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Articles for April 2005
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More resources needed for malaria  - Mail & Guardian
So let's get this right... UNICEF, WHO and the other Roll Back Malaria partners have all failed miserably in rolling back malaria and yet they are appealing for more money. How about giving money to programs that are actually working! Giving more money to UNICEF would be irresponsible and immoral - their actions have led to an INCREASE in malaria cases and deaths.

Brown says Interest growing in malaria vaccine  - Lesley Wroughton
Gordon Brown, UK's Chancellor of the Exchequer, should put his energy into funding malaria prevention using tools that we know work - such as indoor residual spraying. That way we could be saving hundreds of thousands of lives right now, rather than having to wait yet another 10 years for a vaccine.

New Study Finds Coartem Is The Most Effective Malaria Treatment In Areas Of High Resistance To Conventional Anti-Malarials  - Wall Street Journal
Coartem is the most effective available malaria treatment for children in areas of Africa where resistance to conventional drugs is high, according to a study published in the U.K. medical journal, The Lancet.

Statement of U.S. Senator Sam Brownback on Bilateral and Multilateral Malaria Control Efforts  - Senator Sam Brownback
US Senator Sam Brownback drops his Eliminate Neglected Diseases bill in the US Senate today. AFM supports this bill and thinks that if it passes, it will make a real difference to disease control in poor countries. Read Senator Brownback's Press Statement here.

Malaria: DDT use urged  - Jasson Urbach - Health24
Jasson Urbach writes in favour of DDT use in malaria control. As we head towards Africa Malaira Day 2005, the WHO, UNICEF and donors should pay attention.

Reversing the failures of Roll Back Malaria  - Lancet
This Lancet editorial pulls no punches in its analysis of Roll Back Malaira and quite rightly, we believe, concludes that "the RBM partnership needs strong leadership and a clear signal from all its partners that malaria is a priority. Without this commitment, the history of RBM will become a calamitous tale of missed opportunities, squandered funds, and wasted political will."

Taxes Raise Drug Costs  - Scott Miller - Wall Street Journal Europe
Scott Miller of the Wall Street Journal Europe reports on AFM's new paper on taxes and tariffs on medicines published by the AEI-Brookings Joint Centre.

UN Says Kenyans Have Failed to Curb Malaria  - Waweru Mugo
What business does the UN have criticising Kenya when it should look within for the source of malaira control failures? The reality is that the UN has pushed an ITN-only policy and has forced countries to abandon Indoor Residual Spraying (something that works spectacularly well). Yes Kenya is failing, but the fault lies with the UN - specifically UNICEF and WHO not just the Kenyan government.

Carter: rich states "don't give a damn" about poor  - AlertNet
Carter may be partially right - but more money isn't the solution necessarily. Rich countries ignore the solutions to diseases like malaria that actually work, like DDT spraying. Also, Carter forgets that many poor country governments give less of a 'damn' for their poor than rich country governments. Many poor countries are poor and sick because their elite polticians keep them that way with daft policies that entrench their power and keep the foreign aid rolling into their own pockets.

Sanofi-aventis Affirms Its Commitment to Access to Medicines in the 'Southern Countries', with a Policy of Tiered Drug Prices Geared to Populations Incomes  - PR Newsire-First Call
Sanofi-aventis has a new and effective malaria drug and it is selling it on a no-profit basis. Sounds great, but in fact profit is good and vital to ensure ongoing research. Companies should seek out profit in Africa - profit builds economies and attracts investment; without it Africa will only ever be worthy of charity

Agency Aids Uganda  - Jude Etyang
The Global Fund has allocated $66million to Uganda to improve malaria treatment. This is good news, however it would be better if the global funders and donors provided support and funding to prevent malaria cases from occuring in the first place. The Ugandan government has wanted to spray DDT for several years now but has been stopped from doing so by donors and by threats from the EU that it would ban all agricultural exports.

Why is HIV So Prevalent in Africa?  - Michael Fumento
Michael Fumento asks why HIV prevalence is so high in Africa and questions whether heterosexual sex is the main form of transmission - contrary to what the WHO and UN say. Blood transfusions, sharing needles and bad medical practice may be the answer.

