Tag: malaria

  • Rotary sentisises traders, schools on malaria prevention

    More than a hundred Rotary clubs in Lagos and Ogun States took to markets, schools, bus parks and other public places on Wednesday to sensitise Nigerians on malaria prevention and control.

    The enlightenment rallies were in commemoration of the 2017 World Malaria Day with the theme: “End malaria for good.”

    The clubs also distributed free treated nets to fight the worsening influence of the malaria in the states.

    A public health specialist and chairman, Malaria Elimination Committee, Rotary District 9110 Nigeria, Dr. Dele Balogun, pointed out that an estimated 292,000 African children die before their fifth birthday due to malaria in 2015.

    The disease, he said, caused an estimated 306,000 under-five deaths in the same year.

    Balogun added 95 countries and territories had ongoing malaria transmission and an estimated 3.2 billion people, nearly half the world’s population, were at risk of malaria as at 2015.

    Distribution of insecticide-treated nets, he stated, was reintroduced to prevent mosquitoes from biting people.

    He said, “Mosquitoes will preferably bite at night especially the mosquitoes that transmit malaria.

    “I want the people to know that without eliminating malaria, poverty will remain with us.

    “This commemoration is another opportunity for people to know that if mosquitoes are not allowed to breath and are not allowed to bite there can never be malaria.”

    “Malaria kills children, especially those below five years of age. Malaria kills pregnant women. Malaria kills people living with HIV/AIDS.

    “Malaria kills people with low immunity especially those who come from areas where they don’t have malaria who now come into the malaria belt.

    “So it is very important to know now that malaria is a preventable disease and rotary along many other NGOs and the government had put together plans to make it a reality that malaria is totally eliminated.”

    An Ophthalmologist and Rotarian, Dr. Basirat Giwa, buttressed the fact that Rotary has made a landmark achievement in the fight against malaria over the years.

    She added that there must be a collaborative effort between the public and private sector in winning the war against malaria.

    “Statistics has shown that the rotary involvement has contributed immensely to more than 30 per cent reduction in the mortality rate over the years and that is the reason why Rotary is getting stronger and encouraging more Rotarians to get involved in the Roll Back Malaria activities,” the ophthalmologist stated.

     

     

  • Presenting a united front to end malaria for good

    The United Nation’s call to “end malaria for good” resonates deeply with me – I have had malaria. I am encouraged by the progress that has been made to eliminate this terrible disease. The global mortality rate dropped by 47 per cent between 2000 and 2013 and the number of children killed by malaria has declined by two-thirds since 2000, with more than 6.8 million lives saved. I was reminded however of the deadly toll this disease continues to take when I saw a public service announcement on DSTV stating that every thirty seconds a child in Africa dies from malaria. Today, Global Anti-Malaria Day, is a time to reflect on what we have achieved and chart our way forward.
    Most of the progress has been attributed to improved deployment of malaria control interventions, including enhanced access to artemisinin based combination therapy and the proper use of insecticide treated mosquito nets. To consolidate these gains, World Health Organization member states agreed on a new global malaria strategy for 2016-2030, aimed at reducing the global disease burden by 40 per cent by 2020 and eliminating malaria in at least 35 new countries by 2030.
    Nigeria, which accounts for one-quarter of all the malaria cases in Africa, is a signatory to the bold new strategy, a clear signal that the government is determined to reduce malaria morbidity and mortality in the country. Nigeria has already made remarkable progress in the past 15 years, successfully reducing mortality rates among children under the age of five by 18 percent through an aggressive program to combat malaria.
    However, Nigeria faces a new challenge. The decimation of healthcare infrastructure across the country’s North-East at the height of Boko Haram’s insurgency has put millions of Nigerians at a high risk of malaria infection and malaria-related death. The majority of the estimated 2 million internally displaced people in the area, including vulnerable children under the age of five and pregnant women, no longer have easy access to the free tests and artemisinin based combination therapy drugs previously available at government funded healthcare centers.
    Medical professionals are also concerned about the possibility of increased resistance to anti-malaria drugs as mosquitos adapt to increasingly warmer temperatures across Sub-Saharan Africa. Resistance to malaria medicines and insecticides has been recorded in regions of Asia and may pose significant risks to Nigeria’s progress in malaria control.
    The government and people of Nigeria do not face these challenges alone. The U.S. government, through the U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI), is a steadfast partner in the global fight against malaria, working together with host country governments and partners to bring effective tools for the prevention and control of malaria to the people who need them the most.
    In Nigeria, PMI works with national partners such as the Federal Ministry of Health and the National Malaria Elimination Program. PMI also works with international partners such as the UK Department for International Development, the World Health Organization, and the Global Fund to reach and maintain universal coverage with long-lasting, insecticide-treated nets for all individuals living in malaria endemic areas.
    PMI has scaled up malaria control interventions in Nigeria and to date, has procured over 31.6 million bed nets, 20.9 million malaria diagnostic test kits, over 52.4 million malaria first line drugs, and 11 million doses of the drugs that prevent malaria in pregnancy
    As World Anti-Malaria Day rolls by each year, I wonder what needs to be done to rid the world of malaria for good. The good news is there are answers. We must recognize that we do not need to accept malaria as a normal part of life. If we sleep inside a treated net every night, if we seek treatment from a qualified health worker within 24 hours of the onset of a fever, we can drive down the presence of the malaria parasite in our environment and ultimately eliminate it.
    Together, we must improve the protection of expectant mothers and their newborns from malaria. During pregnancy, malaria can cause particularly serious, life-threatening risks for both the mother and her baby.
    We must also increase access to health services, especially for the poor. Community health workers must be able to provide reliable testing and treatment for malaria and other childhood illnesses.
    Success during the next three to five years will be crucial to attain the vision of this year’s World Anti-Malaria Day theme, “End Malaria for Good.” Ridding the world of this burden will have a long-term transformative impact across the globe, saving millions of lives and generating trillions in additional economic output.
    I am fully convinced that fighting malaria is one of the smartest investments to protect health, create opportunity, and foster growth and security. While the road ahead is complex, the narrative is not— it is about coming together as a global community because of our common humanity and each doing our part to protect families and children from a cruel disease.

