"I
have no inner strength. I feel like I'm dying," the 30-year-old
university student said from her hospital bed.
Malaria,
the ancient mosquito-borne disease that was rolled back
by medical advances in the mid-20th century, is making a
deadly comeback.
Strains
of the disease are becoming increasingly resistant to treatment,
infecting and killing more people than ever before -- sickening
as many as 900 million last year, according to estimates
by the U.S. Agency for International Development.
More
than 1 million people -- and as many as 2.7 million by some
estimates -- of those victims died. The vast majority of
the deaths were in Africa.
After
three days in a private hospital in Nigeria's commercial
capital of Lagos, Egbuchue recovered from what doctors said
was a strain that had become resistant to many of the standard
treatments.
"Malaria
is something that we thought we had conquered years ago.
But more and more of our people are dying from it every
day," said Patrick Dike, a malaria specialist at the Lagos
hospital.
Only
AIDS kills more people worldwide. Among children, malaria
kills even more than AIDS.
The
economic cost of malaria is also high -- in countries of
Africa, Asia and Latin America where the disease is endemic,
the World Health Organization estimates up to $12 billion
are lost annually to the disease.
Americans
traveling abroad also are at risk. Of the 225 Marines and
Navy forces who went ashore to assist West African peacekeepers
in Liberia, 51 showed symptoms -- an unusually high rate,
U.S. officials said.
International
efforts to contain or even eradicate the disease have received
a boost in recent years with major grants from the U.S.
government and from the $4.7 billion five-year U.N. Global
Fund for Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
The
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which has supported malaria
efforts, is also expected to announce new funding toward
malaria medicines, controls and vaccine research this weekend.
"We
hope that malaria gets some additional visibility," Bill
Gates, the Microsoft tycoon, said in a conference call with
journalists. "Of those million people who die, overwhelmingly
those are children. ... This is something we should demand
more action on."
Increasing
resistance
Malaria
campaigners complain that despite the increased focus, their
efforts remain woefully underfunded. Whereas AIDS vaccine
research receives $400 million a year, malaria research
receives just $60 million.
While
donors commit an estimated $200 million each year to treating
impoverished patients and distributing mosquito nets and
insecticides to prevent mosquito bites that transmit the
disease, experts say they need at least $1 billion to make
a dent.
"Malaria
has to some extent been forgotten by the international community,"
said Allan Schapira, a senior official in WHO's Rollback
Malaria program. "Apart from AIDS, it is the single worst
child health problem that we haven't got a grip on."
In Nigeria,
a nation of 126 million people where government officials
estimate up to one-quarter of the world's malaria deaths
occur, researchers at the national Nigerian Institute of
Medical Research test malaria treatments and other drugs
on mice in a single tiny, stiflingly hot laboratory.
"The
resources available in Nigeria for this work are limited
or even nonexistent," research director Philip Agomo said.
A major
cause of malaria's alarming resurgence is the parasite's
increasing resistance to the drugs used to treat and prevent
the disease -- including chloroquine, the cheapest and most
effective anti-malarial since the 1950s.
The
number of alternatives are limited. The WHO supports use
of multi-drug combinations based on artemisinin, until recently
an extract from the "sweet wormwood" plant used in China
for centuries but little known in the West.
Yet
aid agency officials say that artemisinin is not yet produced
in large enough quantities to affordably treat the large
numbers of Africans who need it most.
Some
governments and Western donors have been hesitant to promote
the treatment widely because of a lack of funds -- artemisinin
is 10 times more expensive than chloroquine, or between
$4.50 and $9 for a three-day treatment.
"It
is definitely the future," Anne Peterson, head of global
health for USAID in Washington, said of artemisinin-based
drugs. "Yet it is far more expensive and harder to get out
to the numbers of people who need it."
The
Nobel Prize-winning international humanitarian group Medecins
Sans Frontieres is urging the United States and other Western
governments to support and fund artemisinin-based therapy
regimens. It notes chloroquine and other drugs have become
ineffective in up to 80 percent of malaria cases in some
countries.
"Donors
must stop wasting their money funding drugs that don't work,"
MSF said in a report.
Peterson,
the USAID official, said that until it receives more funds,
the U.S. agency will support the use of the "cheapest, most
effective drugs" in countries where they still have use.
Dike,
the Lagos doctor, said in the absence of affordable alternatives,
he and some colleagues have in desperation begun exchanging
information about what available combinations work best
to treat patients.
"People
don't understand why their relatives are sometimes not recovering,
or why they are not being cured as quickly as they are used
to being cured. How do you explain drug resistance? When
they are suffering, the doctor is blamed."
|