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Malawi
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Anemia, Malaria Rates Drop in Malawi Children

FrontLines - May 2009


Video: Malawi, Nsambe, Neno District: Bednet distributions - Click to view
VIDEO: Neno District in southern Malawi is strongly affected by malaria. The beneficiaries were children under 5 and pregnant women, those most vulnerable to malaria. Click to view video.

NKHOTAKOTA , Malawi— Fighting malaria through indoor insect sprays and other strategies does more than reduce malaria—it also substantially reduces anemia among young children in this part of Malawi. Malaria is one of the major causes of childhood anemia. So the reduction in anemia is often used as an indication that malaria control programs are working.

After spraying the interior walls of homes, anemia in young children dropped from 22 percent to 12 percent in Nkhotakota District’s spray area, the anemia and parasitema (A&P) survey reported.

A second round of spraying began in October 2008 and was scheduled for evaluation in April. The A&P survey confirmed the understanding that indoor residual spraying is highly effective, particularly when used with insecticide-treated bed nets and prompt treatment, said USAID Senior Malaria Advisor Katherine Wolf.

The drop in anemia rates here is due in part to efforts by the U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI). The five-year, $1.2 billion initiative, housed within USAID, aims to reduce malaria-related deaths by 50 percent in 15 focus countries.

Photo by Katherine Wolf, USAID
A home in Malawi’s Nkhotakota District is sprayed with insecticide to combat malaria—a major cause of childhood anemia.

USAID and the Department of Health and Human Services’ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began the pilot indoor spraying program in Nkhotakota District two years ago. The district was hard-hit by malaria, and its natural boundaries provided an ideal pilot site.

The program worked closely with the Ministry of Health, Nkhotakota District Health Office, and Illovo Sugar Estates to spray approximately 28,000 houses in 2007 and 25,000 houses in 2008.

The spray, a biodegradable insecticide, was applied on walls inside houses to repel and kill malaria-spreading mosquitoes, which are most active late at night when people are sleeping. Nearly 90 percent of the houses in the designated area of the district were sprayed during the first round—coverage high enough to protect even people living in houses that weren’t sprayed.

The study concluded that high coverage with spraying, along with use of long-lasting nets and effective case management, reduces anemia rates.

PMI also worked with the Ministry of Health to procure a national supply for 18 months— over 9 million doses—of artemisinin-based combination therapy, the country’s new firstline malaria treatment; and approximately 1.2 million longlasting nets, used as protective barriers when people are asleep.

“On the basis of this successful pilot,” Wolf said, “the Malawi Ministry of Health is planning to scale up the [spray] program to include six additional highly malaria endemic districts.”

PMI is working with the National Malaria Control Program and the University of Malawi’s Malaria Alert Center to evaluate the effect of the scale-up of these malaria prevention and treatment programs.

 


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