    •Bray is U.S. Consul General, Lagos.

  • U.S. committed to ending malaria in Nigeria – Envoy

    U.S. committed to ending malaria in Nigeria – Envoy

    The Deputy Head of Mission, U.S. Embassy, David Young, on Monday said that his country was committed to ending the scourge of malaria in Nigeria.

    Young, who stated this in Abuja at the commemoration of 2017 World Malaria Day organised by the U.S. Embassy, said prevention and control remained a major U.S. foreign assistance objective.

    “The U.S. Government, through Presidential Malaria Initiative (PMI) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) is committed to raising awareness about the proper prevention, diagnosis and treatment of this disease,” he said.

    According to him, the U.S. Government supports local partners to design and implement programmes to improve public and private sector adherence to diagnosis and treatment guidelines.

    He disclosed that the U.S. invested over 420 million dollars in the fight against malaria in Nigeria since 2010, and 75 million dollars in 2016 alone.

    He said that the U.S PMI strategy goal was to work with PMI-supported countries and partners to further reduce malaria deaths and substantially decrease malaria morbidity towards the long-term goal of elimination.

    PMI, Young said, delivered nearly 7.5 million Rapid Diagnostic Tests and 12 million Artemisinin-based Combination Therapy (ACT) treatment doses in support to 3,000 health facilities across 11 states in Nigeria.

    To end malaria for good, Young called on Nigerians to commit to sleeping in a treated bed net every night and remember that not every fever is malaria.

    He stressed the need to demand a “test before treatment”, before beginning a full regimen of ACT.

    According to him, ending malaria will prevent more than 80 million illnesses and more than 300,000 related deaths from malaria annually.

    “Ending malaria will increase school attendance, boost workers’ productivity and significantly lower out-of-pocket cost for treatment.

    “This is why malaria prevention and control remain a major U.S. foreign assistance objective.

    “Each year in Nigeria, more than 80 million people fall ill and 300,000 die from malaria,” he said.

    According to him, early and accurate diagnosis is essential for rapid and effective disease management and surveillance.

    He said that Malaria diagnosis was vital as misdiagnosis allows disease progression from uncomplicated to severe forms, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality.

    Young said that Nigeria had in 2015 adopted the T3 (test, treat and track) strategy for malaria case management.

    He said that the strategy helped to improve overall management of patients with febrile illnesses and reduced the emergence and spread of drug resistance to anti-malarial medications.

