News
Articles for July 2006
Select Month

Bukenya speaks on DDT  - New Vision Online
The Vice-President, Prof. Gilbert Bukenya, has dispelled fears that Uganda’s agricultural exports might be banned from Europe due to the Government’s decision to use DDT to fight malaria.

Kenya: New Malaria Treatment Gets Under Way  - UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
Kenya's health ministry is distributing the more effective malaria treatment, artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT), to public health centres in areas prone to epidemics, a senior official said on Friday.


Malaria Truths Discovered By Einstein Researchers  - Eurekalert
Researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have managed to delve deep into the secrets of the malaria disease by using their previous research on tuberculosis.

Malaria Adversely Affects Over 70 Percent of African Business  - Joe De capua
A new study says over 70 percent of African business are adversely affected by malaria, with nearly 40 percent reporting serious consequences.

Uganda: Health Threatens To Sue Nema Over DDT Use  - The Monitor (Kampala)
The Ministry of Health is ready to go to court to secure clearance to use DDT to control malaria in case the National Environment Authority fails to give it green light to use the anti-mosquito chemical in the country.


Tackling malaria makes good business sense  - Global Health Initiative
Fighting malaria is good for business, governments and the community, highlights a report launched today entitled Business and Malaria: A Neglected Threat by the Global Health Initiative (GHI) of the World Economic Forum.

Rwanda: Country to Get $85 Million to Fight Malaria  - The New Times (Kigali)
Rwanda will be getting $17 million (USD) each year for five years, to fight malaria, John Dunlop, the head of Health services for USAID Rwanda, has said.


Rwanda: 12 Districts to Benefit From Bush Malaria Fund  - The New Times (Kigali)
Twelve districts are set to benefit from eighty five million dollars (US$85m) from the US President Bush's Malaria Initiative to help fight Malaria.

Up to 10m malaria tablets 'may be destroyed'  - Andrew Jack
Millions of tablets of a highly effective medicine for malaria may have to be destroyed in the next few months because orders from the developing world are substantially below original forecasts, Sanofi-Aventis, the French-based pharmaceutical group, has warned.

NGO Takes Giant Step by Offering Free Screening  - Charles Takyi-Boadu
As part of measures to eradicate malaria from Ghana, an NGO, Infanta Malaria Prevention Foundation, has started a sensitization campaign, educating and giving free screening tests to some communities.

Study raises malaria block hopes  - BBC News
Scientists have made a key breakthrough in understanding the genetics of a parasite they hope could be used to block the spread of malaria.

Real risks, irrelevant risks  - Fiona Kobusingye-Boynes
We desperately need the African equivalent of chemo drugs -- DDT and other insecticides -- to prevent this terrible disease.

Fake malaria drugs will 'murder' Africa - WHO  - Tan Ee Lyn
Hong Kong - Fake China-made malaria drugs, which have flooded parts of Asia and killed many people in recent years, are beginning to show up in Africa where the dummy tablets are expected to take far more lives, a WHO expert has warned.

Give malaria, due coverage - Chakachaka  - Deogratius Kiduduye
Despite challenges facing the media in the continent, African journalists must remain focused so as to improve reporting on HIV and AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

State moves to contain malaria  - Stephen Makabila
The Kenyan Government has moved to contain a malaria outbreak in West-Pokot District, which has claimed over 50 lives.


Wrong drugs causing high malaria mortality  - Sunday Standard Team
The country’s healthcare system is hanging precariously as health workers blame bad procurement laws and the bureaucratic red-tape that donors have to contend with when dealing with issues of procurement of drugs and other medical equipment.

NEMA gets DDT report  - Alfred Wasike
THE health ministry has finally handed over to the National Environment Management Authority (NEMA), an environmental impact study of the effect DDT (Dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane) on the environment.

The Truth about Malaria and DDT  - Grassroot Perspective
After long resistance to using the chemical, the USAID, World Health Organization and several African health ministers are once again emphasizing the vital role that DDT can play in disease control.

