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Malaria Hits One In 12 Of World Population
By Steve Connor
10 March 2005
The Independent
More than half a billion people are suffering from malaria today, twice as many
as scientists thought had been affected by one of the biggest killers in the
developing world.
The new figures are the result of detailed research that gives the most accurate
assessment yet of the disease that kills at least a million people a year.
Scientists now believe there are about 515 million cases of malaria out of 2.2
billion people who are at risk - about a third of the world's population.
The discovery throws the slow progress of the world's fight against malaria into
sharp relief.
In countries such as Malawi, malaria claims more lives each year than Aids, but
attracts a fraction of the attention. Coachloads of overseas visitors come to
view the Aids projects run by Médicins Sans Frontières in the country, but few
are interested in malaria.
Malaria has never captured the public imagination as Aids has done, even though
children are its chief victims. Malaria is old and Aids is new. Most important,
malaria is not a disease that affects the West - except for those fortunate
enough to holiday in the tropics - whereas Aids threatens us all. The scale on
which the parasite, transmitted by the mosquito, kills is breathtaking. A new
malaria map of the world suggests that the incidence of malaria in Africa is
some 50 per cent higher than previous estimates by the World Health Organisation
and up to 200 per cent higher for areas outside Africa, such as in south-east
Asia.
Professor Robert Snow, of the Wellcome Trust Research Laboratories in Nairobi,
Kenya, who led the study, warned that the true figures for the spread of malaria
across the globe may even be higher than these latest estimates.
"We have taken a conservative approach to estimating how many attacks occur
globally each year but even so the problem is far bigger than we previously
thought," he said.
"Getting numbers right is important. Not knowing the size of the problem limits
our ability to articulate how much money we need to tackle the problem - not
knowing where the problem is located means you can't spend wisely," he said.
For 40 years chloroquine was the standard treatment for malaria. Patients
swallowed a couple of pills at the onset of the fever and within 48 hours they
would be better. It was safe, effective and cheap.
But over recent decades, a drug-resistant strain of malaria, Plasmodium
falciparum, has been growing in Africa and now accounts for well over 90 per
cent of cases. Surveys in east Africa show that almost two-thirds of patients
given chloroquine and nearly half of those on its successor,
sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, have died. The only effective therapies are those
based on artemesinin, a drug derived from a weed that grows wild in Africa and
the Far East.
Six years ago the WHO set a target to halve the number of deaths by 2010, but
instead the toll has risen by at least a quarter, and in some areas by as much
as 50 per cent, because victims have not had the right drugs. Hundreds of
thousands of children have died needlessly and the disease has gone virtually
unnoticed in the West. Malaria has been a scourge of humanity since antiquity
and although it is largely preventable with the use of mosquito nets and
insecticides it remains one of the biggest killers of children under five.
The disease, caused by a blood parasite transmitted in a mosquito bite, was
eradicated from industrialised countries of the northern hemisphere about half a
century ago but it still threatens some 40 per cent of the world - mostly in the
poorest countries of Africa, South America and southern Asia.
More than 80 per cent of malaria deaths occur in sub-Saharan Africa and the WHO
estimates that every day the disease kills 3,000 children. Those that survive
often suffer brain disease or paralysis. Economists for the United Nations have
identified malaria as one of the top four causes of poverty with many African
governments spending up to 40 per cent of their total health budgets on the
medical care or control of malaria.
In Africa alone the total economic burden of malaria is estimated at $12bn
(£6.7bn) a year, according to the WHO.
The deadliest form of malaria is the single-cell parasite Plasmodium falciparum
and the latest estimates of its spread suggest that there are more cases in
south-east Asia than previously suggested.
"Our work has demonstrated that nearly 25 per cent of worldwide cases occur in
south-east Asia and the western Pacific, whereas most people regard Plasmodium
falciparum as a problem particular to Africa," Professor Snow said.
In 1998, the WHO produced estimates of the extent of malaria based on reports of
cases compiled by individual countries and data on the intensity of transmission
within a particular region. However, it is widely accepted that the two methods
are flawed because many cases of malaria are not reported to the authorities and
transmission rates can vary widely because of local factors such as the weather.
The new study uses a more proactive approach with a combination of
epidemiological, geographical and demographic data. "We have taken a
science-driven approach to working out who is at risk, where they are located
and what their chances would be of developing an attack of malaria," Professor
Snow said.
©2005 Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.
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