17 Sep 2012
Cambodian villagers armed with a little medical know-how -- and their
mobile telephones -- are the nation's new foot soldiers in the fight
against drug-resistant malaria.
In the small village of Phnom Dambang near the Thai border, locals
know that early detection and treatment is crucial to containing the
virulent strain of the mosquito-borne disease that is blighting the
region.
"The malaria here... can kill people in a short period of
time if we don't have the right treatment," said Long Vuthy, whose home
doubles as a walk-in clinic. The village is dotted with bright yellow
signs emblazoned with pictures of mosquitoes, warning that the disease
is prevalent in the area.
Vuthy, 41, who is also the chief of the
village in Pailin province -- considered to be at the epicentre of
drug-resistant malaria in Cambodia -- is one of more than 3,000
volunteer malaria workers in the country.
They diagnose the
disease with a quick blood test and provide treatment, free of charge,
in remote parts of the impoverished nation, where access to health
services can be difficult.
Under a new pilot project, he is now
also using a dedicated text message service to report new cases,
allowing health experts to monitor and respond to patients' needs in
real time.
"It's a very good way to help the community," said
Vuthy, who was taught how to use the mobile phone service two months
ago by the Malaria Consortium, a non-profit group working with the
government and the World Health Organisation (WHO) to eradicate malaria
from the country by 2025.
Cambodia has already had success
tackling malaria. In 2011, it reported over 108,000 cases, of which 96
were fatal, compared to 102,473 cases and 154 deaths the year before
and over 600 deaths in 2000, according to government statistics.
But the prevalence of the drug-resistant strain has caused concern.
Malaria
resistant to regular forms of treatment was confirmed in western
Cambodia eight years ago, likely as a result of patients taking an
incorrect or incomplete course of anti-malarial drugs.
To control
the spread of this drug-tolerant form, health workers must catch cases
early and ensure patients strictly follow the right treatment plan.
The
alert system is simple. If Vuthy's diagnosis test shows a person has
malaria, he immediately starts them on medication and composes a
message with the patient's age, sex, location and the type of malaria.
Using
a toll-free number, the text is sent instantly to the district health
centre, provincial health officials and a national malaria database in
the capital Phnom Penh -- a process that used to take a month.
The information is also fed into Google Earth to create a map of reported cases and of potential hotspots of resistance.
Together,
the data helps officials track each case and make sure the right
treatment is available or that more medication is supplied when stocks
are running low.
"I think this system is very important in
eliminating malaria in Cambodia because it provides information very
fast," said Pengby Ngor from the Malaria Consortium, which developed
the database. "In this way there can be intervention and the patient
can get treatment quickly."
Malaria killed an estimated 655,000
people worldwide in 2010, although mortality rates have fallen sharply
over the past decades, according to the WHO.
Researchers
attribute this decline largely to the increased use of artemisinin
drugs, seen as the most effective treatment, and the widening use of
insecticide-treated bed nets -- which have also been distributed by the
Cambodian government.
Comprehensive data on resistance in the
country is unavailable, although a study by international scientists
published in The Lancet this year found that between 2007 and 2010, 42
percent of falciparum malaria cases, the most severe form of the
disease, in western Cambodia were drug tolerant.
Resistance does not mean the disease will be fatal, but it typically takes longer to be cured using a combination of drugs.
Meas
Tha, deputy director of the National Centre for Parasitology,
Entomology and Malaria Control, said the mobile pilot scheme was a
"tool that could help us to achieve our 2025 goal" to eradicate
malaria, alongside other key efforts such as education on prevention
and medication.
It is part of a national malaria containment
project on which the Global Fund, supported by The Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundation, has spent some $30 million since 2010.
The
system, using SIM cards provided free by Cambodian telecommunications
firm Mobitel, was launched in three other provinces last year before
coming to Pailin in July.
Some 230 volunteers have used the
mobile phone service so far and there are plans to eventually include
all volunteers in the project.
Vuthy knows that close monitoring of severe malaria cases is essential in his part of the country.
He
makes sure his patients take their pills correctly and he carries out
follow-up tests to check their blood is parasite-free after three days.
If not, it could be a sign of drug tolerance, requiring further
treatment.
Here too the text message alert service comes in
handy, sending reminders to check on patients on set days. "It makes my
job easier," Vuthy said.
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