Ugandan environmentalists criticise govt over DDT  - By Gerald Businge
Kampala (AND) The National Association of professional Environmentalists in Uganda has criticized Parliament for allowing government to spray DDT to kill malaria causing mosquitoes.

Lukyamuzi could be an enemy of Ugandans  - Fiona Kobusingye
KEN Lukyamuzi has taken his anti-DDT campaign further, this time round calling on his supporters to cut anybody who comes knocking at their doors with the insecticide meant to control mosquitoes.

Gambia: Gambia Registers Drop in Malaria, Others  - The Daily Observer (Banjul)
Dr Tamsir Mbowe, Secretary of State for Health and Social Welfare, yesterday said the malaria prevalence, alongside maternal mortality and morbidity have dropped in the country.


Organic farmers oppose DDT use on malaria  - Patrick Jaramogi
Many developed countries continue to condemn millions of Africans to death based on inconclusive evidence that DDT is harmful to humans, this is spite of the fact that they themselves used DDT to eradicate the disease years ago.

The truth about malaria and DDT  - Paul Driessen
Inaccurate claims about DDT are killing African children.


Spending Warren's Money  - Roger Bate
With Warren Buffett's largesse added to his own, Bill Gates has about $60 billion to spend on health and development -- how should he spend it?

Africa Malaria Day and Nigeria’s new strategy  - The Tide Online
On the 25th of April 2000 an unprecedented number of Heads of State or representatives from 44 malaria afflicted countries in Africa came together in Abuja, Nigeria to attend the first-ever Summit on Malaria.


Africa Fighting Malaria Responds To Berkeley University Study Into DDT And Neurodevelopment In Children  - MedicalNewsToday.com
Once again media attention has been given to research that links DDT exposure to human harm. Africa Fighting Malaria rejects this conclusion and finds it both irresponsible and misleading.

The truth about malaria and DDT  - Paul Driessen
Inaccurate claims about DDT are killing African children. People need to learn the facts.


Intermittent Treatment Found Effective In Malaria  - Medindia.com
An intermittent treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, a common and cheap anti-malarial was found effective in treating malaria in Mozambican children by Rafael Pardo, director of the Fundación BBVA, and Pedro Alonso, coordinator of the Centre of International Health of Hospital Clínic de Barcelona.

G8 urges lower tariffs to help poor get medicine  - TODAYonline.com
Leaders of the Group of Eight industrialised nations have called for lower customs duties on drug imports to bring medicine and medical technology into easier reach for people in the world's poorest countries.


Malaria & homeopathy  - Sense About Science
In July 2006, Sense About Science brought together leading experts in malaria and tropical diseases to respond to public misinformation about alternative ways to prevent malaria.

Malaria Foundation International Announces First Annual Awards to Honor Unsung Heroes and Leaders in Science, Business, Education and Media in the Fight Against Malaria  - PR.com
The Malaria Foundation International (MFI) announces the 2006 Inaugural Malaria Awards.

Zanzibar sprays over 9,700 households against malaria  - Xinhua
A total of 9,719 households in Zanzibar have been sprayed against malaria-spreading mosquitoes

Intermittent Treatment Found Effective In Malaria  - Àlex Argemí
An intermittent treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, a common and cheap anti-malarial was found effective in treating malaria in Mozambican children...

Coburn to Barosso: End threats against African countries that use DDT to stop malaria  - Paul Driessen
Physician and US Senator Tom Coburn, MD, has written European Union President José Manuel Barroso, seeking his “support and help in a life saving effort,” to end malaria and express support for countries choosing to do so by using DDT.

Homeopaths 'endangering lives' by offering malaria remedies  - Alok Jha
Doctors and scientists have warned holidaymakers not to use homeopathic remedies for malaria and other serious tropical diseases or their lives could be put at risk.

KENYA: Battling malaria in western region  - IRIN
Kenya continues to ban the controlled use of DDT for public health, despite the fact that millions of individuals suffer daily from malaria.

World Bank chief on four-day tour  - Daily News
World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz was scheduled to arrive in Tanzania late yesterday for a four-day visit at the invitation of President Jakaya Kikwete, the bank's local office said in a statement.

