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Roll Back Malaria in EMRcross border issues

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40% of world population at risk in over 100 malaria endemic countries ... Meetings in Baku 1999, 2000 ( AFG, Syr, IRA, Iraq, AZE, TUR, TAJ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Roll Back Malaria in EMRcross border issues


1
Roll Back Malaria in EMR-cross border issues
  • Second cross border meeting Afghanistan, ,
    Pakistan, Iran
  • Peshawar , Pakistan
  • August 30-September 1
  • Dr Hoda Atta
  • Regional malaria advisor
  • WHO EMRO

2
Overview of Presentation
  • Global Malaria Burden
  • Regional malaria burden
  • Roll Back Malaria
  • RBM tools
  • Regional strategy _Cross border collaboration

3
Global Malaria Burden
  • 40 of world population at risk in over 100
    malaria endemic countries
  • 300-500 million cases of malaria per year
  • 1 million malaria deaths per year
  • gt 90 of deaths in Africa
  • In Asia and the Americas Malaria is now mainly
    found in poor, marginalized rural communities

4
Economic Burden
GNP per capita (1995)
  • 1.3 reduced growth of national economies
  • lowers GDP by 32 within 35 years
  • Affects mainly agricultural productivity and
    school attendance of children

0-70
1941-2580
0
0
3
3
Malaria Index
5
Malaria is coming back
  • Over last decade
  • return of P.vivax transmission to countries where
    it had been eradicated
  • Central Asian Republics
  • Korean Peninsula
  • increasing P.falciparum problem in parts of
    Africa, Asia and South America
  • Some causes
  • Wide-spread population movement, Poverty, war
  • Resistance to antimalarials
  • Resistance to insecticides
  • Fragmented efforts to combat malaria

6
Malaria burden in the Eastern Mediterranean
Region
  • PUBLIC HEALTH THREAT
  • 287 million live under risk (60 of EMR
    population)
  • 15 million clinical cases per year
  • 47 thousand deaths per year

7
Estimated number of cases in EMR countries
(million/year)
8
Current operational situation
Free from malaria Limited foci Mild-mod
transmission Intense transmission
9
Group 1 Malaria eliminated
  • Lebanon , Palestine
  • Jordan, Qatar
  • Libya, Bahrain
  • Tunisia , Kuwait
  • UAE

9 countries, 7 of the population Have Imported
cases
10
Group 2 - Malaria under elimination
  • Egypt
  • Morocco
  • Oman
  • Syria

24 of the population
Cross border collaboration between Egypt and
Sudan annually Turkey Syria Iraq started in 2003
11
Most Areas Freed From Malaria Are Still Receptive
  • Population movement and lack or poor coordination
    of control activities at the border areas are
    common risk factors
  • Threat of reintroduction to Gulf countries from
    labor force coming the Indian subcontinent
  • Cross border movement e.g, between Turkey and
    Syria
  • Threat of expansion of A. arabiensis Sudan to
    Egypt

12
Group 3 Low/Moderate endemicity
  • Pakistan
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Iran
  • Iraq

53 of the population
13
Vision to eliminate gt80 of cases in one district
in Dhouk Gov in the north Indoor residual
spraying is the mainstay of the programme
14
Set a plan to eliminate Strong collaboration
with Yemen along the border Joint planning and
joint implementation teams
15
Significant increase in malaria cases in 2003
Cooperation with PAK, AFG is not functional YET
16
(No Transcript)
17
Pakistan Access to and utilization of diagnostic
services is poor ratio of reported total
slides examined (TSE) through passive cases
detection to reported clinical malaria cases 2002
is 24
18
Rough estimation of malaria burden in Pakistan
Surveillance is incomplete , incomprehensive
  • The total number of confirmed cases recorded for
    2001 was 111,110.
  • If the SPR of the remaining clinical cases
    treated in the public sector was 7, then this
    would account for an additional 226,125 cases, So
    the total confirmed cases should be 337,235 .
  • If this represents one fifth of the total cases,
    then a conservative estimation for 2001 would be
    some 1.5 million malaria cases

19
Group 4 With intense malaria transmission
16 of population 95 of the cases
  • Afghanistan
  • Djibouti
  • Yemen
  • Sudan
  • Somalia

