Case Study: Malaria (Vector-borne) (in Ethiopia)
Malaria
- Malaria is a vector-borne disease (parasite) carried by mosquitos
- Initially, there are no symptoms
- After a few weeks, or even up to a year, flu-like symptoms appear
- Fever, shaking chills, nausea, headaches, exhaustion, diarrhoea
- It can be fatal
- Roughly 240 million people contract malaria annually
- There are many different contributing factors to high incidences of malaria
- However, poverty is the most prominent issue
- Malaria has been eradicated from much of the developed world
- Developed countries mainly worry about disease contraction during travel or as a result of the global spread of the disease
- Malaria is mostly concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa (the lowest levels of development)
- Malaria may spread around the world as global temperatures rise
Causes of Malaria
- Anopheles mosquitos can carry the disease, and infect humans by biting
- Malaria is more common in tropical and subtropical regions e.g. the Malaria Belt
- The climate is warmer and more humid. It is the ideal environment for mosquitos to thrive and reproduce
- Deforestation in rainforests also increases temperatures
- Mosquitos thrive in areas with stagnant water
- Heavy rainfall and flooding can cause standing water
- Water collects in mining pits, irrigation channels and rice paddy fields, where mosquitos breed more efficiently
- Vulnerability:
- Children under the age of 5
- Pregnant women
- Immunocompromised people e.g. HIV
- Immunity to malaria may develop over time
- If immunity wanes, cases of malaria will rise
- Travellers or migrants may come from areas with no malaria, so they do not have immunity
- Mosquitoes are becoming immune to drugs
- Urbanisation may increase malaria
- If unregulated development occurs near water bodies, people will come into direct contact with mosquito breeding grounds
- Low income and poverty:
- Lower-income countries have very poor healthcare or reduced access to treatment and vaccines
- Poor sanitation and water sources can result in more standing and stagnant water
- Immune systems are weaker as a result of other diseases like malnutrition
- Education rates are lower, resulting in less awareness about the disease and prevention methods
- Jobs are usually labour-heavy, exposing people to mosquitos outdoors
The Malaria Belt
Impacts of Malaria in Ethiopia
- In 2019, Ethiopia recorded 2.9 million cases of malaria
- Roughly 70% of Ethiopia is at risk of malaria contraction
- As of 2020, malaria cost Ethiopia around $200 million per year (about 10% of total outgoings on healthcare)
- Education rates will go down as a result of children being off sick from school
- People can’t go to work due to sickness
- Directly affects the economy
- Affects the agricultural sector and food production
- People struggle to afford food
- Direct effects on the well-being of the population e.g. anxiety, grief
- Malaria impacts Death Rates, Infant Mortality Rates and Maternal Mortality Rates
- Pressure on healthcare systems:
- More people require treatment and medication
- Increased staff shortages
- Money goes into healthcare instead of economic or education development
- This results in economic stagnation or decline
- Medicines and other preventative measures, like nets or repellants against malaria, are costly
- Lack of education and technology results in a shortage of information or knowledge about malaria epidemics
- Some areas in Ethiopia experience a lower incidence of malaria due to arid climates and higher elevations (physical barriers to diffusion)
- Impacts of malaria may also be seasonal, particularly after the rainy season
Solutions to Malaria in Ethiopia
- Insecticides (e.g. Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane or DDT) have been useful in Ethiopia
- Insecticides result in water pollution and can enter the food chain
- In 2003, malaria cases rapidly increased in Ethiopia
- UNICEF led the international response, with financial aid coming from the UK, the US and the World Health Organisation
- It funded drugs, supplies and other responses like training and investigations
- However, the funding was not enough to fully eradicate malaria and has since gone down after the economic crash of 2008
- Malaria is also becoming immune to some of the drugs
- Malaria won’t be eradicated from Ethiopia without dealing with development issues and poverty
- The U.S President’s Malaria Initiative began in 2005
- Helping to provide treatment for malaria
- Working to reduce deaths, stop cases and eradicate the diseases altogether
- Other general solutions include:
- Travellers can take anti-malaria drugs to stop the infection
- Providing mosquito nets in high-incidence areas
- Education for people about malaria epidemics
- Stopping mosquitos at the source:
- Covering standing water
- Removing irrigation channels no longer in use
- Adding marine life to bodies of water to consume mosquito larvae
- Mosquito Breathing Traps