Showing posts with label Invest in the future. Defeat malaria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Invest in the future. Defeat malaria. Show all posts

Monday, 27 April 2015

World Malaria Day 2015, April 25


Theme 2015 : Invest in the Future: Defeat Malaria.




News release
 
WHO is calling on the global health community to urgently address significant gaps in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of malaria. Despite dramatic declines in malaria cases and deaths since 2000, more than half a million lives are still lost to this preventable disease each year.
At least three quarters of malaria deaths occur in children under 5. Yet in 2013, only about 1 in 5 African children with malaria received effective treatment for the disease, 15 million pregnant women did not receive a single dose of the recommended preventive drugs, and an estimated 278 million people in Africa still live in households without a single insecticide-treated bednet.
“As we celebrate World Malaria Day on April 25, we must recognize the urgent need to expand prevention measures and quality-assured diagnostic testing and treatment to reduce the human suffering caused by malaria,” says Dr Hiroki Nakatani, WHO Assistant Director-General for HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, Malaria and Neglected Tropical Diseases.

Updated treatment guidelines

Updated "Guidelines for the Treatment of Malaria" are being issued by WHO this week. They include the latest recommendations on preventive treatment for infants, children under 5 and pregnant women. The updated guidelines should help expand access to recommended treatments.
For uncomplicated malaria cases, WHO recommends the use of artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs). Globally, 392 million ACT courses were procured by malaria-endemic countries in 2013, up from just 11 million in 2005. However, millions of people are still not treated for malaria, primarily because the communities most affected by the disease have limited access to health care.
WHO recommends diagnostic testing for all suspected malaria cases to ensure that malaria drugs are used only for those who have the disease and that—when a test is negative—other causes of fever are investigated. Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are now widely available and more than 319 million were purchased in 2013 compared to 46 million in 2008. Despite this progress, nearly 40% of people with suspected malaria at public health facilities in Africa are not tested.
WHO also recommends that the most vulnerable groups in malaria-endemic areas of sub-Saharan Africa—pregnant women, children under 5, and infants—receive preventive treatment to reduce the risk of malaria infection. Preventive treatments are highly cost-effective, with the potential to save tens of thousands of lives each year. Coverage with such treatments, however, remains low and needs to be significantly scaled up.
The need to urgently address gaps in preventive treatment for malaria is also being highlighted by the Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership, which has issued a global call to action to increase national coverage with preventive treatment in pregnancy.

Accelerating towards elimination—a new WHO strategy

WHO has developed a new global malaria strategy for the 2016-2030 period, which will be reviewed by the World Health Assembly in May 2015. Developed in close consultation with endemic countries and partners, the new strategy sets the target of reducing the disease burden by 40% by 2020, and by at least 90% by 2030. It also aims to eliminate the disease in at least 35 new countries by 2030. The strategy provides a comprehensive framework for countries to develop tailored programmes that will sustain and accelerate progress towards malaria elimination.
Commitments to malaria elimination have already been made by a number of countries and regions. In recent years, elimination efforts have been intensified in many parts of Africa—including in Southern Africa’s “Elimination 8” countries (Angola, Botswana, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia, Zimbabwe)—in Central America and Hispaniola, as well as in South-East Asia. In 2014, heads of state at the East Asia Summit made a commitment to eliminate malaria from the Asia-Pacific by 2030 and WHO is currently working on an elimination strategy for the Greater Mekong Subregion.
“We must take the malaria fight to the next level. Moving towards elimination will require high-level political commitment and robust financing, including substantial new investments in disease surveillance, health systems strengthening and research,” says Dr Pedro Alonso, Director of the WHO Global Malaria Programme. “In addition, we urgently need new tools to tackle emerging drug and insecticide resistance, as well as innovative approaches that will accelerate progress.”
Increased political commitment and greater funding have averted more than 4 million malaria deaths since 2001, and 55 of the 97 countries and territories with ongoing malaria transmission are on track to meet the current World Health Assembly target of reducing malaria incidence by 75% between 2000 and 2015.

Note to editors
World Malaria Day was instituted by WHO Member States during the 2007 World Health Assembly and is celebrated on 25 April each year. It is an occasion to highlight the need for continued investment and sustained political commitment for malaria control and elimination. The theme for the 2013-2015 campaign is “Invest in the Future. Defeat malaria”.
Roll Back Malaria (RBM) is a global partnership of national governments, civil society, non-governmental organizations, research institutions, professional associations, UN and development agencies, development banks, the private sector and the media.