  • Ghana, Kenya, Malawi to pilot world’s first malaria vaccine in 2018 – WHO

    Ghana, Kenya and Malawi will pilot the world’s first malaria vaccine from 2018, offering it for babies and children in high-risk areas as part of real-life trials.

    The World Health Organisation said in a staatement on Monday that the injectable vaccine is called “Mosquirix”.

    The WHO said the vaccines was developed by British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) to protect children from the most deadly form of malaria in Africa.

    In clinical trials it proved only partially effective, and it needs to be given in a four-dose schedule, but is the first regulator-approved vaccine against the mosquito-borne disease.

    The WHO, which is in the process of assessing whether to add the shot to core package of WHO-recommended measures for malaria prevention, has said it first wants to see the results of on-the-ground testing in a pilot programme.

    “Information gathered in the pilot will help us make decisions on the wider use of this vaccine,” Matshidiso Moeti, WHO African regional director, said in a statement as the three pilot countries were announced.

    “Combined with existing malaria interventions, such a vaccine would have the potential to save tens of thousands of lives in Africa.”

    Malaria kills around 430,000 people a year, the vast majority of them babies and young children in sub-Saharan Africa.

    Global efforts in the last 15 years cut the malaria death toll by 62 per cent between 2000 and 2015.

    The WHO pilot programme will assess whether the Mosquirix’s protective effect in children aged five to 17 months can be replicated in real-life.

    It will also assess the feasibility of delivering the four doses needed, and explore the vaccine’s potential role in reducing the number of children killed by the disease.

    The WHO said Malawi, Kenya and Ghana were chosen for the pilot due to several factors, including having high rates of malaria as well as good malaria programmes, wide use of bed-nets, and well-functioning immunisation programmes.

    The UN organisation said each of the three countries will decide on the districts and regions to be included in the pilots.

    It also said high malaria areas will get priority since these are where experts expect to see most benefit from the use of the vaccine.

    “Mosquirix” was developed by GSK in partnership with the non-profit PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative and part-funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

    The WHO said in November it had secured full funding for the first phase of the drugs pilots.

    The organisation said the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis would provide 15 million dollars and up to 27.5 million dollars and 9.6 million dollars respectively from the Global Vaccine Alliance and UN global health initiative for the first four years of the programme.

  • ‘Malaria can be treated with herbal medicines’

    ‘Malaria can be treated with herbal medicines’

    Treating malaria is much simpler and more effective with herbal-based medicines, OYEYEMI GBENGA-MUSTAPHA writes.

    Despite the huge funds voted for its treatment and prevention yearly, malaria  remains a thorn in the flesh of many Nigerians.

    The choice of the theme “End malaria for good”, by the WHO for its World Malaria Day celebration, is, therefore, apt, an expert has said.

    The event, which coincides with WHO’s 25th anniversary to be  held next week, is focusing on the disease’s prevention, which, observers said, is a strategy for reducing the disease that kills over 400,000 people yearly globally. Since 2000, malaria prevention has played an important role in reducing cases and deaths.

    The expert, Mr Samuel Etatuvie, said malaria is caused by a parasite of the species plasmodium,  spread by infected mosquitoes. Early diagnosis and prompt treatment were necessary to control the disease and to save the lives of those afflicted, he said.

    In consonance with WHO, Etatuvie, who is the Nigerian Agency for Nigerian Natural Medicine Development Agency Director-General, said avoiding mosquito is the best way to treating malaria. “That is, never to catch it in the first place, but to avoid mosquitoes in the tropical world is difficult, to say the least. Powerful bug spray(specifically those good for mosquitoes) is good; you should add mosquito netting to your bed and windows, so you can sleep soundly, knowing that you won’t wake up in two weeks with the symptoms of malaria. You should also ensure that there are no large pools of standing water near your home, as those are the perfect places for mosquitoes to lay their eggs,” he explained.

    Etatuvie said recent successes in the malaria elimination had shown that prevention works: expanded access to proven, as cost-effective prevention tools has significantly reduced the global disease burden.

    “A new brochure from WHO, released ahead of World Malaria Day offers a summary of WHO-recommended tools in the malaria prevention arsenal. It highlights remaining gaps in coverage and the need for new anti-malaria tools. But if you still come down with malaria, there are ways to quickly treat same, especially before the condition becomes complicated,” he said.

