I am re-posting a recent update from Dr. Richard about Malaria, from the BMJ Blog here http://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2010/05/25/richard-feinmann-on-malaria-in-lira-uganda/
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Working as a doctor in Northern Uganda I wonder where to start with healthcare. Since 75% of diseases in Uganda are preventable and since there are very few health workers and little money, especially in a country which is so Kampalacentric, one probably has to follow the government’s prevention line.
There is a feeling that much of what has been done in healthcare has not been sustainable. NGO’s are protective of their roles and are often unwilling to share or work together. Projects are completed and may not be evaluated and the district health office charged with overseeing care may be unaware of what is going on in their patch.
So when you are tasked with setting up a centre of excellence to deal with malaria it is not easy. Nets, sprays, education, vaccines, and medicines have all had many millions spent on them and yet last week in Lira there were 5000 new cases of malaria. This is an unbearable and unacceptable burden. Although there are so many health disasters in Uganda, malaria is the commonest and in my opinion the worst and most complex disease to deal with.
I had a boy recovering from 4+ malaria on a quinine infusion and I was talking to him and his mum. These were the responses: “No we don’t use nets. Yes we could afford them. My husband uses the only net we have. Treatment is easily available. People rarely die of it. My son has had 3 attacks this year. Everybody gets it. A fan and sprays are better than nets. Nets are too hot to sleep under. We live in a poor swampy area and the government won’t spray the mosquitos,” and so on. In other words, we may know what to do but it is not working.
The government plans to rely on village health workers. They are elected, health trained volunteers who look after just 20-30 householders. They have been trained to assess fever and when it might be appropriate to treat with anti-malarials. Sadly they receive no allowance and for unknown reasons they have not been supplied with the co-artem which was promised. I like the idea of decentralisation but should we be using anti-malarials without investigation when we are running out of active medications for falciparum malaria and resistance is increasing.
Apparently there is a global fund and presidential initiative to swamp the country with nets. 17 million nets are supposedly available. Driving up to Lira recently we tried to think of 101 different things people do with mosquito nets. People sell them or use them as bridal veils. Using them as curtains is popular. The most novel use was to put them over termite mounds to catch termites to eat.
I think a coordinated approach involving all NGO’s and the district health offices all working through village health teams could be sustainable. We need to have cheap, easily available testing and treatment. We need nets for everyone and if DDT (or alternatives) is considered safe then lets do it. But there is still a need for a huge educational programme to change culture and perceptions about malaria which must be on ongoing.
Until someone finds a vaccine or eliminates the anopheles mosquito then what else is there? What do you think?
Richard Feinmann is a 62 year old general and chest physician who retired a bit early after a serious health scare. He felt he had more to give and jumped at the chance to work with his health visitor wife in Uganda.



Dear Dr Feinmann,
I read your article with interest. I am your age recently retired Oxn GP .I spent 4months in North East Zambia in a rural clinic all of whose inhabitants had been supplied with nets 3years ago but excuses for not using them were very similar to your experience. Zambia was well supplied with testing kits co-artem but only from October were the tests available. I understood from a local Paediatrician in Katete that rural testing treating was one of the more effective controls as people living in remote areas always presented late and this intervention picked up many more early cases.
I can sympathise with a family of 6+ in a hut not wanting to use nets! There was also a poor response from local villagers to attend regional meetings organised by DMOs clinic nurses.
Regards Martin Harris
Dear Dr Feinman,
You echo the same feedback I’ve heard cited from friends and associates working in rural areas within Uganda – the frustration of healthcare workers is very evident. Lack of sustainable resources chips away and undermines their ability to sensitize persons in the villages.
I tried a pilot project in a village in eastern Uganda involving about 1,500 inhabitants. It is surrounded by swamps which at one point used to be papyrus fields. Now these have been cleared for rice harvesting…However, the farming practices utilised were still somewhat challenging and herein lay the problems of harbouring mosquitoes. The approach I took was to involve farmers as part of their farming routine in clearing up and planting traditional plants that mosquitoes didn’t like, in-between the rice fields and around the homesteads.
In the rainy season, a reported noticeable fall of malarial-type fevers (1.5%) requiring treatment was recorded by my associate colleague in the following 6mths that followed. To date, there has been a rise in sustained school children attendance in this area in addition to a drop in deaths accounted to malaria. In addition, as part of the community sensitisation, ways in which all individuals can contribute to eliminating breeding grounds for mosquitoes has become part of the weekly mantra for any gathering – much like the drive for proper sanitation or use of latrines.