Blood screenings in what is considered the epicentre of drug-resistant malaria in Cambodia (Pailin Province) (Photo: Brendan Brady/IRIN) |
PHNOM PENH, 7 June 2012 (IRIN) – Two years
after some US$22 million in donor funds were pumped into malaria control
along the Cambodia-Thailand border to fight off suspected resistance to
treatment, health workers say the battle is not over.
“If you take your foot off the… [accelerator] we can lose everything
we have done in the past two to three years,” Steven Bjorge,
anti-malaria team leader in Cambodia for the World Health Organization
(WHO), told IRIN in February 2012.
The government reported 103,000 malaria infections and 151 deaths
nationwide in 2010. A year later, 85,000 reported infections led to 93
deaths – a 38-percent decline in mortality.
When health workers screened more than 3,600 people for malaria in
Pailin Province, near the Thai-Cambodia border, in May 2010, only two
out of every 1,000 people tested positive for the fatal strain of
malaria (falciparum) that had shown resistance to the recommended
treatment, based on the drug artemisinin.
Villages in this province are in the zone hit by artemisinin resistance in earlier years.
Resurgence risk
Bjorge warned that any decline in vigilance could lead to resurgence.
A recent analysis of “historical failures to maintain gains against
[malaria]” identified 75 significant returns of the disease in 61
countries from the 1930s to the 2000s.
The authors of the analysis concluded that nine out of 10 such
returns were due to weaker malaria control programmes, brought about by
funding problems in 54 percent of cases. Other causes included
“purposeful cessation”, war, administrative problems, community
non-cooperation, vector and drug resistance, population movements among
humans as well as mosquitoes, and climate changes.
Elimination
The government has announced a goal of zero malaria cases by 2025, but is struggling to hang on to donor funds.
The Global Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria pledged
almost $80 million in two current grants to fight malaria in Cambodia,
but government agencies were unable to collect some $20 million – 35
percent of one grant – due to “performance below the expectations”, said
Andrew Hurst, a Global Fund spokesman.
“Grant signed amounts represent available fund ceilings and are not
an entitlement,” he wrote in response to a query by IRIN about the
undisbursed amount, which is still available but must be requested
again.
Aid analysts warn that the Global Fund’s stricter reporting requirements after a funding squeeze may hobble emergency responses.
“There is also a danger that some risk-reduction measures primarily
intended for high-risk countries will be applied to all countries,
thereby increasing the administrative burden and slowing down the work
in low-risk countries,” wrote Angela Kageni, a senior programme officer
at Aidspan, the Kenya-based not-for-profit Global Fund watchdog.
The director of Cambodia’s Centre for Malaria Control said the centre
cannot comment without a “final decision” from the Global Fund on an
upcoming review of the country’s grant, scheduled to end in 2015. The
next phase begins on 1 January 2013.
One challenge in reaching zero cases will be detecting asymptomatic
incidents – when people have built up enough resistance to the parasite
not to display symptoms but still carry the disease – said Didier
Menard, chief of the molecular epidemiology unit at the Pasteur
Institute in the capital, Phnom Penh.
Such people constitute a “hidden malaria parasite reservoir”, so when
a mosquito bites them, and then bites someone else, the disease can be
transmitted. But the test and the laboratory equipment required to
detect such low parasite levels – polymerase chain reaction (PCR) – is
expensive and not widely available or fool-proof, Menard noted.
Another challenge will be migrant workers infected with malaria –
either domestic seasonal workers or those coming from a neighbouring
country – Bjorge pointed out. “A comprehensive intervention is hard with
people who do not even live under a tent… [Our efforts] are trial and
error right now.”
Some 35 percent of Cambodia’s population is constantly on the move, according to the most recent government estimate.
As a result, in recent decades malaria hotspots have shifted from
rural areas to forested areas that attract seasonal migrants, Bjorge
said. “Those will be the hardest to reach.”
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