Scaling up malaria prevention in Sierra Leone

Scaling up malaria prevention in Sierra Leone

Preparations are currently underway for a vast bed net distribution campaign in Sierra Leone. Planned for June this year, the campaign aims to distribute around 4.3 million insecticide-treated bed nets to households nationwide to help protect them against malaria, which remains one of the country’s leading causes of death and illness.

Every year malaria infects thousands of Sierra Leoneans, with children and pregnant women especially vulnerable. A recent national survey shows that, despite high levels of awareness, malaria prevalence among young children is as high as 40 percent, with devastating impacts for families, communities and development.  

“Malaria can be both prevented and treated, which makes every malaria-related death truly tragic,” says Janet Kayita, Essential Health Services Coordinator at the World Health Organization in Sierra Leone. “Treated bed nets are one of the most cost-effective ways of preventing the disease, and we need to work together with Government, partners and communities to ensure that families both have access to and are using the nets every night, everywhere, alongside early treatment seeking behavior at the very first signs of the infection.”

Christy Berewa is a nurse at the Under-Five Clinic at Kenema Government Hospital in the east of the country, and regularly treats young children presenting with malaria – often, she says, at a late stage when they can be vulnerable to complications. “Although people know and talk about it in communities and among families, malaria regrettably still remains the most common complaint we receive here on a daily basis. Even more upsetting is the fact that the disease can be prevented and treated at no major cost, yet it still continues to kill so many children”.

Preventive measures such as improved sanitation, and continued and consistent use of the treated nets remain a key focus for anti-malaria interventions. With the pending mass distribution of nets, the Ministry of Health and Sanitation is therefore working with local partners to prevent their leakages and misuse and has recently embarked on a mass awareness campaign to such effect.

Towards a commitment to reduce new cases of the disease by 40 percent by 2020, the national bed net distribution campaign is being led by the Ministry of Health and Sanitation and supported by a range of partners including the Global Fund, the UK Government, WHO and UNICEF, as well as community and civil society partners

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