    He identified the symptoms, which may include fever, headache, fatigue, muscle aches, shaking chills, nausea and vomiting. These may come and go, but they appear seven to nine days after being bitten.

    Etatuvie said proper malaria treatment was possible using herbs as long as you know what type you have. ”Some strains can remain dormant in the system for months or years after the initial exposure. There are three types of malaria: Tertian Fever, Quartan Fever and Malignant Fever. In Tertian Fever, the attacks happen on alternate days. With Quartan Fever, the attack of fever happens after an interval of two days, for example, first fever will occur on the first day, then again on the fourth day, then the seventh, and so on. Malignant Tertian is a very severe type that is the most alarming,” he explained.

    While Tertian and Quartan Fevers can be treated at home, Malignant Tertian must be treated in a hospital. Complications of malaria include anemia, dysentery and kidney failure.

    Explaining the role of the celebrated Artemisia Annua in the treatment of malaria, he said, Artemisia annua, also known as sweet wormwood (Morinda lucida, Owuro, Yoruba), is one of the most effective natural remedies for malaria. “That is even the WHO recommendation for the treatment of malaria from mono therapy to  artemisinin-based combination therapy.   Big players in the anti-malarial manufacturers in the pharmaceutical industry have all bought into this. Hard to believe, it took so long for conventional medicine to accept the herbal drug artemisinin as an effective treatment for malaria, though it has been used for a millennium and a half, it has been considered ‘acceptable’ by modern medicine for barely 40 years.

    “But now, it’s in short supply, and producing drugs with smaller dosages won’t work – a drug containing only half of the active ingredient won’t cure malaria and, in fact, will create drug resistance. Two well-known malaria drugs – chloroquine and pyrimethamine are already useless because of drug resistance. To get the best of the plant, the herb has to be steeped in cold water, and the water should be consumed directly in order to get optimum results.

    “Our agency, the Nigerian Agency for Nigerian Natural Medicine Development Agency, has come up with scientifically proven and efficacious products – mosquito repellant cream, and anti-malarial tea. These were even showcased at the just-concluded Technology innovation expo held in Abuja. I will recommend these to Nigerians because they are highly efficacious both in the prevention and treatment of malaria,”  Etatuvie said.

    On other Nature’s provisions to treat uncomplicated falciparum malaria, Etatuvie said: “The benefits of lemon or lime tea for weight loss are well-known but they are also handy in treating malaria as home remedies. Lime and lemon also play a vital role to reduce the quartan type of malarial fever. Take four to five drops of lime, add the juice of one lemon and dissolve it in one glass of water. This mixture needs to be consumed before the onset of fever. Lemon juice is also an effective home remedy for the treatment of malaria. Take two to three tablespoon of lemon juice and mix in half cup of water. Take this mixture during the initial stage of fever. Grapefruit is a great remedy for curing malaria. Sufferer should take raw grapefruit or its juice. Other fruits, which are good for patient suffering from malaria, are apple, orange, etc. If a patient cannot eat these fruits, freshly prepared fruit juice should be given.

    “Fruit and vegetable meal plan is always great when it comes to treating the body. One of the most effective home remedies for malaria is grapefruit. It should be consumed daily. The natural quinine-like substance can be extracted from the grapefruit by boiling a quarter of it and straining its pulp.”

    He said cinnamon is a valuable remedy for treating malaria. “One teaspoon of powdered cinnamon should be boiled in a glass of water with a pinch of pepper powder and a teaspoon of honey. This needs to be taken every day which is a beneficial medicine for malaria. As home remedies for malaria one can include cinnamon with clove powder. Take two to three teaspoon of finely powdered cloves and cinnamon and mix in a glass of water. Boil this mixture until the constituent become half. Allow it to cool and add little amount of black pepper or honey to it. Patient can take this mixture two to three times a day. This is a very old remedy for curing malaria.

    “Holy basil leaves are good in the prevention of malaria. Make a paste using 11 grammes of holy basil leaves with three grammes of black pepper powder. This mixture can be consumed daily in the cold stages of malarial fever. This will check the severity of the disease. Ginger is one of the oldest home remedies for treating chronic diseases. Take a small piece of ginger and two to three teaspoon raisins. Add this to a glass of water and boil it till the constituent become half. Allow it to cool, and then give to the sufferer.”

