The Times of India 25.04.2013
Staff shortage hits malaria drive
Gajuwaka and Maddilapalem in the 1970s to control malaria in the
industrial area but though the areas and the population of the city have
increased four to five times since then, the staff strength remains the
same.
“The Gajuwaka unit is supposed to have 37 multipurpose
health assistants but it has only five. Maddilapalem, which is supposed
to have 62 health staff, has only 10,” said the district malaria
officer.
“The staff is supposed to make house-to-house visits,
especially in high-risk areas such as urban slums and collect blood
smears. However, certain legal disputes regarding the educational
qualification of the staff have led to a shortage. The government will
recruit staff once the case is solved,” said the officer.
This
bodes ill for the coastal districts, with four of them — Visakhapatnam,
Vizianagaram, Srikakulam, and East Godavari — being among the five
malaria-prone districts of Andhra Pradesh, according to the data of the
state epidemic cell of the directorate of health.
However, GVMC
officials denied any staff crunch. “We have 380 staff members in the
health section. When malaria cases start rising from June, additional
staff from the sanitation wing of GVMC will be pressed into service. We
are speeding up spraying and anti-larval operations in all the 72 wards
under GVMC. The urban health centres are equipped with drugs and blood
test facilities,” said GVMC entomologist Y Mani.
“We are taking
all precautionary measures to control malaria, especially in vulnerable
districts and Agency areas. We have got Rs 11 crore from the National
Rural Health Mission (NRHM) for the state vector borne disease control
programme this year, against last year’s Rs 8 crore,” said P Ratna
Joseph, deputy director, (malaria control), state epidemic cell.
“Last year, around eight lakh imported mosquito nets were distributed.
This year another 10 lakh are being distributed to malaria-prone areas.
IEC (Information Education and Communication) activities have also been
stepped up and each district has been supplied with drugs, insecticides
and 2-4 lakh diagnostic kits depending on their area and its
population,” he said.
On an average, over the last three years,
around 30,000 malaria cases have been reported from Andhra Pradesh
every year. WHO statistics indicate that in India around three malaria
patients out of every 1,000 dies and going by this the toll in AP should
be 90-100 per year. However, the state epidemic cell authorities claim
that just three-four deaths are recorded every year with just two deaths
in 2012.”There has been no death so far this year. Last year, there
were two deaths and five the year before that,” said Champa Naik, joint
director, state epidemic cell.
However, the malaria-endemic
Agency area of Paderu has already recorded 389 confirmed malaria cases
while Vizag city has 881 positive cases in this period, against 561 and
1,176, respectively, last year during the same period, said Rao.