PHNOM PENH, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- The reported number
of fatal malaria cases almost doubled in the first half of 2009 compared with
the same period last year, while the overall number of infections rose more than
58 percent, local media reported Monday, citing the figures from the Ministry of
Health officials.
Tol Bunkea, chief epidemiologist at the Ministry of
Health, was quoted by the Cambodia Daily as saying that the number of malaria
deaths this year stood at 130 out of a total of 32,638 registered malaria cases.
Dr Bunkea said that in the first half of 2008 there were 67 fatalities out of
20,563 reported cases of malaria.
Duong Socheat, director of National Center of
Parasitology, Entomology, and Malaria Control, said the increase of infections
was due to the early rains and the fact that the government had distributed
mosquito nets too late this year.
Dr Socheat said the increasing number of people
migrating to remote, forested areas on the Cambodian-Thai border, such as in
Pailin and Oddar Meanchey provinces, was also leading to a rise in malaria
cases.
"People are moving there to work, clear the forest
and do farming in areas that have a lot of mosquitoes. Then they come back with
malaria," he was quoted as saying, and adding that, "this migration is still the
major cause of this disease."
Dr Socheat said the government is also increasingly
concerned about the effectiveness of medicine for malaria treatment, as recent
international studies found strains of drug resistant malaria in western
Cambodia "Before it took 48 hours to kill the parasite, but now [in some cases]
it takes 80 hours," he said.
In February, the World Health Organization started a
22.5 million U.S. dollars cross-border project to contain the drug-resistant
malaria strains.