Tag Archives: Malaria

Undernutrition and Malaria: A Vicious Circle

Malaria and malnutrition are closely related, as malaria usually affect families that are both poor and malnourished.  The months of the ‘hunger gap’, when malnutrition is at its peak, often coincides with the rainy season, when mosquitoes breed and the number of malaria cases shoots up. The diseases combine in a vicious circle: malnourished children have weak immune systems, so their bodies are less able to fight diseases such as malaria, while children sick with malaria are more likely to become dangerously malnourished.

Credit: These O Duke

Credit: These O Duke

Evidence shows that investing in nutrition is tremendous value for money in the fight against child mortality.  The example of malaria prevention shows that integrating nutrition programs into other development initiatives delivers even greater benefits.

The most underweight children have the highest risk of dying from malaria but if children are deficient in essential micronutrients, such as zinc, Vitamin A, iron and folate, they face dying from malaria even if they are not underweight. Large numbers of children less than five years old suffer and die from malaria due to lack of protein energy, zinc, vitamin A and other micronutrients.

Unlike many causes of death and disability, with appropriate nutritional support these deaths are entirely preventable. With the advances in nets and other simple malaria technologies there is massive potential to bring down child deaths through increased investment in these simple solutions.

Studies have demonstrated that malaria-control programs will have limited success if they do not also address undernutrition.[1]  Nutritional counseling and education of mothers followed by feeding programs have to specifically focus on improving the health of the malnourished. This, alongside malaria-control measures, could reduce deaths from malaria on a large scale if built into a long term programme.

Medicins San Frontiers (MSF) is one of the organisations in the field that is addressing both malnutrition and malaria as public health problems and integrating their prevention and treatment into the set of basic health measures aimed at all young children.  They are currently employing this approach in Niger[2]

The effort being made to treat malnutrition in Niger is tremendous, and this needs to be supported,” says José Antonio Bastos, president of MSF in Spain. “The problem in 2012 was that a massive plan for treating malnutrition was prepared and implemented, but it excluded other health needs, in particular malaria prevention and immunisations. It failed to take account of the fact that even if you provide children with appropriate nutrition, you can still lose them to malaria or a respiratory infection. There is a need for an integrated response, rather than for pushing one response to the exclusion of others.”

So measures to improve nutrition, if sustained over a number of years, increase the success of other development interventions.  In the UK there is an opportunity to promote this lesson on 8th June, when the Prime Minister is hosting a second ‘Hunger Summit’, co-hosted by the Childrens Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF).  The UK government can take the lead by giving a significant pledge, of £150 million per year, for the next five years. This has been calculated as the UKs ‘fair share’ of the funding gap, according to World Bank figures, and will encourage other donor countries and leverage major contributions from private foundations.

[1] “Malaria, Anemia, and Malnutrition in African Children—Defining Intervention Priorities” Erdhart, et. al. July 2006. http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/194/1/108.full.pdf

[2] http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/press/release.cfm?id=6739&cat=press-release

Advocacy in Action: the Global Fund protest

Hundreds of protesters took to the stage during last Thursday’s panel discussion on the future of the Global Fund at the International AIDS Conference in Washington.

This video clip shows protesters interrupt the conference with banners and chants of ‘End Aids – No Cuts’. It continues as one activist steps up to the podium to speak out against the Global Fund’s budget cuts and the damage to life that restricting its country grant allocation procedures could have in the future.

The protest party consisted of AIDS activists from ACTION, HealthGAP, Global Fund Advocates Network and Stop AIDS Campaign UK and were joined by representatives from humanitarian medical aid organisations like Medecins sans Frontiers (MSF).

The protesters spoke out against efforts to cap funding for high risk HIV-TB countries and called on Global Fund manager Gabriel Jaramillo and the US Global AIDS Coordinator Dr. Eric Goosby to promise to protect the country-led, demand-driven funding model that has proved so vital to the treatment of HIV and its related illnesses like tuberculosis.

This comes amidst fresh waves of cut backs and increased austerity measures which see the Global Fund cancel its 11th Round of funding applications this year, leaving thousands of projects under-funded and millions of lives at risk.

Click here to find out about the Global Fund and what RESULTS UK is doing to make sure this revolutionary grant model for health provision isn’t undermined.

RESULTS UK – Getting active about Advocacy.

Rio+20: will we reach ‘the future we want’?

The Rio+20 conference last week was designed to provide a crucial update to 1992′s original Rio ‘Earth Summit’ on environmental issues, which introduced hugely important new international agreements including the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. Activists and governments hoped that the summit would provide an opportunity to develop ‘sustainable development goals’ which would set out how the world will achieve development for all within the constraints of world resources. But what was really achieved, and did it live up to the title of the summit declaration ‘The Future We Want’?