Nepad calls for stop to reliance on foreign aid  - Elizabeth Mwai and Waweru Mugo
Some sensible talk from the NEPAD Council which calls for less government-to-government aid and more investment. Aid transfers have only led to more poverty and corruption in Africa, but now NEPAD have to put some serious effort into improving the institutions of a free society, so that the private sector can invest. Condeming Robert Mugabe and his violent regime would be a good start.

Malaria wedding net dress decline  - Abraham Odeke
A campaign in Uganda to stop prospective brides using malaria nets as wedding dresses appears to be having an effect.

The cheap bed nets are treated with insecticide and intended to prevent mosquito bites, but clergymen and health officials have in recent years campaigned vigorously against the practice.

Science shows how malaria 'hides'  -
Scientists have determined how the deadliest malaria parasite "hides" from the body's immune system, but it will be a while before this research might have any practical benefit.

WHO: Millions of Mothers, Babies Die Needlessly  - Stephanie Nebehay
The WHO reports that "Countries reporting a rise in newborn, child and maternal mortality rates included Kenya, Rwanda, Swaziland, Turkmenistan, Zambia and Zimbabwe." Note that with the possible exception of Zambia, these are all countries with significant institutional problems, intransigent and unaccountable government and a lack of free markets and free people. Getting these institutions right will not only grow their economies, but improve their health status

UK global HIV strategy criticised  - BBC News
The UK comes under fire for its AIDS spending plans. The BBC reports that "Nearly half of DfID's aid budget goes on multilateral bodies, such as the European Commission, but just 4% of the £1.4bn pot is then spent on HIV/Aids. "

Sanofi Launches New Malaria Drug  - The East African Standard
Sanofi launches its new malaria drug - an artemesinin based combination therapy. This is good news for malaria patients around the world.

Zim Health Crisis 'Threat to SADC'  - Bertha Shoko - The Standard
One of the few remaining independent newspapers in Zimbabwe, The Standard, reports on the tragic destruction of Zimbabwe's healthcare by Mugabe's government.

Wolfowitz sets Africa poverty aim  - BBC News
Wolfowitz has the potential to improve the World Bank - but only if he breaks from the past. Reforming the Bank's failed malaria program would be a great place to start. See our recent National Review Online article on this topic under recent articles.

Mugabe's party sweeps to victor  - BBC News
Mugabe steals another election - AFM believes this is bad news for the health of the nation. Under Mugabe's rule, life expectancy has fallen to just 33 years. People are dying of preventable and curable diseases and all the healthcare gains made from 1900 onwards have been undone. Only when peace and real democracy are restored can the lives of ordinary Zimbabweans improve.

The Incredible Shrinking Country  - Dr Marian Tupy
Marian Tupy of the Cato Institute writes of the apalling consquences of Zimbabwe's political and economic turmoil - which amongst other things has reduced life expectancy to just 33 years.

Malaria: DDT use urged
Last updated: Wednesday, April 20, 2023
Policy makers need to compare the real risks that people face from malaria with the often uncertain and hypothetical risks they may face from using DDT to protect themselves from infection.

There is clear evidence that there is a close correlation between the use of DDT and reduced mortality and morbidity and no credible evidence that DDT results in harm to human health and the environment.

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Governments of malaria-infested countries are therefore not justified in either preventing the use of DDT in malaria control or refraining from using it in their own malaria control programmes.

They should follow the lead of the South African government in putting real human lives saved before precautions against hypothetical and unproven risks.

Death rates on the increase
A recent paper in the leading science journal Nature estimated that every year there are 515 million episodes of malaria. Somewhere between one and two million people die of the disease every year, most of these being African children.

The worrying factor is that malaria cases and deaths have been increasing despite WHO efforts to control the disease. A key reason for the ever-increasing number of cases and deaths is that UNICEF and donors like USAID steadfastly refuse to promote anti-malaria interventions that work – such as the careful use of the insecticide environmentalists love to hate: DDT.

