MYANMAR: WHO warns of tolerance to anti-malaria drug
WHO, researchers and health officials are already trying to contain the spread of resistant strains of the plasmodium falciparum parasite along the Thai-Cambodian border.
The parasite causes the most deadly form of malaria .
Preliminary studies in 2008-09 by the Mekong countries of Cambodia, China, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, show tolerance elsewhere, with the drug proving less effective and taking longer than previously to kill the parasite.
The studies, presented late last year at a WHO regional workshop of health officials, show tolerance may have extended to areas along the Myanmar-Thailand, Myanmar-China and Cambodia-Vietnam borders.
WHO describes the Mekong countries as the epicentre of plasmodium falciparum resistance to anti-malarial drugs in the world, and the findings have prompted further studies over 2010 and 2011 to confirm increasing resistance.“In this globalized economy, people move from one place to another, so parasite resistance can easily be spread to the rest of the world,” Leonard Ortega, WHO’s acting country representative in Myanmar, told IRIN.
“If those drugs are no longer effective, more people may die of malaria,” he said.
Artemisinin is normally used in combination therapy (ACT) with other drugs, although it can be prescribed on its own.
Ortega said the studies in Myanmar had shown that parasites were still detected in some cases after treatment, taking more than a benchmark three days to be cleared.
“This is an indication that there is resistance, but this year we will try to confirm that,” he said, adding that plans will soon be under way for containment of the parasite, which is spread by mobile populations such as migrant workers.
“We don’t need to wait until we confirm. We know from history - and there is now evidence at the Thai-Cambodia border - that there is resistance to artemisinin, so we believe it is already here,” he said.
Factors in resistance
In Myanmar, evidence of a tolerance to ACTs, with longer times for the parasite to be cleared and decreasing effectiveness, has been seen in Kawthaung town in the southeast, along the border with Thailand, and in southern Mon State, said Ortega.
As with the Thai-Cambodia situation, tolerance may be due to the use of counterfeit or substandard drugs which expose the parasite to lower doses of artemisinin, thereby enabling it to become resistant.Malaria patients may also not be completing the full three-day ACT courses, while health service providers, such as doctors, are not following the national malaria treatment guidelines recommended by WHO, said Ortega.
“On the part of the service providers, we have evidence that they don’t give the complete treatment,” he said.
Instead of handing over a full course of drugs to patients, private general practitioners are cutting up the medicine packs to dole out drugs by the day, probably to increase their profits, he said.
This, in turn, deters patients from completing drug treatment courses, many of whom are the rural poor and lack the means to travel for repeat practitioner visits.
Containment challenges
Despite this, resources to treat malaria and to control its spread are limited.
“People already own mosquito nets, but they are not treated with insecticide, so it’s not effective in preventing malaria,” said Ortega.
“We estimate that around nine million mosquito nets are available at the household level, but only 6 percent are treated with insecticides,” he said.
In addition, only around 500,000 ACT courses are available annually - a fraction of what is needed to treat an estimated 8.5 million malaria cases.
“There is a huge gap in terms of drugs available and prevention,” he said.
Original source: http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=87993
| Comments |
|
3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
Translate into your Language!
User Login
Latest Published
- US wants ASEAN to persuade Burma to hold transparent polls
- Thailand approves second friendship with Burma on Moei River
- Campaigners demand global arms embargo against Burma
- HRW honours Burmese rights activist
- US embassy official meets detained citizen, lawyers appointed
- Takkatho Tun Naung dies
- Thailand affected by situation in Burma
- Burma urged to open LCs with Bangladeshi banks directly
- Ethnic Nationalities Council chair clarifies groups’ position
- Junta supremo postpones delta trip
- Burmese Rape Survivors Speak Out
- Ramos-Horta Launches Burma Petition
- Ban Writes Junta Leader over Lack of Reconciliation
- Cambodian Rape Victims Face Bribes, Corruption
- Thein Sein Visits Sino-Burmese Border Town
See Also
- Flu Outbreak in Rangoon
- MYANMAR: WHO warns of tolerance to anti-malaria drug
- Another Medical Malpractice Death in Rangoon
- 21 infected with H1N1 flu in Myanmar
- AH1N1 virus hits Thailand refugee camp
- New Influenza A/H1N1, Cases Increase To 18 In Myanmar
- Myanmar reports 17 flu A/H1N1 cases
- Doctors Criticize Burmese Junta Flu Policy
- A(H1N1) cases in Burma reach 10
- Influenza cases increase to 9 in Myanmar
Most Read
- Thailand approves second friendship with Burma on Moei River
- Burma urged to open LCs with Bangladeshi banks directly
- Junta supremo postpones delta trip
- US wants ASEAN to persuade Burma to hold transparent polls
- US embassy official meets detained citizen, lawyers appointed
- Takkatho Tun Naung dies
- Burmese Rape Survivors Speak Out
- Junta Provides Details of First Election Law
- Ethnic Nationalities Council chair clarifies groups’ position
- Ramos-Horta Launches Burma Petition
Get Latest News in Your E-MAIL
Weather Situation
|
Yangon, Burma
|
|||||||
![]() |
|
||||||
|
![]() SE
|
||||||
| Show more details | |||||||
| Select your city... | |||||||
|
|
|||||||