400 people hired in Isles’ anti-malaria campaign  - Issa Yussuf, Zanzibar
More than 400 people will be hired to implement Zanzibar’s anti-malaria initiative, which got underway in Pemba last weekend.

Malaria tripartite to spend R18m for eradication  - SABC news
The Mpumalanga provincial government has increased the budget for the tripartite malaria prevention campaign in the region including Swaziland and Mozambique to R18 million.

Zanzibar sprays households in anti-malaria effort  - IRIN
At least 452 workers took part in spraying the households with the lambda-cyhalothrin (ICON) chemical in the campaign dubbed Indoor Residual Spray

Kenya enforces new malaria treatment policy  - AngolaPress
Health authorities in Kenya Thursday announced far-reaching changes in the national anti-malaria treatment policy in an effort to finding a lasting solution to the malaria menace that is so far claiming 15% of children under five annually.

Govt to distribute 1.2m free mosquito nets  - Fredrick Odiero
The Kenyan government has announced that it will distribute 1.2 million long lasting mosquito nets to children under 5 years old in various parts of the country in an effort to fight malaria.

Gates in SA this week to check up on projects  - Business Day
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates arrives in SA this week to check up on projects supported by the philanthropic foundation he formed with his wife Melinda six years ago.

Zanzibar launches new campaign against malaria  - Xinhua
Zanzibar has launched a campaign to spray approximately 210,000 households.

KENYA: Campaign against malaria to be launched  - IRIN
In an effort to save more Kenyan children from malaria, the country will on Saturday embark on the first phase of a massive campaign to increase the number of children sleeping under nets treated with insecticide.

Bald Eagle-DDT Myth Still Flying High  - Steven Milloy
Pennsylvania officials just announced success with their program to re-establish the state’s bald eagle population. But it’s a shame that such welcome news is being tainted by oft-repeated myths about the great bird’s near extinction.

The US President's Malaria Initiative  - Lancet Staff
While the President's Malaria Initiative embodies positive reforms to USAID's malaria control programs in Africa, there remains much room for improvement.

Old and new drug mix could be 'radical' malaria cure  - Hepeng Jia
An old malaria drug that is cheap but increasingly ineffective could still play a role in the fight against the disease, according to research presented on 3 July at the 15th World Congress of Pharmacology in Beijing.

Health Campaign Launched to Protect More Than 3.5 Million Children in Angola  - Press Release: American Red Cross
More information about the launch of Angola's national vaccination and disease prevention campaign, which will cover seven districts with long-lasting insecticide treated mosquito nets.

Uganda: Buy Nets And Save Global Fund Cash  - The Monitor (Kampala)
Uganda's relationship with the Geneva-based Global Fund for Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria, is headed for the rocks once again.

How the west's health fads kill the poor  - Mark Weston
Although there is a cheap vaccine for measles, scare stories from the west are building up aversion to the life-saving MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) injection, just as scare stories led to millions of avoidable deaths from malaria.

Angola to launch child vaccination, malaria drive  - Reuters
Angola is embarking on a massive campaign to protect more than 3.5 million children under the age of five from measles, polio and malaria, health officials in the southwestern African nation said on Friday.

How long must malaria win?  - Barnabas Natamba Kahiira
Kobusingye, a co-ordinator of Congress for Racial Equality (CORE-Uganda) appeals to European leaders to embrace Uganda even if she starts DDT spraying and urges them to abandon their threat to ban fresh agricultural products from a Uganda trying to reverse a malaria epidemic that claims 320 lives daily.

Uganda may be barred again from global fund  - ANDnetwork .com
Just months after having its suspension from the Global Fund lifted, Uganda once again is on the brink of falling off the list of beneficiaries of the Geneva-based organisation that provides money to help fight Aids, tuberculosis and malaria.

Cheap anti-allergy drug offers hope of cure for malaria  - James Randerson
A drug developed to treat allergies has been identified by US researchers as a potential cure for malaria.

