Officials: New Disease Threat Overshadowing Malaria Fight
May 1, 2003
By Kate Woodsome
The Cambodia Daily
Severe acute respiratory syndrome to date has killed at least 375 people across
the globe. Malaria kills at least 1 million people every year. The attention the
outbreak of SARS has received from the international media has drawn needed
attention to the world's state of health, but has pushed less-dramatic diseases
farther into the shadows, health officials said.
"[SARS] is not the major health problem in Cambodia, especially since we don't
have a case," said the World Health Organization's Dr Severin Von Xylander,
noting that the most important recommendation he could give the public about
SARS is "to keep things in perspective."
Dr Stefan Hoyer, the WHO's communicable disease control coordinator, said the
attention the international community has paid to SARS is merited, as the
disease's fatality rate is much higher than malaria's. SARS kills approximately
5 percent of its patients while malaria kills 1 percent, he said.
"SARS could actually be wiped out in a couple of months if we're active in
pursuing the cases," Hoyer said. "But malaria is a parasitic disease specific to
mankind that's been around since the beginning of mankind and [will be] for the
time being."
The global effort to identify a cause and cure for SARS and to prevent its
spread has drained financial resources from other diseases, Hoyer said.
WHO bodies throughout the Western Pacific collectively have gone $1.2 million
into debt to fight SARS, Hoyer said.
But he said he was confident that Cambodia's malaria program will not be
directly affected by the strain, since the resources the WHO has reserved for
SARS will be repaid by the international community and wealthier affected
governments.
Finding the resources to combat more common diseases like malaria will continue
to be a challenge for Cambodia, however.
In 2002, malaria caused 300 deaths in Cambodia, a figure that likely reflects
just 10 percent of the fatalities caused by the disease, Hoyer said. But even
malaria survivors are victims of poverty. With the cost of private health care
rising, Hoyer said that more and more Cambodians are selling their land and
becoming trapped in a cycle of debt.
WHO Doctor Given Medal for Contributions
By Michelle Vachon
Dr Stefan Hoyer of the World Health Organization has been honored with the
Cambodian Medal of Saha Matrei, or the Order of the Knight, for services
rendered during his seven years in the country.
Mam Bun Heng, secretary of state for the Ministry of Health, presented the medal
to Hoyer on Monday during a ceremony held at the National Malaria Center, which
was attended by government officials and health-organization representatives.
Hoyer, who has served as the WHO's communicable-disease control coordinator in
Cambodia since 1996, leaves this week to take on his new post in Africa.