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Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Salone Ranks High in Global Disease Fight

HomeAYV NewsSalone Ranks High in Global Disease Fight

Salone Ranks High in Global Disease Fight

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But things are changing fast in Sierra Leone now, with the new government increasing its spending on healthcare and the international community having invested hundreds of millions of US dollars in establishing early warning systems that will diagnose and prevent a repeat of the horrors witnessed in 2013-2015. The country’s hospitals and community health centres have been upgraded.

Early this week, the Ministry of Information and Communication, published a statement, announcing that “Sierra Leone is among three African countries with modest national incomes that are outpouring some richer nations on the continent in the fight against diseases of poverty known as neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), according to a new league table ranking”

The statement from the MIC also said: “The new league table shows that the three countries with modest national incomes – Malawi, Sierra Leone and Togo – have, for the third year running, reported high treatment levels of NTDs to those in need across the five diseases.”

It adds that “the WHO reckons that if countries consistently treat and protect more than 75% of people needing care, across the five diseases (blinding trachoma; intestinal worms; the mosquito-borne elephantiasis; snail-borne bilharzias, and river blindness), they are on track to beating the diseases. Malawi, Sierra Leone and Togo all reached the 75% average target. All three nations are in the ‘lower income’ bracket of the UN Human Development Index, a broad measure of national wealth.”

The release further stated that: “NTDs such as blinding trachoma, the leading cause of infectious blindness, or intestinal worms that can stunt growth in children, are endemic in poor communities without access to clean water and with inadequate sewerage systems. The diseases affect 1.6 billion people worldwide – that’s one in five on the planet – including over 600 million people in Africa.”

“NTDs rarely make headline news because they tend to afflict the poorest and most marginalized communities. However, African heads of state have put a spotlight on them at the AU Summit through the African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA), a forum that track the fight against malaria and, since 2018, also reviews the fight against NTDs,” the statement said.

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