Ghana is still at the control stage of Malaria programme, which embody the first step in the fight against the disease, Dr. Aba Baffoe-Wilmot, Medical Entomologist of National Malaria Control Programme said on Tuesday.
She said the second stage is the elimination of the disease which must be supported by a functioning health system, while the third stage is eradication which is usually global and undertaken when vaccines exist and no case is reported in three years.
Dr Baffoe-Wilmot was addressing the Ghana Health Service (GHS) Monthly Forum in Accra to commemorate World Malaria Day on Sunday, April 25.
Malaria is caused by plasmodium parasite and transmitted through the female anopheles mosquito with simple symptoms as fever, headache, muscle
pain, loss of appetite and severe symptoms like severe anaemia, blood in urine, convulsion, jaundice and extreme general weakness.
She said though recorded cases in Out Patient Department had reduced from 49.5 per cent in 2001 to 30.0 per cent in 2009, total malaria admission from 48.0 per cent in 2004 to 44.2 per cent in 2009 for children under five, 34.0 per cent to 30.3 per cent for total malaria and 7.5 per cent to 5.4 per cent for pregnant women during the same period, are still challenges.
Dr. Baffoe-Wilmot said other setbacks are low Insecticide Treated Nets (ITN)usage, even though ownership is high, misdiagnosis leading to wrong treatment and over consumption of malaria treatment, the prescription of mono therapy by clinicians and ignorance and misconceptions about the disease.
She said current strategies to control malaria included indoor residual spraying, environmental management and targeted larviciding, ITN for children under five and pregnant women, free distribution of the nets during mass immunisation days and Directly Observed Therapy for pregnant women.
On curative strategies, she noted that treatment had been largely based on presumption diagnosis but now the programme is encouraging diagnosis by microscopy before treatment and drugs for simple and uncomplicated malaria,
which include; Aetesunate-amodiaquine; artermether-lumefantrine and Dihydro-artsemisinin pieraquine.
Mother and care givers could also be trained to give the correct treatment at home.
"Malaria is responsible for a growth penalty of up to 1.3 per cent per year," she noted and added that it has been estimated that the annual
economic burden in Africa is 1.7 billion dollars while a single bout of malaria cost a sum equivalent to over 10 working days in Africa.
In Ghana, 8,200 malaria cases are reported daily, with 4,500 deaths, 1,500 under five deaths while 60 pregnant women die from the disease
annually.
She called on government and the private sector to prioritise malaria control through resource allocation and socially responsibilities.
According to a study by the Institute of Statistical Social and Economic Research on the economic burden of malaria in Ghana, the disease is a challenge to human development and both the cause and consequence of underdevelopment.
It is the number one cause of morbidity accounting for 40-60 per cent of outpatient and the leading cause of mortality in children under five and cause of work lost due to illness.