WHO okays expanded use of anti-malaria jab in Kenya as disease prevalence subsides

WHO okays expanded use of anti-malaria jab in Kenya as disease prevalence subsides

Malaria-mosquito

WHO okays expanded use of anti-malaria jab in Kenya as disease prevalence subsides

More children in malaria-endemic counties are set to benefit from the ongoing vaccination after the World Health Organization (WHO) gave approval for expanded use of the vaccine.

Since the vaccination began, 275,000 children have been partially jabbed, while 45,000 are fully vaccinated with data showing the number of malaria cases has gone down.

Kenya has over the last decade been able to reduce the burden of malaria by at least 50 percent from a prevalence rate of 11 percent in 2010 to six percent in 2020.

Health Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe said that this achievement is attributed to the concerted effort and collaboration between the Ministry of Health, the county governments, local communities, development partners in health, and the global malaria community.

CS Kagwe said that in the last year, the government provided Kes1.2 billion for the procurement of malaria diagnosis and treatment supplies.

In a speech read on his behalf by Health CAS Dr. Rashid Aman on Wednesday during the world malaria day media briefing breakfast, Mr Kagwe said that working together with partners, the country registered over 14 million malaria diagnostic tests while five million cases of malaria were treated.

“In the prevention of malaria, over 324,000 pregnant women living in malaria-endemic areas of the lake and coast endemic counties received Intermittent Preventive Treatment for malaria during pregnancy,” said the CS.

He further explained that between May and December 2021, 16 million Long Lasting Insecticide Treated Nets (LLIT) were distributed to households in 27 counties with the highest burden of malaria adding that these nets are providing protection from malaria to an estimated 25 million men, women, pregnant women and children sleeping under these nets every night.

Read also: WHO establishes traditional medicine global centre in India

“The ministry distributed 1.8 million LLIT bed nets in 36 counties to pregnant women and children under a year old who are the groups most vulnerable to adverse outcomes of malaria infection,” he said.

“I am pleased to report that despite the constraints imposed by the Covid-19 containment measures in force then, the bed net distribution campaign achieved 100 percent coverage."

The ministry is liaising with county governments in roll out of Indoor Residual Spraying (IRS) of households in Migori and Homa Bay counties, offering protection to 2.1 million residents.

This programme is likely to be expanded in the near future to other counties in the group of counties around Lake Victoria.

“To complement vector control interventions targeting adult mosquitoes, the ministry has included larval source management as an additional intervention in line with the Malaria Strategic Plan. The Kenya Cuba Malaria Vector Control Project which addresses this additional intervention was launched last year by President Uhuru Kenyatta,” said Kagwe.

According to Dr Willis Akhwale, senior advisor at the Africa Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA),  34 counties in Kenya have a malaria prevalence of less than one percent which is very good progress and means that fewer children will die and more lives will be saved.

Dr Akhwale said that the End Malaria Council (EMC) has been established to mobilize additional private and public sector resources to plug the gap in the implementation of the Kenya Malaria strategy.

“In Africa, 24 countries have either formed or are in the process of establishing their EMC, five of them; Eswatini, Mozambique, Kenya, Uganda, and Zambia are fully operational,” said Dr Akhwale.

Head of Division at the National Malaria Program, Dr George Githuka, said that overall Kenya has a malaria prevalence of six percent which is not evenly distributed across the country.

“The areas with the highest-burden in the country are the lake endemic counties which are around Lake Victoria where one in five people have malaria at any given time. The second highest disease burden area is the coast region next to the Indian Ocean, where one in 20 people have malaria at any given time,” explained Dr Githuka.

He said that they have started the malaria elimination agenda starting with the counties with the lowest burden of malaria and expanding it towards a malaria-free Kenya.

[email protected]

Advertisement