    He said Neem (Dongoyaro) biologically called Azadirachta indica,  a tree in the mahogany family, is plethora in our environment. “We use the plant’s leaves and bark to treat malaria. Its extract substantially increases the state of oxidation in red blood cells, preventing normal development of the malaria plasmodia. Neem can block the development of the gamete in an infected person. This not only prevent the infected person from developing malaria but also stops the disease from spreading. Two other compounds found in neem leaves called gedunin, a limonoid, and quercetin, a flavonoid, are at least, as effective as quinine and chloroquine against malaria. Neem also lowers the fever and increases the appetite, thereby strengthening the body, which aids in fighting the disease parasite and speeding recovery. Neem leaf extract substantially increases the state of oxidation in red blood cells, preventing normal development of the malaria plasmodia.

    “Drinking Neem teas or chewing a couple of its leaves daily reduces the possibility of contracting malaria. According to reports, Neem cures the disease in one week; it is very good in persistent cases. Drink one glass of Neem thrice daily. The extract is made by boiling 30g of Neem leaves in three litres of water for 20 minutes. Some Westerners familiar with Neem often substitute an occasional Neem leaf tea to drinking quinine on trips to malaria-infested areas of Africa and India as a preventive measure. Neem extracts tested by the Malaria Institute were found to repel the mosquito that causes malaria for up to 12 hours. Neem provides protection from not only mosquitoes but also from biting flies, sand fleas and ticks. Because of Neem’s proven effectiveness, insect repellents made with Neem are being used in malaria prone tropical countries. An active ingredient in Neem leaves, called Irodin A, is toxic to resistant strains of malaria, with 100 percent of the plasmodia dead in 72 hours with only a 1:20,000 ratio of active ingredients.”

    Etatuvie continued: “Most importantly, maintain a clean and hygienic surrounding and prevent yourself from malaria by using the above-home remedies. Keep yourself healthy by eating the right kind of foods and keeping away from mosquitoes by using mosquito repellent creams, medications and devices and don’t forget to use the mosquito net at night.”

    He appealed to healers across the country to contact his agency to document their innovations: “We haven’t been able to document properly. If you look at the practice, it is transfer from one generation to the other. In fact, this is one of our core areas of strength – documentation. We need to document the practice for continuity in practice. The essence of our documentation is to ensure that the agency has what we call the national comprehensive inventory of medicinal plants. Once we do that, we will be able to put it in book and practitioners will have access to them.

    ‘’We also encourage practitioners to document their own formulas,  to prevent scarcity of information on the practice. Prior to this time, most aged practitioners died with their knowledge without passing it to the next generation. Although some people think everything herbal is fetish, it is not so.

    This country has very huge numbers bio-resources in the nine geological areas and six geopolitical zones. We have places, such as the Obudu Cattle Ranch, Osogbo Groove and Mambila Plateau. All these places have special climatic conditions, which produce special effects in the medicinal plants grown there. We must document to narrow down on areas of specialisation. This enables researchers to work better on pharmacopeia.’’

  • Bauchi claims 81 per cent success in Tuberculosis cure

    Executive Chairman, Bauchi State Agency for the Control ofTu HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, Leprosy and Malaria (BACATMA),Dr Mansur Dada, Friday said the state had recorded  81 per cent success in the treatment of Tuberculosis last year.

    Speaking during the celebration of  World Tuberculosis Day  held in Bauchi, with the theme ‘Unite to End Tuberculosis’, Dada said of the 3,239 cases recorded in the state,  2646 were treated.
    He said the state had increased its Tuberculosis Treatment and Diagnostic Centres, from 23 in the 2007, to 90 in 2017.
    He said that additional strategies would be implored to increase public awareness on the disease.
    Speaking on challenges, the chairman said that there were cases of resistance to drugs experienced by some patients.
    He also lamented that funding had reduced drastically as a result of the gradual withdrawal of  some donor organisations.

  • Ayade’s wife fights malaria in schools

    Wife of Governor Ben Ayade of Cross River State, Dr Linda, has pledged to eradicate malaria from the state.

    She took the fight against the disease to public schools in the northern senatorial district of the state.

    Inaugurating the Etisalat Fight Malaria Initiative in partnership with her pet project, Mediatrix Development Foundation, in Ogoja, Mrs Ayade said as an ambassador against malaria, they had a duty to ensure that primary, secondary and tertiary institutions in the state are equipped to fight malaria.

