Still, 216 million new cases of malaria were reported in 2016,
the latest data available. Most of them occurred in Nigeria, the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, Ivory Coast and Mozambique.
And of the 445,000 people who died from the infection, about 70 percent
were children under the age of 5. If malaria is a curable disease with effective treatment, why does it still kill so many?
The rise of counterfeit drugs
Our research on the pharmaceutical industry
has revealed that one reason for malaria’s continued virulence in the
developing world is ineffective medicine. In fact, in some poor African
countries, many malaria drugs are actually expired, substandard or fake.
In 2012, a research team from the U.S. National Institutes of Health
found that about one-third of anti-malarial medicines distributed in
southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa were of poor quality. A few years prior, fully 44 percent of anti-malarial supplies in Senegal had failed quality control tests.
For as long as effective medicines have existed, people have produced fake versions. That’s because counterfeiting pharmaceutical drugs is profitable business for manufacturers. This illegal activity is most common in places with little government oversight and limited access to safe, affordable and high-quality medicines.
Various reports have found that many fake medicines originate in India, followed by China, Hong Kong and Turkey. Some illicit drug manufacturers appear to have connections with organized crime groups. It’s a good racket: Public officials in the developing countries
where these medicines are distributed typically struggle to detect and
investigate the crime – much less prosecute it – due to lack of funding and regulatory restrictions.
Imitating good malaria drugs
Generally, fake malaria drugs imitate one of two types of common antimalarial medicines: quinines and artemisins. Quinine and its chemical derivatives are derived from the bark of the
South American quina-quina tree. Artemisinin is isolated from a variety
of wormwood. Both medicines, which cost between US$12 and $150 per
course, are affordable to rich-world patients but largely inaccessible to people in countries where malaria is most widespread.
Anti-malarial drugs distributed in the developing world may also be substandard.
Such drugs are produced by legitimate manufacturers but are not
compliant with World Health Organization standards. Frequently, they are
short on artemisinin, the key active ingredient.
Such medicines, which may be produced deliberately or
unintentionally, do not prevent malaria in the individuals who take
them. Worse yet, they can lead the malarial parasite to develop drug
resistance, a significant danger for everyone who lives in a place
affected by malaria.
Ineffective malaria treatments – whether fake, substandard or
degraded – are also expensive for consumers and national health care
systems. Patients who unwittingly purchase ineffective anti-malarial drugs are
out of pocket for medicines that do nothing. Then, they pay for
additional treatments when the first course of medicine fails.
According to the World Health Organization, repeated medical
treatments due to ineffective drugs is estimated to cost to sub-Saharan
African patients and health care providers as a whole about $38.5 million annually. The problem of fake and substandard malaria drugs is so widespread that the World Health Organization, Global Fund and the United States Agency for International Development have all developed guidelines regarding the procurement of malaria medicines.
DAR ES SALAAM, East Africa: By Dr. Hernan Louise Verhofstadt* “ A BIT like President Donald Trump, Tanzania’s president, John Magufuli, likes to fire employees on television. In November Mr. Magufuli used a live broadcast from a small town in the north of the country summarily to dismiss two officials,” this is an extract from a recent online article I came across from the newspaper that I admired when I was growing up in Europe back in 1990’s; the Economist . Before I venture into other serious issues, the excerpts above contains gross factual errors; my own fact-check indicates that in the named public rally during the opening of Kagera Airport, there was no summary dismissal of the two officials instantly on television, as alleged. Instead, the two, one District Executive Directors for Bukoba Urban and another for Rural were relieved their duties later through a press release from President’s Office. This is my prima impressio reading the Econom...
By Masinde Masondore, Montreal, Canada, 01-04-2018: WHEN a learned politician brags of publicly embarrassing his President and counts it an honor while deliberately sabotages the nation's economic interests is a misfit in African traditions. 'Africans have had own ways of criticising the King, the way it happened in ancient Israel, however, in any case, the nation's interests were set apart from any sabotage," Gilbert Moshi. Tindu Lissu, a controversial Tanzanian opposition politician would be leaning on a wrong wall. He chose a road less travelled by learned individuals who mostly were rational. The road he walks and the philosophy he exhibit, only label him a tyranny of darkness. Any democratic leader, whether in opposition or ruling party ought to be totally enveloped in wisdom which prevents monumental errors of judgment. Lissu does not exhibit a minute of it. One of the pillars of customer-focused policies in the business world i...
Production on of affordable cement now to start next month By Correspondents Dar and Nairobi, 15:16 GMT Under his famed “delivery per se” policy, the government of Tanzania under President John Pombe Magufuli has finally confirmed that it has completed its phase mission of connecting Dangote cement plant in Mtwara, in the southern region of Tanzania, to the natural gas to generate the needed 35MW. Mr. Aliko Dangote in a tete a tete with President Magufuli at the inaugaration of the plant last year. Speaking at the end of his tour of the factory, the Energy Minister Dr. Medard Kalemani said the government was committed to supply the natural gas resource to enable Dangote cement plant access affordable energy for smooth cement production. The factory is one of the biggest cement plants in Southern Africa providing affordable cement to locals and countries in the vicinity. “I am telling you TPDC, if the factory delays to complete its i...
Comments
Post a Comment