
The global drive to eradicate malaria is beginning to show dividends, with more than a third of the most affected African nations slashing the number of cases of the deadly infection by half.
A statement issued by the United Nations Information Centre in Accra, said the 2009 World Malaria Report, produced by the World Health Organisation (WHO), said funding to fight the mosquito-borne disease has more than doubled, from 730 million dollars in 2006 to 1.7 billion dollars in 2009, allowing for a wider distribution of insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) and drug treatments to combat malaria around the world.
However, the report stressed that the amount of money available still falls a long way short of the five billion dollars needed every year to ensure anti-malaria programmes reach enough people to meet the internationally agreed target of reversing the incidence of malaria by 2015, one of the Millennium Development Goals.
It said an estimated 243 million cases of the infection led to a death toll of around 863,000 in 2008, with almost 90 per cent in Africa.
"While much remains to be done, the data presented clearly suggests that the tremendous increase in funding for malaria control is resulting in the rapid scale-up of today's control tools," said WHO Director-General Margaret Chan.
"This, in turn, is having a profound effect on health, especially the health of children in sub-Saharan Africa," added Dr. Chan. "In a nutshell; development aid for health is working".
Of the 108 countries affected by malaria, at least one-third - nine African and 29 others - of the documented reductions in malaria cases of more than 50 per cent in 2008 compared to 2000, as a result of a high coverage of bed nets and artemisinin-based combination therapies drug treatment programmes.
The Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Malaria, Ray Chambers commended the findings of the report, noting that it demonstrates that the global campaign to end deaths from the disease is succeeding.
"As we mark the 12-month countdown to the Secretary-General's December 2010 deadline for universal access to malaria-control interventions, this report confirms we are on path to defeating this disease," he said.
The WHO report noted that more attention needs to be given to ensuring success in large countries that account for most malaria cases and deaths.


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