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UNICEF
and WHO launch 'World Malaria Report'
Sabine Dolan, UNICEF
May
03, 2005
http://www.unicef.org/health/index_26448.html
NEW YORK – UNICEF
and the World Health Organization have jointly launched the first-ever
‘World Malaria Report’, at UNICEF headquarters in New York.
Officiating
at the event were UNICEF Executive Director Ann M. Veneman,
the Director of the WHO's Roll Back Malaria Department Dr. Fatoumata
Nafo-Traoré, and UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Kul Gautam.
The ‘World Malaria
Report’ is a comprehensive study that documents the burden of malaria
worldwide and describes progress in many countries in the effort
to control the disease.
Malaria:
The global situation
An
estimated 350-500 million people suffer from malaria every year.
Describing the situation, UNICEF Executive Director Ann M. Veneman
said: "Malaria is a disease that that kills one child in sub-Saharan
Africa every 30 seconds. The numbers are astounding, and unacceptable.
Globally, more than 1 million people die due to malaria every year,
the vast majority of them young children under the age of five."
Malaria is a
preventable and curable disease. "We will not be able to substantially
reduce child deaths in Africa and meet the Millennium Development
Goals without getting serious about combating malaria," said
UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Kul Gautam. "The science is
proven. We now have tools that work and we know how to deliver them.
There is now no excuse for failing so many children."
World Malaria
Report: Progress made but much remains to be done
In
the last five years, real progress has been made in fighting malaria.
The ‘World Malaria Report’ describes successful control efforts
that are having an impact in many countries worldwide.
Many strategies
can help prevent the disease and drastically reduce malaria mortality.
Among these is the use of insecticide-treated bed nets, which can
reduce malaria illness by 50 per cent in areas of high transmission.
Effective anti-malarial drugs such as artemisinin-based combination
therapies (ACTs) are also available.
However much
still remains to be done. The high cost and limited supply of the
necessary tools to control the disease remain a challenge.
"Money
is not the whole answer. Many developing countries, African countries
in particular, need to strengthen their health systems and there
is an urgent need for greater investment in research," said
Dr. Fatoumata Nafo-Traoré. "We are pleased by the recent
surge in funding for vaccine research, but strong research initiatives
are needed for developing new medicines and safe, new insecticides."
Overall, the
‘World Malaria Report’ shows that the implementation of effective
programs is beginning to bear fruit and is slowly turning the tide
against this deadly disease.
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