20
Afghanistan
Malaria Endemic provinces/districts Border
areas at more risk
Afghanistan
21
Effective Evidence-based Interventions
  • Access to prompt effective treatment and
    diagnosis
  • treatment with most appropriate therapy,
    switching to combination therapy as resistance
    thresholds are passed
  • treatment near the home as possible ( home
    management of malaria)
  • Epidemic prediction , preparedness and rapid
    response
  • Multiple prevention measures
  • Integrated vector management ( chemical ,
    biological environmental , insecticide-treated
    nets priority for children under 5 years old
    and pregnant women in intense transmission areas
    )
  • Intermittent preventive treatment (IPT) in
    pregnancy in areas with intense P F transmission
  • chemoprophylaxis for travelers

22
Strengthen information system, monitoring and
evaluation system
  • Strengthening routine disease surveillance with
    prioritisation on proper analysis of data, timely
    reporting and feedback of information and a
    better use of data translated into action.
  • Development of laboratory-based sentinel
    surveillance
  • Use of Geographical Information Systems (GIS)
    technology for risk mapping
  • Support specific studies , surveys
  • Encourage reporting and documentation national
    malaria report

23
Sentinel sites for monitoring drug efficacy
  • 8 countries with local P falciparum in EMR
  • Sites established in 4 countries ( SUD , YEM,
    SOM, IRA)
  • Not Yet in AFG, PAK, DJI, SAA.in process
  • HANMAT a network for HOA countries was
    established
  • WHO Supported therapeutic efficacy of chloroquine
    and SP study in 2003 , Khanabad, north-eastern
    Afghanistan, in Collaboration with MERLIN and
    the Institute of Malaria and Parasitic Diseases

24
RBM EMR programme 2002-2005
  • Targets
  • Strengthen technical capacity for RBM
  • Support inter-country action and inter-regional
    cooperation
  • Support the countries in implementing package of
    effective interventions
  • Support specific projects to show success

25
Cross border activities in EMR
  • In 2004
  • Cross border meeting in Aleppo, Syria, 20-23
    April 2004 SYRIA, IRAQ, TURKEY
  • Border meeting between Saudi Arabia and Yemen
    every 6 month ( bilateral activity )
  • Border coordination between Egypt, Sudan (
    bilateral activity )
  • Horn of Africa network for monitoring
    antimalarials treatment ( Cairo March, Nairobi
    July 2004) (SUD, SOM DJI, ETH, ERI, YEM)
  • Before
  • First border meeting IRA PAK AFG 2003
  • Meetings in Baku 1999, 2000 ( AFG, Syr, IRA,
    Iraq, AZE, TUR, TAJ)
  • Tunis 97 for north of Africa countries

26
  • Collaboration between Saudi Arabia and
  • Republic of Yemen
  • Border Collaboration was initiated with RBM in
    2000
  • The joined Saudi-Yemeni coordination committee on
    malaria control at the border areas established ,
    Committee agreed, at the last meeting , February
    2003 on
  • implementation of activities through mutual
    teams,
  • Standardization of malaria drug policy in the two
    countries
  • Establishment of a bilateral team to evaluate the
    implementation of control activities at the
    border areas every three months,
  • preparation of periodic and special reports for
    information purposes.
  • A joined team has recently conducted residual
    house spraying in border villages of the
    Republic of Yemen.

27
Cross border coordinationIRA, PAK,
AFGRationale
  • Frequent cross border population movement , no
    real geographic border
  • High incidence of malaria and PF at the border
    with CQ treatment failure
  • Shortages of diagnosis facilities and prompt
    treatment in remote areas
  • Delay on detection and control of outbreaks
  • Limited capacity on integrated vector
    management
  • Insufficient advocacy on personal protection and
    low ITN coverage
  • Information exchange, monitoring and evaluation
    is weak

28
Cross border coordinationIRA, PAK, AFGFuture
vision
  • Be functional
  • National/district committees and joint
    implementation teams at the border
  • Routine activity of the National programme
  • Harmonization of policies and strategies
  • Network on monitoring antimalarials treatment
  • Collaboration in capacity building and training
  • Joint operation research projects
  • Joint proposal for fund raising
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