minimise treatment failure. However control remains reliant mainly on one chemical class of insecticides, the pyrethroids, which is the only insecticide used in long lasting insecticide-treated bednets and from 2013 became used in nearly two thirds of all indoor residual spraying (IRS) programmes. The authors point out that this has meant that for more than a decade mosquito vectors of malaria have been targeted with a monotherapy, and inevitably resistance has been selected and pyrethroids are no longer capable of killing mosquitoes in some parts of Africa.

              The current situation in Africa has, in part, been caused due to complacency when resistance first appeared to this class of insecticide in the 1970s, mainly due to pyrethroids being used to protect crops from insect damage. However this original resistance mechanism was caused by a single site mutation, now a more potent form of resistance has seen resilient populations surviving up to 1000 times the concentration of insecticide that kills susceptible mosquitoes. In programmes where IRS have switched to alternative insecticides there has been a substantial fall in cases of malaria, but currently there is no alternative to pyrethroids for the use in bednets and any replacement, could still be five years away from being available.

              The 2012 WHO Global Plan for Insecticide Resistance Management in malaria vectors has raised awareness of the issue and put a framework in place to manage it. However there are major operational challenges to implementing many of the recommendations. The authors ask if, with there being no current alternative to pyrethroids, at what point should existing bednets stop being rolled out, when is it better to concentrate on the barrier protection provided by more durable nets.

              Ultimately the authors, which also include LSTM's Professor Hilary Ranson and Dr Nick Hamon, the CEO of the Innovative Vector Control Consortium (IVCC), point out the successful implementation of the WHO global plan requires the development and operational deployment of new insecticides. IVCC is currently working with industry to develop novel public health-specific insecticides and, with several of these urgently needed products currently in the pipeline, there is a call that a concerted effort be made to streamline the developmental, regulatory, and WHO recommendation pathways.

              Professor Hemingway is keen that researchers learn from lessons of the past: "Countries should be helped to develop rational malaria prevention strategies in order to prolong the efficacy of current vector control methods, ensuring that their efforts are adequately resourced. In terms of new products, it is vital that we do all that we can to overcome hurdles that are preventing them being brought to market now, and introduce them in a format that will ensure they are not rapidly compromised by resistance. All key stakeholders must be committed to playing their parts, or much of the hard won progress in reducing malaria transmission will be lost."
              https://www.sciencedaily.com/release...0213075128.htm

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