Media contact:
Christian Lindmeier
Communications Officer
Mobile: +41 79 500 65 52
Telephone: +41 22 791 19 48
E-mail: lindmeierch@who.int

Alison Clements-Hunt
Communication Officer
Mobile: +41 79 386 3943
Telephone: +41 22 791 1995
E-mail: clementshuntal@who.int
 

Share the Facts
Working together with national governments and other donors, PMI has reached millions of people with life-saving prevention and treatment measures through a variety of approaches at hospitals, health facilities, and communities. Seventeen PMI focus countries have now reported declines in deaths among children under the age of five. These declines range from 18 percent (in both Liberia and Nigeria) to 55 percent (in both Senegal and Zambia). 

Share the facts below via Twitter to help spread the message about the fight against malaria.

Reduction in All-cause Mortality Rates of Children Under Five - President's Malaria Initiative (PMI)


    On April 25th people across the globe take part in a wide range of activities to mark World Malaria Day. For half the world every day is malaria day - a day to keep up the fight against this killer disease. This website is a communication and advocacy platform for civil society north and south to showcase your work , share resources , engage in dialogue, contribute views, ideas and events to mobilise the world against malaria.

World Malaria Day 2015 theme is Invest in Malaria, Defeat Malaria.


 LINKS :


PUBLICATIONS

Guardian shorts : The Deadly Air
Meet the cutting-edge scientists who are genetically modifying mosquitoes on the frontlines of the fight against one of the world’s deadliest diseases: malaria.Click here to read a free extract and buy the eBook for just £1.99

 Audio/Video :  World Malaria Day 2015.

For World Malaria Day, 25 April, WHO calls on the global health community to urgently address significant gaps in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of malaria. Despite dramatic declines in malaria cases and deaths since 2000, more than half a million lives are still lost to this preventable disease each year

Wednesday, 23 April 2014

World Malaria Day 2014, 25 April.

 



Global efforts to control and eliminate malaria have saved an estimated 3.3 million lives since 2000, reducing malaria mortality rates by 42% globally and 49% in Africa. Increased political commitment and expanded funding have helped to reduce malaria incidence by 25% globally, and 31% in Africa.

But we are not there yet. Malaria still kills an estimated 627 000 people every year, mainly children under 5 years of age in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2013, 97 countries had on-going malaria transmission.
Every year, more than 200 million cases occur; most of these cases are never tested or registered. Emerging drug and insecticide resistance threaten to reverse recent gains.
If the world is to maintain and accelerate progress against malaria, in line with Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 6, and to ensure attainment of MDGs 4 and 5, more funds are urgently required.

The theme for 2014 and 2015 is: Invest in the future. Defeat malaria

 

 

Goal: energize commitment to fight malaria

World Malaria Day was instituted by WHO Member States during the World Health Assembly of 2007. It is an occasion to highlight the need for continued investment and sustained political commitment for malaria prevention and control. It is also an opportunity:
  • for countries in affected regions to learn from each other's experiences and support each other's efforts;
  • for new donors to join a global partnership against malaria;
  • for research and academic institutions to flag scientific advances to both experts and the general public; and
  • for international partners, companies and foundations to showcase their efforts and reflect on how to further scale up interventions.

World Malaria Day is a chance to shine a spotlight on the global effort to control malaria. Each year, Roll Back Malaria (RBM) partner organisations unite around a common World Malaria Day theme. Invest in the future: defeat malaria is a three-year theme partners chose for the period of 2013-2015 to call attention to the need to reach the 2015 Millennium Development Goals and defeat malaria in the future.

On the occasion of World Malaria Day 2014, we spoke with the Right Honourable Stephen O'Brien, MP, global advocate for the Roll Back Malaria Partnership, about his time in the Sahel collecting mosquitoes, the role of parliamentarians in this fight, the post 2015 agenda, and the importance of continuing to invest in the fight against malaria.
 

El tema para 2014 y 2015 es: Invertir en el futuro. Derrotar el paludismo.

