Here in Ghana, the authorities are failing to deal with the worsening malaria problem that is crippling our country and killing our
people. After years of failure, it is time for a re-think.
More than 17 million of Ghana’s 20 million people are infected by malaria every year, costing the nation a colossal 850 million cedis
(US$94 million)for treatment alone. These figures probably underestimate the real burden, as many cases go unreported.
Malaria also has a huge indirect cost on Ghana’s economy due to lost productivity. Those infected by malaria are in and out of hospital
and unable to work. Malaria takes an especially heavy toll on farmers. Swarms of mosquitoes make it impossible for farmers and their families to sleep indoors,
especially during the rainy seasons when they are forced to sleep outdoors around bonfires.
Malaria makes it difficult for our fledgling industries to get off the ground because it scares away tourists and investors – both
major potential sources of income and jobs. A country where 85 percent of the population falls sick every year is not likely to attract investors, in search of a robust
and healthy workforce, or tourists, looking for amusement and leisure.
The productivity of future generations is also being undermined by this epidemic. Pregnant women and children under five are a
significant proportion of those infected each year. Even if children survive the infection, serious illness at such an early age stunts development, with lifelong
repercussions. This loss of potential is unnecessary and unacceptable.
Our health system is utterly ill-equipped to deal with the malaria crisis, even with the government's recent introduction of a national
system of socialized healthcare.
Some of the blame of Ghana's failure to tackle malaria must fall on the World Health Organization, whose recommendations have led to
rising infection levels. Until recently, the WHO advocated the use of insecticide-treated bed nets, almost to the exclusion of other proven measures.
While bed nets have their uses, they are not a panacea. For bed nets to be effective, they must first be distributed among the population,
and second, be used correctly. Poor roads, isolated communities and a fragmented healthcare system make distribution very difficult. To remain effective, bed nets also
need to be dipped in toxic pesticide every three months. And people often find them too hot to sleep in, or use them for fishing nets or even wedding dresses!
This all means that the number of people contracting malaria is on the rise, but the recommended treatment – Artemisinin
Combination Therapy (ACT) – is beyond the financial reach of most Ghanaians. Our national health system is not able to shoulder the spiraling cost of treatment,
either.
We need to consider different approaches if we are to free Ghana from the economic and social destruction malaria brings.
One such alternative is Indoor Residual Spraying, which involves spraying the interior walls of dwellings with a small amount of DDT.
This acts as an irritant to the mosquitoes, which prevents them from coming in the house in the first place. Those that do make it inside are quickly repelled outside.
This can effectively stop the transmission of malaria.
DDT is a low-cost and long-lasting insecticide that only requires reapplication once a year. South Africa has run a successful 50-year
DDT-based IRS program in preventing malaria.
In 2003, the South African minister of health urged other African countries to use DDT in malaria prevention. Now, many African
countries including Swaziland, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Madagascar and Botswana are all using DDT in malaria prevention with positive results. Isn't it time Ghana joined
these countries?
Effective and wide-scale prevention stops infection in the first place and removes much of the need for medication, saving both lives
and money. The good news is that after years of providing only lukewarm support for IRS, the WHO has now changed its strategy to lobby more strongly for DDT. Ghana must
therefore make good use of the WHO's recent decision to re-introduce DDT in malaria control and start using the insecticide as a cornerstone of its control program.
Despite limited resources, the cost-effectiveness and reliability of DDT will mean that many Ghanaians will be protected and able to live productive lives. Only then
will it be possible to build a wealthy nation of healthy people.
Editor's Note: The banning of DDT was influenced by Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring in which bird eggs were damaged by DDT. The claims
made in the book were subsequently proved to be without merit but DDT was still banned – an act that has resulted in the deaths of more people around the world than
all the wars of the 20th century.
ISIL member Kofi Akosah is the director of Africa Youth Peace Call in Ghana, an NGO working to train the youth of Africa to work for
peace and development. ISIL has been providing some support for Kofi but he could use financial assistance to maintain his small office in Accra. His e-mail is:
aypc_gh@yahoo.co.uk
Donations made through ISIL to help Kofi's work are tax-deductible in the USA.