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Nigeria’s malaria cases drops by 26% – WHO

The World Health Organization (WHO) has praised the Federal Government’s efforts to reduce malaria incidence and fatalities.

According to the global health organization, between 2000 and 2021, malaria cases decreased by 26 percent, and malaria-related deaths decreased by 55 percent in Nigeria.

The WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, gave the commendation while unveiling ‘The Report on Malaria in Nigeria 2022’, the first-ever subnational malaria report.

The WHO official said while Nigeria accounted for about 27 per cent of the global burden of malaria cases, the country had made significant progress.

He added that the key drivers of the continuing disease burden include the size of Nigeria’s population, which makes scaling up intervention challenging; and the suboptimal surveillance systems, which picked up less than 40 per cent of the country’s malaria data.

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Other factors stifling malaria eradication efforts, Moeti said, are inadequate funding to ensure universal interventions across all states; and health-seeking behaviour, where people use the private sector, with limited regulation, preferentially.

She said: “While Nigeria accounts for around 27 per cent of the global burden of malaria cases, the country has seen major progress. Malaria incidence has fallen by 26 per cent since 2000 – from 413 per 1,000 to 302 per 1,000 in 2021. Malaria deaths also fell by 55 per cent, from 2.1 per 1,000 population to 0.9 per 1,000 population.

“Further, learning from COVID-19, we know that continuity of provision of essential health services is critical to interventions in malaria and other diseases, particularly in populations affected by humanitarian emergencies; and changing environmental factors, such as climate change, and farming and mining practices that may increase transmission.

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“Addressing the prevention, elimination, and control of malaria and the burden from other diseases requires critical data and information gathering for evidence-based investment and decision-making.”

The Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Muhammad Pate, stressed that governance, not finance, is a major challenge bedeviling malaria fight in the country.

The minister said his team intended to fix this by working with development partners and the private sector to garner resources needed to tackle the menace.

Pate promised the ministry would retrain about 120,000 health workers, as well as update their standards of practice.

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