Objetivo: potenciar el compromiso para luchar contra el paludismo

El Día Mundial del Paludismo se instituyó a instancias de los Estados Miembros de la OMS durante la Asamblea Mundial de la Salud de 2007. Es una ocasión para poner de relieve la necesidad de inversiones continuas y de un compromiso político duradero para la prevención y el control del paludismo. Es también una oportunidad para que:
  • los países de las regiones afectadas aprovechen las experiencias de los demás y se presten apoyo mutuo;
  • los nuevos donantes se adhieran a una alianza mundial contra el paludismo;
  • las instituciones de investigación y académicas expongan sus adelantos científicos a los expertos y el público en general: y
  • los asociados internacionales, las empresas y las fundaciones den a conocer sus actividades y reflexionen sobre el modo de intensificar las intervenciones. 

Тема Всемирного дня борьбы против малярии в 2014 и 2015 годах — Инвестировать в будущее. Победить малярию.

Цель: усилить приверженность делу борьбы против малярии

Всемирный день борьбы против малярии был учрежден государствами-членами ВОЗ на сессии Всемирной ассамблеи здравоохранения в 2007 году. В этот день предоставляется возможность подчеркнуть необходимость постоянных инвестиций и устойчивой политической приверженности для профилактики малярии и борьбы с ней, в том числе:
  • для стран в охваченных малярией регионах изучить опыт работы и оказать взаимную поддержку;
  • для новых доноров присоединиться к глобальному партнерству в области борьбы против малярии;
  • для научно-исследовательских и учебных институтов ознакомить с научными достижениями экспертов и широкую общественность; и
  • для международных партнеров, компаний и фондов продемонстрировать свою деятельность и задуматься о том, как расширить масштабы проводимых мероприятий.
 
Le thème pour 2014 et 2015 est: Investir dans l’avenir. Vaincre le paludisme

Objectif: dynamiser l’engagement à combattre le paludisme

La Journée mondiale de lutte contre le paludisme a été instituée par les États Membres de l’OMS lors l’Assemblée mondiale de la Santé de 2007. Elle est l’occasion de souligner la nécessité de poursuivre les investissements et de maintenir l’engagement politique en faveur de la lutte antipaludique. C’est également l’occasion:
  • pour les pays des régions touchées, d’apprendre de l’expérience des autres et de soutenir mutuellement leurs efforts;
  • pour de nouveaux donateurs, de rejoindre le partenariat mondial contre le paludisme;
  • pour les établissements universitaires et de recherche, de faire connaître les progrès scientifiques aussi bien aux experts qu’au grand public;
  • pour les partenaires internationaux, les entreprises et les fondations, de mettre en exergue leurs efforts et de réfléchir à la façon de développer encore les interventions.

2014年和2015年世界防治疟疾日的主题是:投资未来,击败疟疾。

目标:加强与疟疾作斗争的承诺

世卫组织会员国在2007年世界卫生大会期间设立世界防治疟疾日。在这一天,我们要强调有必要在预防和控制疟疾方面继续投资并保持政治承诺。这也是一个契机:
  • 受影响地区各国可以相互交流经验并相互支持;
  • 新的捐助方可以加入遏制疟疾的全球伙伴关系;
  • 研究和学术机构可以向专家和公众说明科学方面的进展;
  • 国际伙伴、公司和基金会可以展示自己的努力并反思如何进一步扩大干预措施。


والموضوع المعتمد لعامي 2014 و2015 هو التالي: الاستثمار في المستقبل هزيمة الملاريا.

الهدف المنشود: تنشيط الالتزام بمكافحة الملاريا

أنشأت الدول الأعضاء في المنظمة خلال جمعية الصحة العالمية المعقودة في عام 2007 يوم الملاريا العالمي الذي يتيح فرصة لتسليط الأضواء على ضرورة استمرار الاستثمار وتواصل الالتزام السياسي للوقاية من الملاريا ومكافحتها فضلاً عن فرصة لتحقيق ما يلي:
  • أن تستخلص البلدان في الأقاليم المتضررة الدروس بعضها من تجارب بعض ويدعم بعضها بعضاً؛
  • أن تنضم الجهات المانحة الجديدة إلى شراكة عالمية لمكافحة الملاريا؛
  • أن تُطلع مؤسسات البحث والمؤسسات الأكاديمية الخبراء وعامة الجمهور على التطورات العلمية؛
  • أن تعرض الجهات الشريكة والشركات والمؤسسات الدولية جهودها وتفكر في سبل مواصلة تكثيف التدخلات.