No one should die of malaria today

by Global Diversity Foundation
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No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today
No one should die of malaria today

Project Report | Mar 28, 2023
Communities implement highly effective pilot malaria control strategy

By Drs. Eglee Zent and Susannah McCandless | Project leaders

Health leaders track malaria testing and treatment
Health leaders track malaria testing and treatment

I spoke to Egleé a week ago, just ahead of project leaders’ return to the Amazon to continue community visits to the Indigenous communities leading this work, starting with a visit to Betania. Over the next four weeks, they will reinforce the strategies set up for epidemiological vigilance and control over malaria, and deliver mdicines and medical equipment.

The headline is, “No cases of malaria in Kayama since November!”, Egleé said. “In an extended community of almost 1,600 people, no cases—neither autochthonous (the parasite is in the community, the transmission is within the local population) nor imported (the malaria comes from the outside)! And very few cases in Caño Iguana—only 6 or 7—since the last time we visited in December.

“Malaria used to be the topic, the thing we talked about all the time. Now when we communicate, they don’t even talk about it! Instead, we talk about weather, other health issues, hunting or….”

These community-led impacts—and our ability to deliver, document, and share them—are possible thanks to the generosity of you, the project’s donors. And now those impacts, combining prevention, rapid diagnosis and effective treatment, have come to the attention of national and international actors working to address malaria in Venezuela and beyond! But I’m getting ahead of myself. Egleé shared the following detailed report on the project’s work since our last report to you.

“During December 2022, project leaders returned to the Jotï community of Caño Iguana (AmazonasState, Manapiare, Alto Ventuari). We continued the training, distribution of long-lasting insecticidal mosquito nets (LLINs)), medical supplies, generic medicines targeting morbidity and especially enough Rapid Diagnostic Tests (RDTs) and treatments for malaria, reaching our numerical targets in all categories. See Table 1, below: Caño Iguana (Jotï) by the numbers.

We attended several community meetings, and it was a wonderful surprise to see the results accomplished in the area by the community’s implementation of the malakits: the portable kits for malaria diagnosis and treatment. The way the Jotï have appropriated the strategy to control, diminish and eventually eliminate the malaria and made it their own was amazing!  Each responsable, the person responsible for one or more of the (25) sectors that the Iguana area is composed of, truly took care of the people with malaria or malarial symptoms. They walked from their home sectors to meet with us and report what had been doing since May of 2022. A synthesis of what was done and found is represented in the Figure 1 (table and pie graphic, below). 

Figure 1, below. Sector-based strategy for malaria control: Sectors of Jkalo Ijkwala, or Caño Iguana, by name, population, person responsible (sector head), rapid diagnostic kits used, and cases recorded.

The sectors are to different distances from the ambulatorio where the clinic and the only microscope to diagnose malaria are located, some as far away as two day’s walk. The possibility of a precise diagnosis through the proper use of RDT, supervised by a well-trained sector head are therefore crucial, given that most people are too far from the diagnostic microscope to get there, especially when they are ill. Now, each sector head has the diagnostic kit, treatments and training to use it on hand, and can give it to anyone affected (see Image 1 and Image 2). If the test is initially negative, they will repeat it in 24 hours. If it is positive, the correct diagnosis and immediate treatment can save the life of the patient, and also stop transmission.

The impact is to stop malaria before it gets severe and before it is communicated to others nearby.

Image 1, below: The sector heads meet, compare experiences, and organize their work: all have walked from their sectors to the control point at the central clinic in Caño Iguana. The pictures show the used RDTs being classified by each sector’s population while the data is processed onto the accompanying forms

One of the most amazing results and our best metric is the reduction of malaria cases and zero mortality.

Image 2, below: The forms above the RDTs from each sector record minute data of the person with malaria symptoms (name, age, and condition, like pregnancy or another specific health issue); the date when the test was performed; the result; if positive the Plasmodium specie; and the treatment provided among other data.

Image 3, below: The Rapid Diagnostic Tests (RDT's) used by two health leaders in two of the 25 sectors.

The new year has been one of intense and formal articulations with several key actors in the work for the elimination of the malaria in Venezuela. Since early January we were invited and selected to be part of the Technical Group for Malaria (TGM). The main goal of TGM is to put together a structured plan, suggested and followed by civil society actors (like us!) in line with Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO) and the Health Ministry’s National Strategic Plan for Malaria. We have been attending weekly and sometimes twice-weekly meetings that can last all day. It has been a huge learning experience, and has afforded an interchange of views and approaches that can be extrapolated to other Indigenous/rural/urban peoples vulnerable to malaria in the most endemic areas.

We’re at the table with PAHO and the Health Ministry, and also United Nations Development Program, Doctors Without Borders, Medicos del Mundo (Spain), Rotary Club, Proyecto Maniapure, and Proyecto Acoana, among other marvelous, committed people. Our project, though, is the first to test the malakits anywhere in Venezuela. Partners and supporters of the Group are gladdened by its success in multiple cultural contexts. They emphasize the importance of our commitment to work always by honoring community requests, in collaboration with community and partner expertise.

Thank you once again for making the amazing work of these communities' possible! Please keep us in your hearts as we visit diverse Indigenous communities in Amazonas State over the next month."

Table of project deliverables in Cano Iguana, 2022
Table of project deliverables in Cano Iguana, 2022
Cano Iguana population & malaria cases by sector
Cano Iguana population & malaria cases by sector
Sector heads process malaria rates, treatment data
Sector heads process malaria rates, treatment data
Case records (blurred) & RDTs for 2 sectors, 8 mos
Case records (blurred) & RDTs for 2 sectors, 8 mos
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Organization Information

Global Diversity Foundation

Location: Bristol, VT - USA
Website:
Facebook: Facebook Page
Project Leader:
Susannah McCandless
GDF International Program Director
Bristol , VT United States

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