When used in malaria control, DDT is sprayed in tiny quantities on the inside walls of houses – a method known as indoor residual spraying (IRS). With DDT on the walls, mosquitoes are deterred from entering the house.

However, if they do enter they are killed by the insecticides' well-known toxic properties. This form of malaria control eradicated malaria from Europe and North America as well as Taiwan and Mauritius and dramatically reduced malaria in many other parts of the world.

DDT comes out on top
There are various insecticides that can be used in IRS, but DDT comes out on top. Not only is it cheaper than other insecticides, its repellent action is also far stronger.

Millions of people around the globe owe their lives to DDT. But malaria is not just a human tragedy; it is an economic one as well.

In Africa, malaria is the leading cause of death among children and it causes catastrophic harm to the continent's development.

In 2000, Gallup and Sachs estimated that in malarial countries the disease reduces per capita economic growth by 1,3% per year. Thus, controlling malaria not only reduces human suffering, it also allows people to work and sustain themselves and their families, further alleviating human misery.

Vaccines for malaria are being developed, but no effective vaccine exists as of 2005. In 2002 the genome sequence of the deadliest malarial parasite, plasmodium falciparum, was completed, giving rise to a great deal of excitement that this would allow a vaccine to be developed shortly.

If diagnosed early, malaria can currently be treated, but prevention of infection is always much better.

Why isn't DDT being used?
The obvious question is why DDT isn't being used if it is so effective. The short answer is that the controversy and misunderstanding surrounding DDT stops the leading donor countries from supporting its use. One of the biggest concerns surrounding DDT is its possible effect on human health, and more specifically, whether or not it is carcinogenic.

The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), classifies DDT as a possible carcinogen. It should be noted that DDT shares this classification with a number of common household consumables, such as peanut butter, beer and coffee.

Since the 1940s, thousands of tons of DDT have been produced and distributed throughout the world and millions of people have come into direct contact with it in one way or another.

Despite this direct exposure, the scientific world has failed to produce any substantial evidence to back claims that link DDT to health ailments in humans. We do know, however, that wherever DDT has been used in public health, disease and deaths decreased dramatically and human populations began to rise; something one wouldn't expect if DDT was as dangerous as some people make it out to be.

Where did DDT get its dirty name?
The whole matter boiled over in 1962 with the publication of Rachel Carson's blockbuster Silent Spring. Carson's writing raised the dark suspicion that DDT was upsetting the balance of nature. Nowhere did she acknowledge that the chemical had saved millions of lives. Nor did she make it clear how judiciously and selectively the public-health community deployed DDT.

Her criticism was based almost entirely upon the fact that in agriculture DDT was being sprayed indiscriminately. One of DDT's biggest assets, its inability to be broken down quickly, created the suspicion that it adversely affected the environment. It was for this reason that it was named as one of the persistent organic pollutants (or POPs) and included in a list of vilified organic substances known as the dirty dozen.

However, the quantities involved in IRS are minimal: 2 g per square metre. Donald Roberts noted in 1997 that: "treating a 4 square kilometre cotton field – which is the size of a single farm in some locations – takes as much DDT as all the houses in a tropical country the size of Guyana".

Furthermore, the WHO advocates its controlled use for public health and notes, "the improvement in health resulting from malaria campaigns using DDT has broken the vicious circle of poverty and disease resulting in ample economic benefits" such as increased productivity of workers, lower rates of morbidity and the use of previously unoccupied areas that were ravaged by the parasite.

Certain countries now use DDT
While malaria continues to rise around the globe, certain countries such as South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia and Mozambique have seen dramatic declines in malaria cases and deaths.

The one thing these countries have in common is that they have strengthened and expanded their spraying programmes and, with the exception of Mozambique, use DDT.

In fact, in 2000 the South African government lobbied hard at UN Environment Programme meetings for DDT not to be banned by international treaty. The South African government's leadership on this matter has saved countless lives and strengthened malaria control.

Meanwhile, disingenuous and scaremongering anti-DDT campaigns from environmentalist groups has condemned millions of Africans to lives of illness, poverty and early death. – (Jasson Urbach, Free Market Foundation)

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