Premaratne Risintha, Ortega Leonard, Janakan Navaratnasingam, Mendis Kamini N
Anti-Malaria Campaign, Narahenpita, Colombo 5, Sri Lanka.
World Health Organization South- East Asian Regional Office, New Delhi, India.
WHO South East Asia J Public Health. 2014 Jan-Mar;3(1):85-89. doi: 10.4103/2224-3151.206892.
Fifty years after narrowly missing the opportunity to eliminate malaria from Sri Lanka in the 1960s, the country has now interrupted malaria transmission and sustained this interruption for more than 12 months - no indigenous malaria cases have been reported since October 2012. This was achieved through a period overlapping with a 30-year separatist war in areas that were endemic for malaria. The challenge now, of sustaining a malaria-free country and preventing the reintroduction of malaria to Sri Lanka, is examined here in the context of rapid postwar developments in the country. Increased travel to and from the country to expand development projects, businesses and a booming tourist industry, and the influx of labour and refugees from neighbouring malarious countries combine with the continued presence of malaria vectors in formerly endemic areas, to make the country both receptive and vulnerable to the reintroduction of malaria. The absence of indigenous malaria has led to a loss of awareness among the medical profession, resulting in delayed diagnosis of malaria despite the availability of an extensive malaria diagnosis service. Highly prevalent vector-borne diseases such as dengue are competing for health-service resources. Interventions that are necessary at this critical time include sustaining a state-of-the-art surveillance and response system for malaria, and advocacy to maintain awareness among the medical profession and at high levels of government, sustained funding for the Anti-Malaria Campaign and for implementation research and technical guidance on elimination. The malaria-elimination effort should be supported by rigorous analyses to demonstrate the clear economic and health benefits of eliminating malaria, which exceed the cost of a surveillance and response system. An annual World Health Organization review of the programme may also be required.
20世纪60年代,斯里兰卡险些错失消除疟疾的机会,五十年后的今天,该国现已阻断疟疾传播,并将这一成果持续了12个月以上——自2012年10月以来未报告本土疟疾病例。这一成果是在疟疾流行地区与一场持续30年的分裂战争重叠的时期取得的。本文结合该国战后的快速发展,探讨了当前维持无疟疾国家状态并防止疟疾重新传入斯里兰卡所面临的挑战。该国与外界往来增多,以拓展发展项目、商业及蓬勃发展的旅游业,来自邻国疟疾流行区的劳动力和难民涌入,再加上疟疾传播媒介在原流行地区持续存在,使得该国既易重新传入疟疾,又有接纳疟疾的可能。本土无疟疾病例导致医学界意识淡薄,尽管有广泛的疟疾诊断服务,但疟疾诊断仍出现延迟。登革热等高流行的媒介传播疾病正在争夺卫生服务资源。在这一关键时期,必要的干预措施包括维持最先进的疟疾监测和应对系统,开展宣传以维持医学界和政府高层的意识,为抗疟运动持续提供资金,以及为消除疟疾的实施研究和技术指导提供资金。消除疟疾的努力应得到严格分析的支持,以证明消除疟疾带来的明显经济和健康效益超过监测和应对系统的成本。可能还需要世界卫生组织对该计划进行年度审查。