Delegate adds her vision for the future to a display at Rio+20 conference, photo by UNSIDR

Delegate adds her vision for the future to a display at Rio+20 conference, photo by UNSIDR

Germaine Umuraza, a delegate at Rio+20 for the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts, explained to TerraViva news agency why the link between poverty-reduction and environmental sustainability is so important: “A degraded environment stands in the way of girls getting an education. I feel a heavy responsibility to be in Brazil as a voice for millions of girls who could not be here to speak for themselves about the importance of education, because when the environment suffers, girls and young women are affected.” In her home country of Rwanda, for example, soil erosion affects agriculture and the availability of forest products such as timber and firewood. A shortage of firewood means that the young women who collect it for cooking are often forced to spend more time searching for firewood and less time on schooling.

With such vital issues under discussion, expectations were high, but the overall consensus is that world leaders fell short in Rio. Gro Harlem Brundtland, former Prime Minister of Norway and chair of the Brundtland Commission which brought the concept of sustainable development to world attention said: “The Rio+20 declaration does not do enough to set humanity on a sustainable path, decades after it was agreed that this is essential for both people and the planet. I understand the frustration in Rio today. We can no longer assume that our collective actions will not trigger tipping points, as environmental thresholds are breached, risking irreversible damage to both ecosystems and human communities. These are the facts – but they have been lost in the final document.” Continue reading

June conference call recording now available: protecting the model of the Global Fund

Carol Nyirenda

We are pleased to announce that a recording of Tuesday’s conference call on the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria is now available online for download. Click here to download the call.

Our special guest on the call was Carol Nawina Nyirenda, an international health activist from Lusaka, Zambia, working mainly on HIV, TB and malaria. She is the Executive Director for the Community Initiative for Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS and Malaria (CITAM+), which is a member of the ACTION Partnership. She is a founding member of the Coalition of Zambian Women Living where she is the Interim Chairperson and set up Act Up Lusaka where she is in charge of international relations and TB/HIV.

Carol spoke passionately about the Global Fund model from her personal experiences. She spoke about the importance of retaining the ambition of the Global Fund and the need to support the continuation of the Country Coordinating Mechanism. The call makes up the centre of our June action for which we will be working to ensure that the Global Fund remains at the forefront of Global Health.

UK MPs Call for DFID to Fund the Global Fund

The UK International Development Select Committee report on the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was released today. RESULTS UK has been following this process closely, given the critical importance of the Global Fund in the fight against these three killer diseases, particularly tuberculosis (TB), with our Executive Director, Aaron Oxley, being called on to give oral evidence to the Select Committee.

The Chair of the Committee, Malcolm Bruce MP, summed up the findings with:

The UK has been a reliable partner to the Global Fund but we are concerned at the continued delay in providing additional funds. We strongly urge the Department for International Development to do all possible to commit funds earlier than 2013. A significant increase by the UK could help to catalyse contributions from other donors.

There has been some welcome news since we completed our report with the Global Fund announcing £630 million in new funds. It is also reassuring to see other countries such as Japan stepping up to the plate with their largest ever annual contribution. Other donors – including the UK – also must commit new funds in the coming months if the Global Fund is to return to full operation speedily and carry on doing what it does best – saving lives.

We at RESULTS couldn’t agree more. Continue reading

May conference call announced: Call on the UK to stand up for the Global Fund!

We are pleased to announce that the RESULTS May conference call will take place on Tuesday 1st May at 8pm. Our guest on the call will be Michael O’ Connor, Head of the Civil Society Team at the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria. Click here to find out more.

To join the call activists and groups will need to dial 0844 8360 3600207 788 3000 or 0800 369 8888 and when prompted enter participant code 18723#.

The Global Fund has been possibly the single most effective public health intervention since the second world war, saving millions of lives all over the world through their excellent work. However, due in part to the global economic downturn the Fund is suffering a crisis in funding and has cancelled its 11th Round of grant application, jeapordizing much of the good work that it has alredy done and putting thousands of lives at risk.

This month we are calling for the UK government to stand up and support the  Fund with a new funding donation.

Download the action materials now!

This World Malaria Day – Much to Celebrate but Don’t Lose Focus Now!

The theme for this World Malaria Day is ‘sustain gains, save lives’. As with the other two diseases which have received a huge boost from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, this disease is on the cusp of many breakthroughs in efforts to control it and the message coming from the millions of people who are every day at risk of contracting malaria is ‘don’t lose focus now’.

Last October a large-scale Phase III trial of RTS,S a malaria vaccine candidate, demonstrated its first positive results. The results showed young African children with significant protection against clinical and severe malaria. The results came after 40 years of scientists seeking to develop a vaccine for Malaria, a 30 month period of analysis in regard to the vaccine’s safety will bring results by 2014. Whilst the vaccine does not kill the malaria parasite it will boost the immune systems of those most vulnerable to the disease in order that they might more effectively fight it.

