Success Damian:
Adequate funding, provision of cost effective drugs have been advocated as parts of measures government must take to ensure the successful control of parasites and malaria in the country.
Professor
Omolade Olayinka Okwa, Professor of Parasitology, Department of Zoology and
Environmental Biology, Faculty of Science, made this known as the 79th
Inaugural Lecturer of the Lagos State University (LASU). She spoke on the topic
‘Parasites: The Unwelcomed and Ungrateful Stranger; the Battle Line’
While delivering
her lecture on Tuesday, August 10, 2021 at Buba Marwa Auditorium, Ojo Campus,
Professor Okwa said “To facilitate research in malaria and NTDs along with the
WHO/NTDS road map, adequate funds should be provided in the health sector.
There are basic and fundamental research problems requiring little funds and
gadgetry which are crying out to be solved. Health funds must be continually
increased and funds from international donor agencies should be properly
monitored, follow up, accounted for and not diverted.”
She also maintained that cost effective drugs is one sure way of combating
parasites ‘It is the government’s responsibility to execute mass drug
administration to endemic areas and this should be carried out efficiently. The
rural populace in remote endemic rural areas should be of top priority. Antiparasitic
drugs such as anti-protozoa (e.g. Metronidazole (Flagyl), Tinidazole),
anti-helminthic (e.g. Ivermectin, albendazole, thiabendazole, Pyrantel pamoate)
should be at the reach of the poor. Fortunately, most of these drugs are broad
spectrum drugs and their use appears as the most cost-effective means of
treating and controlling many parasitic infections.”
She further tasked government on clear cut health policies and interventions,
saying that it is compulsory for the government to be aware of the relevance of
parasitology to man and his health. She said that the same energy used to
create awareness for COVID-19 will come a long way in curbing malaria and NTDs.
The social media, radio, television should also incorporate information about
parasitic diseases in their information and news schedules
Okwa added that environmental
sanitation should be everybody’s business as it will go a long way to control
parasites. “The monthly environmental sanitation and market sanitation should
be sustained and monitored. There should be efforts to stop open defecation,
water control from feacal contamination and improved conditions of living.”
Still on what government should do to control
malaria, Okwa made some other recommendations saying “In malaria control,
mosquitoes are the weak link in the chain so the destruction of their larvae
habitats, improved drainage systems, clearing out water ways, proper sewage
systems should be of high priority. Education of the populace on mosquito
breeding and habitats should include clearing bushes, cleaning drainages and
open gutters, destruction and removal of containers, plants, tires, sachets,
and anything that can hold water.
“It is important for the Nigerian government to key into
the W.H.O goals and other malaria control agencies such as Roll back malaria
(RBM), Action and investment to defeat malaria (AIM), Malaria No More (MNM) and
CDC. There is a need to meet up with neglected interruptions associated
with malaria in this COVID-19 era.
“The most effective way to prevent a disease is by
vaccination which stimulates the host protective immune response. A malaria vaccine
produced by the University of Oxford team has proved to be 78% effective in
early trials and could be a major breakthrough against malaria. This R21
vaccine is the first to reach the W.H. O’s goal of at least 75% efficacy. When trialed among 450 children in Burkina Faso, the vaccine
was found to be safe, and showed "high-level efficacy" over 12 months
of follow-up. The trials of this malaria vaccine started in 2019, long before
coronavirus appeared - and the Oxford team developed its COVID vaccine (with
AstraZeneca) on the strength of its research into malaria vaccines,” she
stated.
She maintained that the R21 vaccine should be welcomed in
Nigeria. Then, the government can create awareness on the need for children as
a vulnerable group to be vaccinated against malaria just as the interventions
and awareness made for COVID-19.
HHer recommendations to individuals on Malaria prevention
include avoiding malariogenic activities.
She encouraged sleeping in well
ventilated rooms or under insecticide treated mosquito nets and wearing of
protective clothing. “Screen your doors and windows and use safe insecticides
or mosquito repellants. Objects, excavations, plants, empty soft drink bottles
and anything that can hold water must be eliminated in homes. Water storage
containers in homes should always be covered and dispose unused ones. Place
useful containers upside down under a roof or seal with a tight cover. Change
frequently water troughs of domestic animals and garden flower pots in homes.
Keep trash cans tightly sealed and drill a hole at the bottom in order not to
retain water that may serve as breeding sites.
“Tree hole-fillings must be carried out regularly and fill
up eroded soils, natural depressions, excavations and empty rain-filled
receptacles around the home. Swimming pools in homes should not be left unused
and untreated. Drainage systems, ditches, and gutters must not be dumped with
waste to avoid clogging, thereby making them stagnant for mosquitoes to breed.
Outdoor pyrethrum spraying of domestic animal shelters, garages, and outdoor
latrines is essential and spraying oil on stagnant pools to kill mosquito
aquatic stages. The use of larvicides such as Paris green, application of
petroleum oils on surfaces of stagnant water is recommended because it
asphyxiates the larvae stages of mosquitoes.
Earlier
defined two major terms which threw more light on the topic of the day and
consequently ensure that her audience understood the topic better.
The first
was to define a Zoologist. She said “I am a proud Zoologist with specialization
in Parasitology. Zoology is the branch of biology that deals with the study of
animals in all aspects of life. Zoologists are lovers of animals and so a
Zoologist is a person that studies animals in all ramifications and in relation
to their environment.
Quoting Otubanjo
(2007) she defined Parasitology as an aspect of symbiology, which deals with
the study of parasites. It is the study of the biology of parasites and their
interactions with their hosts (Cox, 2004). “Parasitology is synonymous with
Medical Zoology or Sanitary Zoology and combines medical and ecological science
which encompasses the study of parasites and the diseases they cause. It
emphasizes classification of parasites, identification and elucidation of their
life cycles and factors affecting their distribution thus gaining insights into
their prevention and control.”
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