West Africa’s fight to contain Ebola has hampered the campaign
against malaria, a preventable and treatable disease that is claiming
many thousands more lives than the dreaded virus.
In Gueckedou,
near the village where Ebola first started killing people in Guinea’s
tropical southern forests a year ago, doctors say they have had to stop
pricking fingers to do blood tests for malaria.
Guinea’s drop in
reported malaria cases this year by as much as 40 percent is not good
news, said Dr. Bernard Nahlen, deputy director of the U.S. President’s
Malaria Initiative. He said the decrease is likely because people are
too scared to go to health facilities and are not getting treated for
malaria.
“It would be a major failure on the part of everybody
involved to have a lot of people die from malaria in the midst of the
Ebola epidemic,” he said in a telephone interview. “I would be surprised
if there were not an increase in unnecessary malaria deaths in the
midst of all this, and a lot of those will be young children.”
Figures
are always estimates in Guinea, where half the 12 million people have
no access to health centers and die uncounted.
Some 15,000 Guineans died
from malaria last year, 14,000 of them children under five, according
to Nets for Life Africa, a New York-based charity dedicated to providing
insecticide-treated mosquito nets to put over beds. In comparison,
about 1,600 people in Guinea have died from Ebola, according to
statistics from the World Health Organization.
Malaria is the
leading cause of death in children under five in Guinea and, after AIDS,
the leading cause of adult deaths, according to Nets for Life.
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