Such developments are only possible if there are the funds to invest in such innovative research and product development partnerships which harness the power of the private sector to invest as well as engaging the most affected communities in trials.

This World Malaria Day comes as the history of the response to the disease lies in the balance. The Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, which currently provides nearly a quarter of all international funding to fight AIDS, over half of the funding against malaria and more than four-fifths of all funding to fight TB is in crisis. Huge funding shortfalls meaning the cancellation of its 11th funding round threaten the progress made to date on malaria as well as presenting a risk that gains might be reversed as resistance to malaria drugs rises in key malaria hotspots.

Today a key faith leader in the UK, the Archbishop of Canterbury called for world leaders not to lose sight of our achievements to date and potential progress for the future. He noted that

“Local churches and other grassroots organisations have been key partners in enabling this progress, alongside a concerted effort from the international community through mechanisms such as the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria.

Warning of the danger of reversing gains made he added:

“The current gap in global funding needed to fight malaria threatens to undo many of the hard won gains and risks allowing malaria to regain a hold on communities who are close to elimination.

On this World Malaria Day I urge governments to continue to invest in malaria programmes to prevent the unnecessary death of millions of vulnerable people. We have already come so far, let’s not lose momentum now.”

Campaigners urge UK government to make increased pledge to the Global Fund

Yesterday the UK International Development Select Committee met to conduct a one off special inquiry into the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria’s current funding crisis. During the inquiry oral evidence session the Secretary of State for International Development, Andrew Mitchell MP, gave strong UK support to the Global Fund, its current reform process and re-iterated the intention of the UK government to make an increase in its commitment to the Fund. The inquiry can be viewed here.

The meeting took place following strong calls from all stakeholders for the Committee to press the UK government on when they would deliver on a promised increased funding commitment and why such a commitment had not yet been delivered. Following yesterday’s meeting campaigners broadly welcomed the Minister’s assurances of a forthcoming commitment but urged haste in making the decision to pledge, noting that we cannot afford to wait whilst lives are lost.

In March last year the UK Multi-Lateral Aid Review judged the Global Fund to be ‘very good’ and yet as the Global Fund announced a funding shortage even to meet its minimal requirements for its new funding Round 11, no new pledge was announced by the UK government. After the Global Fund board announced its intention to cancel Round 11 in December 2012, campaigners welcomed the front-loading of the UK’s existing pledge of £128 Million, yet saw a strong need for UK leadership in increasing donations at this tipping point moment.

The Select Committee inquiry received written evidence from 23 key stakeholders and oral evidence from key stakeholders including the Coalition to Stop TB, represented by Aaron Oxley, ED of RESULTS UK. The Secretary of State for International Development was the final panellist to speak at yesterday’s inquiry and gave no clear indication of when a UK pledging moment might take place.

The Global Fund on Al Jazeera

Global media outlets such as Al Jazeera are starting to take notice of the critical funding shortfalls at the Global Fund to Fight Aids, TB, and Malaria.

On the ten-year anniversary of the Global Fund’s first Board meeting, the 28 January 2001, the short video above was shown on Al Jazeera to highlight what could be lost if we cannot find the money to continue the fight against these diseases. RESULTS UK’s Executive Director Aaron Oxley says:

The biggest problem is not the short term impact, although that’s bad enough. It’s actually the longer term impacts. The science that we have indicates that we now know what we need to do to bring about the end of Aids within a generation, and we have a good plan to save a million people’s lives from tuberculosis over the next five years: these are the kinds of impacts that are in jeopardy.

You can go and read about the full story as we described it in our December action. It’s not too late to take the action and write to your MP as the UK is yet to announce any new funding, so if you have a spare few minutes this would be a powerful way to help ensure the funding gap is filled and the government knows there is strong British support for saving people’s lives from these terrible diseases.

Take action! Show your face for the Global Fund



This week is the ten year anniversary of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS , TB and Malaria, and the global health community is celebrating a decade of incredible impact in the fight against the three diseases. Thanks to the tireless work of the hundreds of thousands of healthcare workers supported by the Global Fund in 150 countries and to the drugs, anti-malaria bed nets and medical equipment they finance, the world has made amazing, lifesaving advances.

In just ten years, the programs the Global Fund supports around the world have saved 7.7 million lives and have: provided financing for AIDS treatment to 3.3 million people; treatment for 8.6 million cases of tuberculosis; 230 million insecticide-treated nets to prevent malaria; and helped 1.3 million HIV-positive women prevent the transmission of the virus to their babies.

Here’s where you come in: For their tenth anniversary the Global Fund are putting together a giant collage of photos of people involved in the struggle against epidemic disease, including some of the world’s leaders, and they want you alongside them. The more people they can see, the better they can show that we have a global movement for change.