Uganda to test malaria vaccine  - Charles Ariko
Uganda has been identified as one of the countries in Africa where malaria vaccine trials will be conducted.

Museveni hails Bush on Malaria fight  - Darious Magara
President Yoweri Museveni has lauded President George Bush for funding the IRS intervention against mosquitoes to fight malaria in Uganda.

January 8, 2024

OP-ED COLUMNIST

It's Time to Spray DDT

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

If the U.S. wants to help people in tsunami-hit countries like Sri Lanka and Indonesia - not to mention other poor countries in Africa - there's one step that would cost us nothing and would save hundreds of thousands of lives.

It would be to allow DDT in malaria-ravaged countries.

I'm thrilled that we're pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into the relief effort, but the tsunami was only a blip in third-world mortality. Mosquitoes kill 20 times more people each year than the tsunami did, and in the long war between humans and mosquitoes it looks as if mosquitoes are winning.

One reason is that the U.S. and other rich countries are siding with the mosquitoes against the world's poor - by opposing the use of DDT.

"It's a colossal tragedy," says Donald Roberts, a professor of tropical public health at Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences. "And it's embroiled in environmental politics and incompetent bureaucracies."

In the 1950's, 60's and early 70's, DDT was used to reduce malaria around the world, even eliminating it in places like Taiwan. But then the growing recognition of the harm DDT can cause in the environment - threatening the extinction of the bald eagle, for example - led DDT to be banned in the West and stigmatized worldwide. Ever since, malaria has been on the rise.

The poor countries that were able to keep malaria in check tend to be the same few that continued to use DDT, like Ecuador. Similarly, in Mexico, malaria rose and fell with the use of DDT. South Africa brought back DDT in 2000, after a switch to other pesticides had led to a surge in malaria, and now the disease is under control again. The evidence is overwhelming: DDT saves lives.

But most Western aid agencies will not pay for anti-malarial programs that use DDT, and that pretty much ensures that DDT won't be used. Instead, the U.N. and Western donors encourage use of insecticide-treated bed nets and medicine to cure malaria.

Bed nets and medicines are critical tools in fighting malaria, but they're not enough. The existing anti-malaria strategy is an underfinanced failure, with malaria probably killing 2 million or 3 million people each year.

DDT doesn't work everywhere. It wasn't nearly as effective in West African savannah as it was in southern Africa, and it's hard to apply in remote villages. And some countries, like Vietnam, have managed to curb malaria without DDT.

But overall, one of the best ways to protect people is to spray the inside of a hut, about once a year, with DDT. This uses tiny amounts of DDT - 450,000 people can be protected with the same amount that was applied in the 1960's to a single 1,000-acre American cotton farm.

Is it safe? DDT was sprayed in America in the 1950's as children played in the spray, and up to 80,000 tons a year were sprayed on American crops. There is some research suggesting that it could lead to premature births, but humans are far better off exposed to DDT than exposed to malaria.

I called the World Wildlife Fund, thinking I would get a fight. But Richard Liroff, its expert on toxins, said he could accept the use of DDT when necessary in anti-malaria programs.

"South Africa was right to use DDT," he said. "If the alternatives to DDT aren't working, as they weren't in South Africa, geez, you've got to use it. In South Africa it prevented tens of thousands of malaria cases and saved lots of lives."

At Greenpeace, Rick Hind noted reasons to be wary of DDT, but added: "If there's nothing else and it's going to save lives, we're all for it. Nobody's dogmatic about it."

So why do the U.N. and donor agencies, including the U.S. Agency for International Development, generally avoid financing DDT programs? The main obstacle seems to be bureaucratic caution and inertia. President Bush should cut through that and lead an effort to fight malaria using all necessary tools - including DDT.

One of my most exhilarating moments with my children came when we were backpacking together and spotted a bald eagle. It was a tragedy that we nearly allowed DDT to wipe out such magnificent birds, and we should continue to ban DDT in the U.S.

But it's also tragic that our squeamishness about DDT is killing more people in poor countries, year in and year out, than even a once-in-a-century tsunami.

New York Times