Archive - Dec 4, 2008
Kenya’s New Malaria Threat

Malaria-related deaths in Kenya have dropped by 75 percent over the last five years, according to a recent study in the Lancet. In 2005, government clinics offered subsidized insecticide-treated bed nets along the most infected areas of the Kenyan coast. The following year they distributed anti-malarial drugs free of charge.
Despite these efforts, Kenya is now witnessing an increase in a severe form of the disease known as "cerebral malaria." Few children survive cerebral malaria. They experience coma and convulsions and are left with permanent neurological problems such as weakness, spasticity, blindness, speech problems and epilepsy.
Malaria is one of Africa's biggest child killers. The UN estimates Africa has approximately 300 to 500 million preventable malaria infections leading to over one million preventable deaths — 75 percent in children less than 5 years old. In economic terms, malaria costs Africa $12 billion each year due to deaths and loss of productivity.
Millions of sick children miss out on education that could help them escape poverty, while parents of sick kids end up losing work days and income, depriving families of basic necessities and being unable to afford treatment.
The best way to prevent any form of malaria is to prevent infection in the first place. According to the Lancet authors:
"Emphasis on use of insecticide-treated bed nets, early treatment, and other control measures must be increased to maintain reductions in disease burden and prevent a potential resurgence of malaria in a population with far less immunity than before."
In a region where malaria kills one child every 30 seconds and most people live on less than $1 per day, a failure to curb malaria is something Africa cannot afford.
How Gaza Copes
Fuel shortages, power cuts, aid shipments blocked by Israel — the UN now describes conditions faced by Gaza's 1.5 million people as "the worst ever." A recent BBC report tells how four Gazans are coping.
Musba Al-Shantri, a bakery owner, says the inconsistent electricity, water problems, gas shortages, and lack of available ingredients forced him to layoff five of his 12 employees and almost forced him to close. Musba admits to depending on material that comes from the smugglers' tunnels under Gaza's border with Egypt.
Fady Al-Burbar, who runs a shop selling meat and fish with his father, says, "A lot of our meat and fish has been spoiled because of the power cuts. Within two weeks I will have to close if the electricity problem continues like this — from now I will not bring more goods for my shop because I am not willing to buy things that will just perish."
Bakar Abu Al-Kas, a taxi driver in the Shujaiyeh neighborhood of Gaza City, also relies on the smugglers' tunnels for needed fuel. Afraid of running out of fuel from border closures, he is storing as much as he can afford before his access runs out.
"The closure of the borders affects economic life here," Bakar explained. "Daily life becomes really tough. The borders are the soul for the Gaza Strip."


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