x

WMD: Malaria knocks 11.6 m pregnant women, 822,000 infants in 33 countries – WHO

…Nigeria loses US$1.1b to malaria absenteeism
… warms Malaria outbreaks imminent as new Malaria strain invades horn of Africa

By Joyce Remi- Babayeju

As the world marks the 2021 World Malaria Day, WMD, today the WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr. Matshidiso Moeti has disclosed that due to lack of intermittent preventable treatment by two out of three pregnant women there were 11.6 million cases of malaria among pregnant women and 822,000 infants were born with low birth weight reported cases in 33 countries.
Moeti disclosed this in a message to mark the WMD today.
In her message to mark the 2021 WMD with the theme, ” Zero Malaria – Draw the Line Against Malaria, said every malaria case is preventable and every malaria death is unacceptable.

We grieve over 384,000 preventable malaria deaths in the WHO African Region in 2020, she said.

According to WHO, the spread of malaria in responsible for an average reduction of 1.3 of Africa’s economic growth while Nigeria loses an estimated US $1.1 billion every year to malaria absenteeism and productivity.

Furthermore WHO urged countries to help risk population countries to alleviate the malaria scourge citing that in 2019 one in three households did not have an Insecticide – Treated bed net and 48% of under- 5 children did not sleep under an ITN.

Meanwhile, WHO has raised an alarm over new strain of malaria invading the horn of African region caused by genetic mutations of new malaria parasites (pfhrp2/3) gene in recent times with the potential to cause devastating outbreaks in cities and towns.

The global health organization reiterated it’s commitment to revisit the stagnated progress in the malaria fight in the past five years in order to attain the 2030 targets of a malaria free continent.

It also called for urgent action to stop the scourge of this disease and to get on track towards the global malaria goals of a 90% reduction in cases and deaths by 2030.
“This includes investment to expand access to malaria interventions for groups that have been left behind, such as children and pregnant women.”

“Together, we need to move from the perception of malaria as a health problem, to understanding this disease as a threat to socio-economic development that requires a multispectral response.”

With an all-of-society response to draw the line against malaria, together, we can ensure African societies, economies and individuals, prosper, WHO said.

Hot this week

China Commends Nigeria for Joint ONSA/DSS/Army Rescue of Four Kidnapped Chinese Citizens

▪︎ Secret Police stabilises rescued kidnapees at own medical...

More Women Grabbing Family Planning Services – NDHS Report

... As Nigerian Fertility Rate Slides DownBy...

Chinese Ambassador’s Cup: 2025 Wushu Championship Set to Hold in Abuja

The Chinese Ambassador’s Cup-Wushu Championship, also known as the...

China: Africa’s Most Reliable Companion on Africa’s Path to Development

By:-H.E. Ambassador JIANG Feng, Head of the Mission of the People’s Republic of...

Kano Speaker Falgore Hails Kwankwaso as a Beacon of Hope on His Birthday

By Jabiru Hassan, KanoThe Speaker of the Kano State...

BREAKING: Police Arrest Omoyele Sowore at Abuja Court

Human rights activist and publisher, Omoyele Sowore, was arrested...

Truck Crushes Female Federal University Lokoja Lecturer to Death in Lokoja

By Noah Ocheni, LokojaA female lecturer at the Federal...

KADMAM-CSO Urges Transparent Use, Community Monitoring of N32.9bn Basic Health Care Fund

By Achadu Gabriel, KadunaThe Maternal Accountability Mechanism in Kaduna...

Dencia Weighs In on Regina Daniels, Ned Nwoko Marriage Drama

Cameroonian singer and entrepreneur, Dencia, has reacted to the...

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img