Malaria deaths reduced by 50% since 2000 -WHO
Malaria
deaths have dropped dramatically since 2000 as more people are treated
and use more bed nets, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has said.
However,
the UN health agency warned on Tuesday that the Malaria treatment
process in West Africa risks being reversed by an unprecedented epidemic
of Ebola.
On
malaria, the WHO said that progress against the mosquito-borne
infection remains fragile and West African countries suffering from
Ebola are particularly at risk of seeing a resurgence of malaria.
In
its annual report on the malaria, the WHO said the death rate from the
illness fell by 47 percent worldwide between 2000 and 2013 and by 54
percent in Africa, where about 90 percent of all malaria deaths occur.
In
an analysis of malaria’s impact across sub-Saharan Africa, it also
found that despite a 43 percent increase in population, fewer people in
the region are infected every year.
Meanwhile,
13 of the 97 malarial countries reported no cases of the disease last
year, including two, Azerbaijan and Sri Lanka, which recorded their
first ever zero result.
While
access to insecticide-treated bed nets has improved, 278 million of the
840 million people at risk in sub-Saharan Africa still live in
households without one, the report said.
“The
next few years are going to be critical to show that we can maintain
momentum and build on the gains,” said Pedro Alonso, director of the
WHO’s global malaria programme.
He
attributed the progress in large part to increasing financial and
political commitment, in particular regional efforts to work together to
eliminate malaria.

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