Dunk Malaria on March 19
Nick Gillespie | March 13, 2006, 10:03pm
Roger Bate of the American Enterprise Institute and Africa Fighting Malaria sends word of a U.N.-backed basketball marathon this Sunday to generate interest in ending malaria. From the official Web site:
On Sunday, March 19th - Take Your Shot Against Malaria
Every year millions of children in Africa die from Malaria--a completely preventable and treatable disease. They need our help! On March 19th join with 99 million people from all over the world and shoot a basket for the children of Africa on Malaria Action Day (MAD). Your shot shows you care and are willing to back up your care with action. The more people who show that they care and are taking action, the more the world will open their eyes to the devastating reality of history's worst killer of children--Malaria. Awareness leads to care--care to action--action to funding--funding to prevention--prevention to health--health to happiness.
African children deserve to be healthy and happy and malaria free! Please help!
Take your shot on any basket anywhere on March 19th to participate...just e-mail us and let us know at dunkmalaria@gmail.com.
More here.
Reason's Ronald Bailey talked about cheap ways to end malaria here.
Paul Driessen | March 16, 2006, 9:36am | #
I'm puzzled and frankly appalled by this continued opposition to DDT -- especially to the way it is used today: not in enormous ground and aerial spraying programs across vast areas, but in tiny amounts on the inside walls of mud-and-thatch and cinderblock homes. Used in this way, virtually no DDT gets into the environment, and barely detectable amounts will show up in some people's bodies.
Just as important, the purpose is not to kill mosquitoes -- so all these misleading maps suggesting resistance to DDT are largely irrelevant. The real purpose, and DDT's true life-saving value, is its repellency effects. Sprayed just once every six to eight months on the walls, it keeps up to 90% of mosquitoes from even entering the home. It also irritates any that do come in, so they rarely bite. And mosquitoes are NOT immune to these repellency and irritation effects.
That's why indoor spraying programs in South Africa, Mozambique, Swaziland and Zambia have been able to reduce malaria disease and death rates by 75% or more in less than two years. With far fewer people getting malaria, medical teams can then get scarce ACT drugs to nearly all victims that need them -- and cut rates even further, by 90% or more in many areas,
Even the World Bank admits that bed nets might be able to reduce malaria by a lousy 20%. That's a good 50% difference -- or a half million more people dying every year, because they have to rely on bed nets, rather than far more effective DDT programs.
It's easy for people sitting in front of their computers, in malaria-free homes and offices in Europe and the United States, to raise all these speculative fears about DDT. But those fears are trivial compared to the risk of getting malaria. 500 million people get this horrid disease every year; at least a million die: 30,000 in Kenya, 70,000 in Uganda, a quarter million CHILDREN in Democratic Republic of Congo -- year after year.
As Uganda's Fiona Kobusingye has put it: "I lost two sisters, two cousins and my son to malaria. Don't talk to me about birds. And don't tell me a little DDT in our bodies is worse than losing more children to this disease. African mothers would be overjoyed if that was their biggest worry."
I've got nothing against bed nets. They also have a place in the war on this killer disease. But DDT is vital.
Tim Lambert and his ideological soulmates need to show a little morality and compassion for people who live amid the poverty and disease in these countries. They need to let people who confront disease and death every day make their own choices, based on facts and free from threats by the EU that their countries' agricultural trade will be cut off if they dare to use the best weapon we have in the fight against mosquitoes that sicken and kill so many parents and children every single year.