Why malaria?
Malaria kills about 400,000 people every year and more than 200 million fall ill. Before bed nets were made available, it was three or more times that. Nets are a proven intervention - a more effective way of saving lives than any other. There is still a long way to go and every death from malaria is preventable.
- 70% of the deaths are children under 5
- Malaria is the world's single largest killer of pregnant women
- 90% of the deaths are in sub-Saharan Africa
Yet malaria is totally preventable and treatable. Nobody needs to die. Prevention is better than treatment.
The most effective means of prevention is sleeping under a mosquito net, specifically a Long-Lasting Insecticide treated Net (LLIN). Each net costs $2.00/€1,70/£1.50. Every 50-250 nets distributed and installed equals 1 life saved.
Humanitarian issue
Given the scale of this problem, malaria is clearly a humanitarian issue.
Economic issue
Malaria is also an economic issue. Malaria is the single greatest drag on the economy of Africa. Every $1m spent fighting malaria efficiently improves the GDP - the wealth - of the continent of Africa by $12m. Fighting malaria is a very good investment.
As well as the approximately 400,000 people that die from malaria each year, more than 200 million fall sick with malaria. And that means a parent has to stay home with a sick child, teachers cannot teach, farmers cannot farm, drivers cannot drive, people cannot function. It fundamentally affects people working and productivity in Africa.
Every $1m we spend fighting malaria efficiently we improve the GDP - the wealth - of the continent of Africa by $12m.
If we want to help Africa out of the situation we all find it in, beating malaria is very high up, if not top of, the list.