Malaria Team Checks Up on Program for Remote Areas
September 5, 2002
By Michelle Vachon
The Cambodia Daily
Like all forms of government services particularly health care its the
impoverished villagers in the remote areas who are too often ignored.
And that's especially true for villagers who live in the mountainous, forested
areas of Ratanakkiri province, where malaria is rampant and where access to
prepackaged medicine therapy and "dipstick" tests which can tell within minutes
if someone has malaria is limited.
This gap has prompted the National Malaria Center, with the support of the
European Commission Malaria Control Program, to look into using health
volunteers in remote villages.
A pilot project was launched in Ratanakkiri in June 2001, and a second one in
Koh Kong province earlier this year.
In each case, the project involved one volunteer per village who received two
days of training on how to recognize symptoms, reduce fever and keep records,
according to Sean Hewitt, malaria control specialist for the EC Malaria Control
Program.
Elders in each village were asked to recommend candidates, he said. Out of them,
a volunteer was carefully selected, said Hoy Vannara, communicable disease chief
for Ratanakkiri.
"They had to read and write Khmer; be popular and trusted by other villagers;
live close enough to the village to be easily reachable; and to be used [to] and
ready to work hard and long hours," he said.
In Ratanakkiri, 36 ethnic Jarai and Tampoun minority villages participated in
the project, and in Koh Kong province, 10 ethnic Khmer villages.
The preliminary report on Ratanakkiri shows that the formula meets a major goal
of malaria control early detection and treatment.
In villages with volunteers, 75 percent of the children sought treatment within
three days of becoming ill, compared to 35 percent in villages without
volunteers, Hewitt said.
One out of 10 sick children never came for treatment in villages with
volunteers, while three out of 10 sick children did not seek treatment in
villages that did not have volunteers, he said.
During the first 11 months of the Ratanakkiri project, nearly a third of the
15,000 people involved showed malaria symptoms. Among them, 2,271 tested
positive half of them being under 7 years old.
In Koh Kong, 787 of the 2,200 people showed malaria symptoms and 284 of them had
the disease. A third of those who tested positive were under 15.
The volunteers receive a $2 per diem for attending meetings twice a month, said
Duong Socheat, director of the National Malaria Center.
The cost of the program is estimated at $1.20 per year per person in
participating communities, officials said.
Mam Bun Heng, secretary of state for the Ministry of Health, who visited
participating Tampoun villages last weekend, said the results prove that the
village volunteer formula might also work for other public health care efforts.