    “Until we can tell the world that no one is dying of malaria anymore in Cross River State, I will not relent as a fight malaria ambassador,” she said.

    According to her, intervention had started in the southern part of the state where the foundation had created school club system to not only fight malaria, but address other health issues that affect young ones.

    “I strongly believe that if the students in schools can be equipped with the right information to fight malaria, they would take same message to their families and communities. I am confident that when the young ambassadors inaugurated in the various schools in all the local government areas in northern Cross River State go back to their communities, they will work to ensure no child or pregnant woman dies of malaria,” she said.

    Dr Ayade charged the students to take advantage of the Etisalat Initiative to improve their knowledge on malaria prevention by joining the Hunt Malaria Club being established.

    She noted that the Etisalat partnership will not only help fight malaria, but has also provided computers to expose more children to computer based learning.

    She emphasised testing before treatment, as not all fevers are malaria, and warned against self-medication and patronizing fake and substandard anti-malaria drugs.

    Commissioner for Health, Dr Inyang Asibong, said malaria kills more than any other disease in the world and lauded Mrs Ayade for attracting Etisalat to partner with the state to fight the disease.

  • Making the war against malaria work

    Book Title: IBA
    Author: Greg Ugbaja
    Publisher: MiriOma Communications
    Reviewer: Edozie Udeze

    “The ruler  of Anwuntaland, a vast kingdom of mosquitoes,has assembled a two million man army drawn from his deadliest military unit, the evil  Female Anopheles Brigade; for the ‘Mother of all wars’ against the human population of Maduland. The strategy is to infect everyone with the dreaded Iba disease.

    In response, Maduland appoints a new war leader for the impending invasion. The young Omara reveals the deep secrets of the evil Anwuntas to the people as they prepare to face the dreaded Anopheles Brigade.

    On the appointed day millions of the tiny six-leg monsters led by experienced commanders, surrounds the human kingdom, in an elaborate midnight invasion. It is supposed to be easy, but something goes wrong… and the greatest war ever recorded in the history of men and mosquitoes was fought that night”.

    The synopsis above clearly sets the stage for  an exciting work of fiction  which has all the trappings of a good story, whose major objectives are to entertain,teach moral lessons and  promote basic principles of Literature.But the work, IBA is much more than just a literary work, it is one of the most innovative strategies in the fight against  Malaria- the  greatest mass killer on the African continent. Thus, its title, IBA, a word for “Malaria” in Igbo and Yoruba languages respectivelly, is apt.

     The work can be described as  an anti-malaria  “battle-axe” laced with an entertainting piece of literary  creativity, culture, song and dance  put together to enhance this very unique piece of “ Stop Malaria” prose fiction.Indeed, it could be the first contribution of the Nigerian literary sector in the fight against Malaria.

    IBA  explored major and minor themes which includes the importance of education and information in the lives of a people. Maduland, where the story is set, is constantly under attack from the blood sucking Anwuntas,until Omara, the only educated boy in the community helped to  effectively disband the people’s agelong  myths about the evil Awuntas, the six leg flying monsters that “carry the dreaded Iba disease on its pointed mouth”. The citizens of Maduland did not reckon that it was their poor health habbits that creates room for the spread of Anwuntas. They thought all Mosquitoes come from their swampy Kingdom of Anwuntaland and are able to mltiply in large numbers due to a special black magic.

     They also thought that “Ogbaruruigwe”, the tiny mosquito pupas that are found in stagnant bodies of water come from the sky, with the rains.Their inadequate understanding of their old foes made it very difficult for them to defeat them.

     But with the arrival of the young Omara, King Anwu and his band of troublesome  citizens where completely dymistified and roundly defeated in the famous Mother Of All Wars.

    The theme of pride and its inherent consequences was clearly highlighted in the rise and fall  of the boastful king Anwu of Anwuntaland, who, blinded by hate for humans vowed to wipeout the entire human population of Maduland  in his illfated  midnight invasion, an elaborate campaign involving over two million members of the  dreaded Anopheles Brigade.

