Barat Lawrence M
Independent Consultant, Provincetown, Massachusetts.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2025 Feb 25;112(5):953-955. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.24-0781. Print 2025 May 7.
In September 2024, the US President's Malaria Initiative; the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria; the Gates Foundation; and Unitaid called for malaria partners to increase the availability and lower the cost of alternative artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) for countries with growing evidence of resistance to artemisinin and current ACT partner drugs, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. Although these global leaders should be applauded for raising this challenge to the highest levels, they missed the opportunity to highlight a major driver of resistance to malaria treatments: the limited access to high-quality health services for malaria. Progress has been made in scaling up integrated community case management and clinical and laboratory quality improvement programs, but few malaria-affected countries have achieved national scale. If affected countries and their partners do not want to confront resistance to these newer alternative ACTs in the near future, they must take more decisive action now to expand access and improve the quality of malaria services.
2024年9月,美国总统疟疾防治倡议组织、全球防治艾滋病、结核病和疟疾基金、盖茨基金会以及国际药品采购机制呼吁疟疾防治伙伴,针对越来越多证据显示对青蒿素以及当前青蒿素联合疗法(ACT)伙伴药物产生耐药性的国家,特别是撒哈拉以南非洲地区的国家,增加替代青蒿素联合疗法的供应并降低其成本。尽管这些全球领导者因将这一挑战提升到最高层面而值得称赞,但他们错失了强调疟疾治疗耐药性一个主要驱动因素的机会:获得高质量疟疾医疗服务的机会有限。在扩大综合社区病例管理以及临床和实验室质量改进项目方面已取得进展,但很少有受疟疾影响的国家实现全国范围覆盖。如果受影响国家及其伙伴不想在不久的将来面对对这些新型替代青蒿素联合疗法的耐药性问题,他们现在就必须采取更果断的行动,以扩大服务可及性并提高疟疾服务质量。