PSI/Rwanda Country Representative Staci
Leuschner speaks about Rwanda’s malaria
control efforts at a briefing on Capitol Hill.
WASHINGTON, DC — PSI, the Global Health Council and the Johns Hopkins University’s Global Program on Malaria held a briefing and reception on April 23 on Capitol Hill in observance of World Malaria Day. The briefing, “Fighting and Winning Against Malaria in Rwanda and Worldwide,” focused on the successes achieved in Rwanda in the face of serious challenges and featured first-person accounts of how US funding supports progress in the fight against malaria in Africa.
Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), a congressional champion against malaria, sponsored the briefing and gave opening remarks. Other speakers were Rwandan Ambassador to the US James Kimonyo, Dr. Corine Karema, coordinator for Rwanda’s National Malaria Control Program, Admiral Timothy Ziemer, coordinator for the President’s Malaria Initiative, and Ray Chambers, special envoy of the UN Secretary General for Malaria. PSI/Rwanda Country Representative Staci Leuschner spoke about the important roles that leadership, partnership, and community played in Rwanda’s success story.
In conjunction with this event, PSI Governmental Affairs Manager Jennie Quick accompanied Dr. Karema to meetings in key congressional offices. They told staff in the offices of Reps. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-IL) and Kay Granger (R-TX), and Sens. Sam Brownback (R-KS) and Dick Durbin (D-IL), that investments in the tools to prevent and treat malaria do achieve results, and it is critical to sustain recent gains in places like Rwanda to avoid a resurgence of the disease.
As part of these advocacy efforts, PSI highlighted some major themes.
- Success is achievable: There are tools available to prevent and treat malaria at a low cost. Recent programs show that investments like those in the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria and the President’s Malaria Initiative have shown significant increases in lives saved.
- The time is now: Recent investments in malaria efforts have allowed us to achieve impressive results; now it is critical to sustain and broaden them to ensure that we don’t lose ground in our fight.
- There is a plan: The malaria community has agreed to the Global Malaria Action Plan and coordination among partners will help assure the best return on these investments.
- National governments play a leading role in achieving success: In leading the implementation of the malaria control plans, countries play a critical role in improving the health of their people in fighting malaria.
- Partnership is key: Between funders and nations, NGOs and communities, everyone must work in partnership to be successful in beating malaria.
- Communities are critical: The majority of malaria-related deaths occur in the home. Therefore, the key to success is the delivery of life-saving interventions at the community level. The Government of Rwanda responded to this reality by establishing a network of community health workers, who act as an official extension of the health system. Such initiatives provide additional benefit for the health system, and in turn, treat patients with a wide range of health conditions.
Rwanda’s Success
Rwanda stands out as one of PSI’s platforms that has made dramatic progress in controlling malaria. For many years, malaria was the leading cause of illness and death in Rwanda. In about two years of rapid scale-up, deaths due to malaria have decreased by 60%. And now only 10% of patients who seek treatment at health centers do so for malaria.
A number of factors contributed to the significant gains in reducing the malaria burden in Rwanda. The National Malaria Control Program, with PSI’s support, made the conversion to artemisinin-based combination therapy; concentrated efforts on preventing malaria during pregnancy; and scaled up ownership and usage of long-lasting insecticide-treated nets. In 2006 and 2007, a coordinated national multi-channel distribution of three million nets reached 10 million Rwandans through antenatal clinics vaccination sites and private sector outlets in 100% of district towns.
Malaria remains a serious issue for Rwanda and many other PSI platforms. As people everywhere commemorate World Malaria Day 2009, these challenges emphasize the importance of continued investment and political commitment to controlling the epidemic.