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The silent epidemic
The threat posed by a world-wide epidemic of "Bird Flu" has received
significant media attention in recent times. Millions of dollars
have been poured into research and the development of a vaccine.
We have been continually warned of the huge effect the disease will
have on millions of people around the world. We are right to feel
scared. But looking at the number of infections up to this point,
we find that since 2003, 228 cases of "Bird Flu" have been confirmed
in 10 countries world-wide, 130 of which have resulted in death.
At the same time as reports of "Bird Flu", there is another disease
which has been with us for a long time . Malaria kills over 1 million
people each year, mostly children. It is so deadly that it can kill
within hours. There is no doubt of its seriousness, but it is barely
mentioned in our media. Why?
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Chaka
Chaka: Wage war against malaria
South African singer Yvonne Chaka Chaka urged world leaders Saturday to wage
war against malaria as she paid emotional tribute to a band member who died two
years ago of the disease, which kills more than a million people every year.
Phumzile Ntuli was infected while on tour with Chaka Chaka in Gabon in 2004.
Upon her return to South Africa, she fell into a coma, from which she never recovered. Associated
Press, 1st July 2006
Unknown
malaria strain kills 27 in Tanzania
Twenty-seven people have fallen victim in one day to an unknown
strain of malaria in westernmost Tanzania while 410 others are still
hospitalised for the disease, according to reports on Saturday. Children
and pregnant women have accounted for more than half of these in-patients. Xinhua,
1st July 2006
Malaria,
dengue fever alert on Thai-Myanmar border
Refugees from continuing violence in the Myanmar countryside
adjacent to Thailand, together with an earlier than normal rainy
season in the heavily-forested border region means that the incidence
and danger of contracting malaria is higher than usual. ETNA,
28th June 2006
Malaria
kills 55, affects thousands in India
A new strain of malaria has killed 55 people and affected more
than 18,000 others in India's eastern state of West Bengal since
January, the World Health Organisation and the state government said
on Monday. "All the deaths could be a result of poor surveillance
and drug resistance, but we are still trying to find answers," K.C.
Barui, state director of health services, told Reuters. Reuters,
26th June 2006 |
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Business
Joins African Effort to Cut Malaria
With malaria spread across southern Mozambique, executives at the international
mining company Billiton expected some workers to call in sick as it began building
a massive new aluminium smelter amid the cornfields here. What they did not expect
was that nearly one in three employees would fall ill - 6,600 cases in just two
years. And they certainly did not expect 13 deaths, not after the company had
built a medical clinic, doused the construction site with pesticides and handed
out bed nets to thwart malaria-carrying mosquitoes. New
York Times, 29th June 2006
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Economic
costs of malaria
"Malaria affects the health and wealth of nations and individuals
alike. In Africa today, malaria is understood to be both a disease of
poverty and a cause of poverty. Malaria has significant measurable direct
and indirect costs, and has recently been shown to be a major constraint
to economic development. For developing economies this has meant that
the gap in prosperity between countries with malaria and countries without
malaria has become wider every single year." World
Health Organisation
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Roll
Back Malaria Global Initiative
To provide a co-ordinated international approach to fighting malaria, the
Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Global Partnership was launched in 1998 by the World
Health Organisation, UNICEF, UNDP and the World Bank. RBM's goal is to halve
the burden of malaria by 2010. This site contains up-to-date information about
malaria, including malaria FAQs, multimedia resources and publications.
www.rollbackmalaria.org

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Malaria:
Killer Number One
Filmed in Ethiopia and produced by IRIN Films (part of
the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs), Malaria: Killer Number One can be viewed online
at www.irinnews.org/film/ using
Realplayer or Windows Media Player (duration 19:43 minutes).
This film is a vivid account of the suffering of people struck
by malaria and charts the challenges the international community
faces in combating one of the world's deadliest diseases. Linked
to the documentary is a website with a wealth of resources on
the topic including background information, stories, maps, interviews,
illustrations and links.
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"There is a silent tsunami underway all the
time in rural Africa. Every month, as many children die of malaria
in Africa as died in the tsunami - about 150,000 children dying every
month." Dr
Jeffery Sachs PhD, Director of the UN Millennium Project, Director
of the Earth Institute at Columbia University
PLEASE NOTE: LINKS TO EXTERNAL WEBSITES ARE NOT NECESSARILY
ENDORSED BY CARITAS AUSTRALIA.
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Caritas
Australia helps eradicate disease
As part of its Asia Program, Caritas Australia is currently supporting
a project in Indonesia entitled "Health education, awareness-raising
and clean water in West Kalimantan" - which aims to manage and prevent
malaria and other major diseases.
Caritas
Australia works to heal divide in East Timor
Caritas Australia has expanded its humanitarian relief operation
to the districts outside of Dili as fresh violence breaks out in
East Timor. In the past weeks many thousands of people have begun
taking refuge away from the capital. "Caritas Australia has just
committed $320,000 towards the East Timor humanitarian response,
which will enable us to focus on peace building and reconciliation,
as well as emergency relief for those displaced," said Dr Jay Maheswaran,
East Timor Country Director for Caritas Australia.
The
Solomons: a fragile but resilient nation on our doorstep
One of Australia's nearest and poorest neighbours, the Solomon
Islands, is also known as 'the Happy Isles'. But recent rioting
in the capital Honiara suggests a very different reality for the
nation's inhabitants.
Caritas
Australia commits further funds for Yogyakarta
Caritas Australia has committed a further $175,000 to assist
the victims of the Yogyakarta earthquake. Working through the local
Catholic Church network in Indonesia, Caritas Australia has now
committed over $240,000 to the humanitarian response. "The new
funding will go towards the provision of food and non-food items,
temporary shelter, trauma counselling, medical supplies, as well
as the rebuilding of houses for the community," said Mr Jamie Isbister,
International Programs Manager for Caritas Australia. |
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