    Inaddition, the ten chapter book further emphasised the importance of  Knowledge above physical strength. This   was highlighted in the methods adopted by “Ijele” the Chief warrior of Maduland, who prefered direct confrontation with the evil Anwuntas, as against  Omara, who would rather educate the people on the nature and character of the dreaded Mosquitoe invaders.

    The style of the author is unique. He carefully blended fiction with facts to produce a work that can be described as a pure “Edutainment”. For instance, he creatively pulled into his narrative, important statistics, drawn from World Health Organisation  about the impact of malaria in Africa and the world. The seamless manner in which scientific data and story telling are fused can at best be desribed as innovative. Presenting data in a narrative form makes it easy for the reader to assimilate statistics without knowing when he or she did.  The book also exposes young readers to the different species of mosquitoes and inherent characteristics.

    There is also the use of Glossary of words to explain some difficult and uncommon terms.

    However,  out of the ten chapters, chapter 7 is too long in relation to the length  of other chapters. As a matter of fact Chapter seven could have been broken into two more chapters. The use of pictures in the opening chapters and the simplicity in choice of words could create the impression that the work is for young students, when in truth, the work is good for all categories of readers.

  • Hauwei donates N50m to eradicate malaria

    Hauwei donates N50m to eradicate malaria

    Hauwei Technologies has donated N50million to Access Bank and other private sector companies in support of the campaign to eradicate malaria in the country.

    The presentation was done on Wednesday at the press conference on ‘Malaria to Zero’ campaign in Lagos by the Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Huawei Technologies, Nigeria, Frank Li to MD/CEO, Access bank Plc, Herbert Wigwe.

    Mr. Ade Kehinde, Head, Enterprise sector, Huawei  Technologies, who spoke on behalf of Chief Executive Officer(CEO), Huawei  Technologies, Nigeria, Frank Li, said, Nigeria has the highest malaria patients ranging from children to adults.

    According to him, “Huawei has a company has employed about six hundred Nigerians as workers and the company is using this medium to say Zero to malaria in Nigeria that is why we are supporting Access bank in fighting against malaria.”

    He also said, Huawei will be glad to donate more fund if need be as long as the money is been used to fund the ‘malaria to zero’ campaign.

     MD/CEO, of Access bank said, the campaign aims at teaching 20 millions Nigerians how to live in a malaria free environment come year 2020.

    “By 2020, 20 million Nigerians would have learnt how to combat malaria. Life has a chance as any child born in Nigeria has that right to life just like children born in other countries in the world. Improving and winning war against malaria to zero in Nigeria and across Africa is our aim,’’ Wigwe said.

    According to him, “it is advisable to help financiers invest in the most appropriate technical strategies suitable to local context. Private sector is coming together to work with the government and accelerate the campaign –malaria control-elimination. And this can be achieved through private sector engagement platform.”

    Chief, Private Sector Health Alliance of Nigeria, Dr. Muntaga Umar-Sadiq  also called on journalists to assist in disseminating proper information in order to help engage hundreds of private companies in Nigeria about ongoing campaign.

    “It is good to ensure private sector roundtable on malaria through innovation and technology to develop new way of measuring impact on the campaign because, money is coming in, but it is rather appreciative to get the target structure issues-data and surveillance system right,” Umar-Sadiq stated.

     

  • Photo: Launch of Malaria to Zero Initiative

    Photo: Launch of Malaria to Zero Initiative

     

    L-R: Managing Director, Huawei Nigeria, Frank Li; Managing Director, Access bank, Herbert Wige; Chief Executive officer, Private Sector Health Alliance of Nigeria, Muntaqa Umar-Sadiq and Representative of Lagos State, Commissioner of Health, Dr. Eniola Erinosho during the press Conference on Zero Initiative by Access Bank Private Sector Health Alliance of Nigeria (PSHN) and Huawei Technology in Lagos. 30-11-2016. PHOTO: OLUSEGUN RAPHEAL.
    L-R: Managing Director, Huawei Nigeria, Frank Li; Managing Director, Access bank, Herbert Wige; Chief Executive officer, Private Sector Health Alliance of Nigeria, Muntaqa Umar-Sadiq and Representative of Lagos State, Commissioner of Health, Dr. Eniola Erinosho during the press Conference on Zero Initiative by Access Bank Private Sector Health Alliance of Nigeria (PSHN) and Huawei Technology in Lagos. 30-11-2016. PHOTO: OLUSEGUN RAPHEAL.