Malaria & Neglected Tropical Diseases
Highlighting the commitment from the Kigali declaration and looking at how we can deliver political and financial commitment to eradicate malaria and NTDs and avoid resurgence. This Mediaplanet campaign was distributed with the Guardian newspaper and launched on www.globalcause.co.uk on 16-May 2022
Highlighting the commitment from the Kigali declaration and looking at how we can deliver political and financial commitment to eradicate malaria and NTDs and avoid resurgence.
This Mediaplanet campaign was distributed with the Guardian newspaper and launched on www.globalcause.co.uk on 16-May 2022
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A PROMOTIONAL SUPPLEMENT DISTRIBUTED ON BEHALF OF MEDIAPLANET, WHICH TAKES SOLE RESPONSIBILITY FOR ITS CONTENTS
We can end NTDs
but we must show our
commitment now
2022: A pivotal moment
for a more equal world
Incredible progress has been made against neglected tropical diseases (NTDs)
but there is still work to be done. The Kigali Declaration on NTDs, a new political
declaration, provides the opportunity to end NTDs.
NTDs are a group of 20
diseases that affect 1.7
billion people globally; they
can debilitate, disfigure
and kill. These diseases include
elephantiasis, rabies, river blindness
and trachoma. We call these diseases
neglected because they affect the
world’s poorest and they receive less
attention than other diseases.
The effects of NTDs are devastating,
they impair cognitive and physical
development in children. They
lead to school and work absences,
particularly in women and girls
who are often responsible for caring
for their family. They also cost the
economies of endemic countries
billions of dollars and can trap
communities in cycles of poverty.
Recognising the success so far
Over the past decade, incredible
progress has been made against NTDs.
So far, 44 countries have eliminated
at least one NTD and 600 million
people no longer require treatment
for NTDs. Some of these diseases that
have plagued humanity for centuries,
such as leprosy, sleeping sickness and
guinea worm disease are also at an alltime
low. This shows that ending NTDs
is within our power, but there is still
work to be done.
The Kigali Declaration on NTDs
pushes us forward
The Kigali Declaration on NTDs is a
new high-level political declaration
that will launch later in 2022 at the
Kigali Summit on Malaria and NTDs,
alongside the 26th Commonwealth
Heads of Government meeting. The
Kigali Declaration will put country
ownership of NTD programmes,
integration and cross-sectoral
collaboration at the front and centre
to ensure that these programmes are
sustainable in the long term.
The Declaration provides the
opportunity to mobilise the political
will, community commitment,
resources and action needed to end
unnecessary suffering from NTDs.
Signatories of this declaration
pledge to do their part to ensure that
NTDs are eradicated, eliminated or
controlled by 2030.
Commitment to ending NTDs is needed
By working together, adopting peoplecentred
approaches and working
across sectors in an integrated manner,
we can end NTDs and achieve WHO
2030 NTD road map targets. Now
is the moment for leaders, donors,
companies and organisations to
make endorsements behind the
Kigali Declaration and show they are
100% committed to ending NTDs.
These commitments will help relieve
needless suffering, decrease the
health-related drivers of poverty, make
our health systems more resilient and
our world an equitable and safer place.
For more information visit 100percentcommitted.com
WRITTEN BY
Thoko Elphick-Pooley
Executive Director,
Uniting to Combat
Neglected Tropical
Diseases
Ending malaria and NTDs will save lives, advance equity and build resilience.
Over the past two years, no
country has been spared
the impacts of COVID-19, a
deadly infectious disease that
killed millions, infected millions and
devastated communities, economies
and health systems. The same impacts
can be attributed to malaria and
neglected tropical diseases (NTDs)
however, these diseases have been
around for millennia and typically
prey on the world’s poorest in Africa.
Ending preventable and treatable diseases
In 2000, global leaders committed
funding and action to reduce cases
and deaths caused by these diseases.
Thanks to this strong political will
and increased funding, by 2015
malaria deaths were cut by over
half and more than 5 billion NTD
preventive treatments were delivered.
The tremendous progress achieved
through global collaboration and
commitment prompted more
ambition to end these preventable
and treatable diseases by 2030.
In the case of malaria, a turning
point was the launch of the Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis
and Malaria. Significantly, 20 years
later, the Global Fund, working with
the US President’s Malaria Initiative
and country partners, has saved 44
million lives.
But in the last two years, progress
has slowed and cases and deaths are
on the rise. With challenges of drug
and insecticide resistance, COVID-19
and humanitarian emergencies, the
world is at a precarious juncture in the
fight against malaria.
Better prepared for better results
However, there is hope on the horizon.
Thanks to greater country ownership,
better use of data and targeting of
existing and new tools, a pipeline
of transformative tools and strong
political will. And, if governments,
the private sector, communities and
partners come together later this year
to fulfil the Global Fund’s Seventh
Replenishment goal of at least USD 18
billion, we can turbocharge progress
again toward a malaria-free future.
By mobilising new funding, we can
scale up existing and breakthrough
tools, including new nets and vaccines
and better target interventions to the
local context. We also must invest
more in research and development to
deliver transformative new tools, such
as second-generation vaccines, that
will accelerate our path to malaria
eradication.
Critically, these innovative
approaches will also help countries
strengthen their health systems,
allowing them to better protect citizens
against malaria and NTDs and be
better prepared for future pandemics.
With COVID, we’ve seen what the
world can do when it comes together.
Let’s recommit to saving millions more
lives from malaria and NTDs, invest
in health and deliver a more equitable
world for all.
WRITTEN BY
Dr Corine Karema
Interim CEO, RBM
Partnership to End
Malaria
Read more at
campaign.co.uk
@GlobalcauseUK @MediaplanetUK
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