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World Malaria Day 2008

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Malaria: Preventable and treatable but still a killer in Sierra Leone

In Sierra Leone, malaria is rife. It is the biggest killer of children under five and causes a massive burden on families and the country’s barely functioning health system. 

Slideshow: World Malaria Day 2008 in Sierra Leone 

Malaria is preventable, detectable and treatable. Rapid Diagnostic Tests make diagnosis simple and effective, even in hard to reach rural settings. Artemisinin-based Combination Therapy (ACT), a treatment that works in just three days, is supposedly available for free to under five year olds and pregnant women from the Ministry of Health. So why are so many people still dying from malaria in Sierra Leone? 

"People are very poor and even if the ACT treatment is given free to pregnant women and under five year olds in the Ministry of Health clinics, people still cannot afford the registration fees, the doctor’s consultation, the cost of other drugs that they might need, etc.” says Willemieke van den Broek, Head of Mission for Médecins Sans Frontières in Sierra Leone.

 

“Another problem is that transport and roads are very bad and people often have to walk several miles to reach a rural health post or clinic. Some villages are completely cut off during the rainy season”.

 

Médecins Sans Frontières is tackling this with a new community malaria program, currently being piloted in Bo and Pujehun districts. Two people from each community are chosen to be Community Health Volunteers. They are trained by Médecins Sans Frontières in how to diagnose and treat uncomplicated cases of malaria, using Rapid Diagnostic Tests and ACT treatment.

With the training and a community health kit, the volunteers are able to diagnose and treat uncomplicated malaria cases in children under five and pregnant women, the two groups most at risk.

Médecins Sans Frontières Profile: Joseph Tucker - Community Health Volunteer

 

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