| Malaria in the Americas: No Time to Ease Up |
Washington, D.C., November 6, 2008 (PAHO)—Cases of malaria have declined 32 percent in Latin American and the Caribbean since 2000, and deaths have dropped nearly 40 percent. Yet more than 140 million people in the Region (16 percent of the population) remain at risk of the disease, experts said today in a panel discussion marking Malaria Day in the Americas at the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO).
The progress so far is largely due to improved treatment of the most deadly form of the disease, along with more effective mosquito control, said the experts. Continued funding for both treatment and control is essential to consolidate these achievements and to spur further progress toward elimination of transmission of the disease throughout the hemisphere, they said.
"Malaria is a problem not only for health, but also for social and economic development," said Jarbas Barbosa, PAHO Area Manager for Health Surveillance and Disease Management. "We have the infrastructure, commitment, tools, and strategies to eliminate malaria."
"Sustaining commitment to high levels of funding even in the face of lower prevalence is essential to get to elimination," said Matthew Lynch, Director of the Global Program on Malaria at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Malaria is caused by Plasmodium parasites, which are carried by mosquitoes and transmitted to people through their bites. In Latin America and the Caribbean, 75 percent of malaria infections are caused by P. vivax and are rarely fatal, while 25 percent are caused by the more lethal P. falciparum, the dominant malaria parasite in Africa. Out of a total 775,500 malaria cases in 2007 in Latin America and the Caribbean, 212 deaths were reported.
Past efforts to eliminate malaria from the Americas have yielded mixed results. Mosquito control efforts in the mid–20th century succeeded in eradicating the disease from North America and most of the Caribbean, and dramatically reduced it in Central and South America.
However, cutbacks in public health funding—largely as a result of the decline in cases—led to a major malaria resurgence in a number of countries. Later control efforts succeeded in reducing the disease, but not in eliminating it.
The most recent efforts were launched in 2000, when a group of South American countries joined together—with PAHO support—in the Amazon Malaria Initiative (AMI). In response to World Health Organization (WHO) findings that malaria parasites in other regions had developed resistance to traditional drugs, AMI set out to assess the emergence of resistance in the Amazon Region. The group documented the growth of resistance to older single-drug treatments and then collectively introduced more effective artemisinin-based combination drug therapies to replace them.
"This is a good example of how cross-border collaboration and consensus-building can be used to achieve a public health impact," said Trenton Ruebush, an expert on malaria and other tropical diseases at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). The AMI network formed to study drug resistance is now serving to improve laboratory diagnosis in the countries as well as to strengthen country capacity in entomology and for pharmaceutical testing, Ruebush noted.
Current AMI efforts focus on the widespread use of insecticide-treated bed nets, indoor residual spraying, and treatment of malaria cases with artemisinin-based combination drug therapies.
PAHO VIDEO: Malaria Day in the Americas
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2013
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The World Malaria Report 2012 summarizes information received from 104 malaria-endemic countries and other sources, and updates the analyses presented in the 2011 report. It highlights the progress made towards the global malaria targets set for 2015 and describes current challenges for global malaria control and elimination.
2012
In the Americas, malaria cases have declined nearly 60% since 2000 (12/20/2012)
PAHO Honors 2012 Malaria Champions of the Americas (11/09/2012)
On 6th Annual Malaria Day in the Americas, PAHO Will Honor Malaria Champions of the Americas (11/05/2012)
2011
World Malaria Report 2011 (12/15/2011)
PAHO Honors Malaria Champions of the Americas 2011 (11/09/2011)
Países de las Américas acordaron plan para reducir la malaria, prevenir su reintroducción y mantener los logros (09/29/2011)
AMI/RAVREDA celebró 10 años de lucha contra la malaria en el Amazonas (09/15/2011)
Celebrating 10 Years of Collaboration: Looking into the Future Together (09/12/2011)
AMI+RAVREDA Celebrating Ten Years of Collaboration: Looking into the Future Together (09/03/2011)
2010
News and Media Information about "Malaria Day in the Americas 2010" (11/12/2010)
PAHO Names "Malaria Champions of the Americas 2010" (11/04/2010)
PAHO Celebrates Fourth Annual “Malaria Day in the Americas," Recognizes “Malaria Champions" (10/29/2010)
Expertos en resistencia a los antimaláricos se reúnen en Panamá (07/14/2010)
Malaria Burden More than Halved in the Americas (04/22/2010)
Photos: Meeting of National Directors of Epidemiology and Malaria Programs (03/23/2010)
2009
PAHO Honors "Malaria Champions of the Americas 2009" (11/11/2009)
PAHO, PAHEF, and The George Washington University launch the Malaria Champions of the Americas Award (06/16/2009)
2008
Malaria in the Americas: No Time to Ease Up (11/06/2008)
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Regional Office for the Americas of the World Health Organization |